FIRST TIME WATCHING THE WIZARD OF OZ (1939) Movie Reaction

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TimotheeReacts

TimotheeReacts

Күн бұрын

THE WIZARD OF OZ MOVIE REACTION! Today I'll be watching a film I have never seen before Wizard of Oz released in 1939 for the first time. Watch the ENTIRE Movie with me? Check out: / timotheereacts
When a tornado rips through Kansas, Dorothy (Judy Garland) and her dog, Toto, are whisked away in their house to the magical land of Oz. They follow the Yellow Brick Road toward the Emerald City to meet the Wizard, and en route they meet a Scarecrow (Ray Bolger) that needs a brain, a Tin Man (Jack Haley) missing a heart, and a Cowardly Lion (Bert Lahr) who wants courage. The wizard asks the group to bring him the broom of the Wicked Witch of the West (Margaret Hamilton) to earn his help.
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@TimotheeReacts
@TimotheeReacts 3 ай бұрын
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@lorsteve7309
@lorsteve7309 3 ай бұрын
May you React the Many adventures of Winnie the Pooh Please
@fantasy-writer-v5z
@fantasy-writer-v5z 3 ай бұрын
Planning on reacting to Helluva Boss because if you enjoyed Hazbin Hotel your going to have fun with HB Or what about The Owl House or Amphibia because of you liked Gravity Falls you’ll love these two
@jessetorres8738
@jessetorres8738 3 ай бұрын
Trivia note: The Wizard himself in the book & his appearance in the movie is based off of 25th President William McKinley (although he was from Ohio & not Kansas).
@katiem9644
@katiem9644 3 ай бұрын
The Graduate, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, The Sting, I would consider them classics.
@theatergeek82
@theatergeek82 3 ай бұрын
You should watch 7 brides for 7 brothers
@sketchnotes2246
@sketchnotes2246 3 ай бұрын
Ah such a classic! Here's a fun fact: Margaret Hamilton (the actress who played the witch) was actually a kindergarten teacher irl. After the film came out, she became concerned that her performance as the witch was scaring a lot of children. So, she eventually made an appearance on an episode of "Mr. Roger's Neighborhood," where she wore the costume without the makeup and explained that acting is a lot like "playing pretend." So sweet!
@j.woodbury412
@j.woodbury412 3 ай бұрын
I still watch that episode on You Tube.
@stephanniemorin
@stephanniemorin 3 ай бұрын
She also appeared on Sesame Street, but the episode was pulled due to parent complaints. It was lost media until relatively recently.
@shaungerald23
@shaungerald23 3 ай бұрын
@@stephanniemorin Why did they complain?
@stephanniemorin
@stephanniemorin 3 ай бұрын
@shaungerald23 Beats me. They claimed it was "too scary" for their children, and my Jersey butt is sitting over here like 🧍🏻‍♀️. We have the Jersey Devil and bumper to bumper traffic on 287, we, at least, can handle this.
@blueeyedbehr
@blueeyedbehr 2 ай бұрын
@@shaungerald23 it was deemed "too scary" for the very young, like 4 to 7 year olds. she wasn't playing herself, but a "wicked old witch", yet toned down for sesame street, but apparently, not toned down enough.
@BryanMcdonough-gl9hm
@BryanMcdonough-gl9hm 3 ай бұрын
Rest In Peace to the entire cast and crew of Wizard of Oz
@nathancruz9172
@nathancruz9172 3 ай бұрын
Yep
@MohamadNadi
@MohamadNadi 3 ай бұрын
The fact that this move is 85 years old and it still holds up is a testament to how great it is
@BatmanFan76
@BatmanFan76 3 ай бұрын
I’m pretty sure there’s not a single person on this planet that doesn’t know this movie. Ever since this movie’s release, there has been many remasters, re-releases, and too many adaptations and parodies to count. Even though everyone keeps trying to replicate this magic, it’s pretty much official no one could ever top this delightful masterpiece.
@WilliamLucas-hy8mx
@WilliamLucas-hy8mx 3 ай бұрын
I know it from the movie Girl, Interrupted
@johnnehrich9601
@johnnehrich9601 3 ай бұрын
I have seen and enjoyed a number of reactors to this movie, who were seeing it for the first time.
@zachariousmccool5768
@zachariousmccool5768 3 ай бұрын
Theres always going to be someone who hasn't seen it but it definetly is the widest reaching film.....probably ever. Its one of the very few films that I feel should be required to see if you even like movies a little bit. It's impact on the film industry and society as a whole cannot be unstated. It will live on probably forever since its always being reintroduced to newer generations, parents showing it to their kids etc. The epitome of "Timeless Classic" lol Its getting close to 100 years old now which is wild to think about.
@a.g.demada5263
@a.g.demada5263 3 ай бұрын
I read three versions of the book but I saw the movie only a few years ago
@youngmaster7405
@youngmaster7405 3 ай бұрын
im pretty sure its the most well known movie of all time. makes sense since it revolutionized effects and cinema back then.
@j.woodbury412
@j.woodbury412 3 ай бұрын
It's interesting that the scarecrow, who didn't have a brain, was the one who came up with the smartest ideas, the tin man, who didn't have a heart, was the one who showed the most sensitivity and was the one who cried when Dorothy was locked up in the castle, and the cowardly lion, who didn't have courage, didn't turn away from danger when he had to face it.
@majkus
@majkus 3 ай бұрын
Yep, this is built into the book. Remembering that the usual expected method of consumption was the parents reading a chapter each night to the kiddies (as the ad copy of the time would call them), it is likely that few kids missed this point.
@carriefischer9552
@carriefischer9552 3 ай бұрын
MY BUDDY KATIE IS A FAN THAT MOVIE, IN THAT WIZARD OF OZ AND MY BUDDY KATIE HAS TATOO OF THE EMERALD CITY ON HER RIGHT ANKLE THERE SOME GOOD SCENES AND SOME BAD SCENES AND MY SISTER barb AND I REPEAT MY SISTER WILL NOT WATCH THAT MOVIE OTHER WISE MY SISTER GETS BAD DREAMS
@TedLittle-yp7uj
@TedLittle-yp7uj 3 ай бұрын
But,, as soon as the scarecrow gets his diploma, he misquotes the Pythagorean Theorem. So much for higher education.
@ammaleslie509
@ammaleslie509 3 ай бұрын
Yes, it's interesting... It's the whole point of the story!
@MsAppassionata
@MsAppassionata Ай бұрын
@@carriefischer9552 😂😂😂 Why do you capitalize everything but your sister’s name?
@krnut_82
@krnut_82 3 ай бұрын
About the horse, NO they did NOT put paint on it. They colored it with Jell-O powder. That way it wasn't toxic for the horse. Lemon, cherry, and grape flavors.
@ronweber1402
@ronweber1402 3 ай бұрын
They had a beast of a time getting shots because the horse kept licking it off, hahahaha.
@galandirofrivendell4740
@galandirofrivendell4740 3 ай бұрын
I don't think many reactors understand or appreciate the impact this film had on us growing up in the 1950s and '60s. The Wizard of Oz aired once a year on television, and its broadcasts were heavily advertised such that watching it was an event comparable to watching the Super Bowl today. This is genuine example of true Americana much beloved by everyone who has seen it.
@stephenpmurphy591
@stephenpmurphy591 3 ай бұрын
It aired in February my brothers and I counted the days then at school everyone talked about for a week or two. My favorite song as a kid the Lions if I was King of the forest!
@hmfrias
@hmfrias 2 ай бұрын
I remember. I would always wait patiently year after year to see it again. When it was released on VHS, I couldn’t believe I could see it any time I chose
@KKowalski1022
@KKowalski1022 21 күн бұрын
I remember watching it once a year on TV in the late 80s and early 90s. It didn’t matter that we owned the VHS. That one night a year was always epic!
@candicelitrenta8890
@candicelitrenta8890 3 ай бұрын
When the Witch went down in the trap door with the red smoke, the actress actually got burned from the flame
@johnnehrich9601
@johnnehrich9601 3 ай бұрын
Yes, but not on the take they actually used in the movie. The stage hands pulled her off the hatch and began dabbing her skin with rubbing alcohol as her makeup included copper, which was poisonous. They didn't want it to touch her exposed skin. And her double was badly burned on a take of the witch on her broom skywriting. In the same vein, the first actor to play the tin woodsman, was covered in aluminum powder. He breathed in the powder and almost died. His replacement, the one we see, was made metallic by aluminum powder mixed into something like cold cream. And the "snow" was asbestos.
@RabbitsFunWorld
@RabbitsFunWorld 3 ай бұрын
@@johnnehrich9601that’s a big yikes all around. 😮😢
@stephenr3910
@stephenr3910 3 ай бұрын
​​​The original Tin Man was Buddy Ebsen of "The Beverly Hillbillies".​@@johnnehrich9601
@RYMAN1321
@RYMAN1321 3 ай бұрын
@@johnnehrich9601Geez, I guess safety wasn’t much of a concern back then was it?
@llanitedave
@llanitedave 3 ай бұрын
​@RB01.10 Organic chemistry wasn't well known at the time. The health effects of asbestos and aluminum powder hadn't yet become understood. As late as the 1970s there were reputable scientists arguing that *most* forms of asbestos were harmless.
@jeffbassin630
@jeffbassin630 3 ай бұрын
This film truly stands the test of time. Judy Garland was a perfect Dorothy. Her singing is and was throughout her career iconic. The special effects used were way ahead of it's time! "The Wizard of Oz" remains a classic!
@Kevmaster2000
@Kevmaster2000 3 ай бұрын
As far as I’m concerned this is THE greatest film ever made! It’s the most influential, quoted, referenced, well known, watched throughout generations, perfect movie ever!
@gregschultz8639
@gregschultz8639 3 ай бұрын
In the original book, the Land of Oz is a real place far far away. It's not specified where, but when Dorothy uses the slippers, she lands on a field several yards away from her home and she goes running to Auntie Em and Uncle Henry. They made the concept a dream sequence for this film.
@RabbitsFunWorld
@RabbitsFunWorld 3 ай бұрын
Good to know.
@majkus
@majkus 3 ай бұрын
"Silver Shoes" in the book, not 'slippers'. Since we're being book-faithful here… :)
@libertyresearch-iu4fy
@libertyresearch-iu4fy 3 ай бұрын
About the only thing I remember from the book was there was a rapid river to cross instead of the poppies.
@ScooterBond1970
@ScooterBond1970 3 ай бұрын
@@libertyresearch-iu4fy also that the Emerald City was not actually emerald; everyone had to wear green-tinted glasses ostensibly to reduce the bright green glare, but it was really so everything would look green thru the green lenses.
@vicentehizon6202
@vicentehizon6202 2 ай бұрын
​@libertyresearch-iu4fy Also, the Land of Oz was more environmentally dangerous. The group had to also outrun a pair of Kalidahs (monstrous beasts with a bear's body and a tiger's head). When the group crossed a big gorge, the Tin Man used his axe to sever the bridge, making the Kalidahs fall down the gorge, where they were impaled by the jagged rocks below.
@frankiebowie6174
@frankiebowie6174 3 ай бұрын
My secret, favorite moment of this film that I’ve watched dozens of times is Judy blowing a kiss to the Lullaby League at 13:32. She must’ve seen herself and her sisters at that age, performing as the Gumm Sisters.
@nudgificator
@nudgificator 3 ай бұрын
There were witches for every direction in the original novel. The Witch of the North is encountered first right after the house lands, and Glinda is the Witch of the South and only appears right at the end to get Dorothy home after the balloon flies away without her. Somewhere along the line it was decided that introducing a new witch right at the end was unnecessary, so the two were conflated into the one here. Also, something I always like to mention on reactions to this (call it my 'Viggo's toe'!) - the voice that sings 'wherefore art thou Romeo?' is the voice of Disney's Snow White, Adriana Caselotti.
@majkus
@majkus 3 ай бұрын
And generations ever since, hearing the line sung as 'wherefore art thou, Romeo' (with a comma), mis-learned that 'wherefore' meant 'where' and not 'why'. Occasionally you will see a high school or community production in which the line is sung correctly.
@skepticcritic4995
@skepticcritic4995 3 ай бұрын
15:09 That fire was real, Margaret Hamilton who played Ms. Gulch and the Wicked Witch while recording this scene, she entered the trapdoor too late, she got hit with a 2nd degree burn on her face, and a 3rd degree burn on her hand from the fiery exit. Hamilton was willing to return to the film after recovering under the condition that NO more fire effects were used for the witch's scenes. That's why you see more red smoke than fire in the later scenes
@beckystar3327
@beckystar3327 3 ай бұрын
You likely figured this out, I know it took me a while, but all the people Dorothy met in Oz were the people she knew at the farmhouse in Kansas. Most obviously the woman at the start was the Wicked Witch. The scarecrow was the farmhand named Hunk, who at the start said "If you have brains why don't you use them?" The tinman was the farmhand named Hickory. And the lion was the farmhand named Zeke, who at the start said to "have a little courage" to deal with the woman. And the professor Marvel was the Wizard funnily enough.
@AliSakurai
@AliSakurai 3 ай бұрын
Despite the terrible stories of what Judy went through behind the scenes, she never regretted playing dorothy, and Over The Rainbow was her signature song. Margaret Hamilton, who portrayed the wicked witch of the west, was known for being extremely kind in real life, and she adored Judy like a daughter. She was more of a mother to Judy than her stage mom from hell ever was. I truly hope Judy found what was over the rainbow the day she died.
@Venejan
@Venejan 2 ай бұрын
There's a snippet of video from some anniversary event made long after the movie came out where Ray Bolger (Scarecrow) expresses his appreciation for the movie because it gave him and his fellow actors a kind of immortality. And he was right, because if this film had never been made, I doubt any of these actors aside from Judy Garland would be remembered today. And even though Garland had a fantastic career, Oz remains her most beloved film and Over the Rainbow remains her most iconic song performance.
@j.woodbury412
@j.woodbury412 3 ай бұрын
Sad trivia: Most of the actors who played the munchkins were German and Jewish, who escaped Germany to escape the Nazis. More trivia: Judy Garland had a hard time pretending to be afraid of Margaret Hamilton as the Wicked Witch because Hamilton was so nice to Garland in real life. Margaret Hamilton said the hardest scene for her was when Mrs. Gulch threatened to have Toto destroyed because she was such a big animal lover in real life.
@leehallam9365
@leehallam9365 3 ай бұрын
Bert Larh, the lion, was a popular comic and comedy singer. If you watch clips of him before he did this, you realise how much of his own act and mannerisms were developed into his wonderful performance.
@shannonmcelroy8454
@shannonmcelroy8454 3 ай бұрын
4:50 To answer your question, Alice in Wonderland came first in 1865 as a book by Lewis Carroll. He was one of the first children's authors who wanted to entertain as well as educate children so they didn't feel lectured to and could have a fun time reading. It was Alice in Wonderland that blew open the door for fun children's fiction and allowed The Wizard of Oz to be published. Also, everyone remembers the "I'll get you my pretty, and your little dog too!", but "Well my little pretty, I can cause accidents too!" Is just as iconic.😊
@llanitedave
@llanitedave 3 ай бұрын
A lot of the perceived similarities to Alice in Wonderland are due to changes made to the story by the movie producers.
@jonb7797
@jonb7797 2 ай бұрын
Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland
@ladyvenusdragon
@ladyvenusdragon 3 ай бұрын
I don't know if many noticed but how funny is it that Scarecrow was ready to face the Witch with a GUN??? XD
@oliverbrownlow5615
@oliverbrownlow5615 2 ай бұрын
Some people without brains have an awful lot of guns.
@_sintrell
@_sintrell 3 ай бұрын
What I like most in the beginning of the movie…is that the men give us keywords to give us the idea on who is which character
@MegaWicked89
@MegaWicked89 3 ай бұрын
In a TV interview later in her career, Judy Garland recalled whenever she would do the dance on the Yellow Brick Road with the Scarecrow, the Tin Man, and the Cowardly Lion, she initially struggled to keep up with them, and because they were dancing with their arms linked together it looked like she was shut out. So the director, Victor Fleming, yelled "Hold it! You three dirty hams! Let that little girl in there!"
@garylee3685
@garylee3685 3 ай бұрын
He "manipulated the kid" to have her stop running away.
@fynnthefox9078
@fynnthefox9078 3 ай бұрын
Exactly, manipulation... But for a good cause.
@FantasticBabblings
@FantasticBabblings 3 ай бұрын
In the early 1980s I attended a fundraiser in New York at the Public Theater for PEN, the international writers' organization. The theme was banned books and several celebrities (Meryl Streep, Kevin Kline, Morgan Freeman...) read from books that have been banned around the world. At the very end Margaret Hamilton (The Wicked Witch of the West) read from The Wizard of Oz. There wasn't a dry eye in the house.
@coolaunt516
@coolaunt516 2 ай бұрын
I saw this movie in a group sing a long. One of the highlights was the whole audience yelling run toto run!
@katiem9644
@katiem9644 3 ай бұрын
Gosh it has to have been 40 years since Ive seen this! What a wonderful memory, fun watching this with you.
@lawrencespinnenweber177
@lawrencespinnenweber177 3 ай бұрын
You asked for some facts about this movie? Judy Garland was 16 years old. She wore a corset to help keep her figure from showing so that she would look younger. When the Witch disappeared in Munchkinland, yes, she dropped through a trap door through smoke and real fire. The technicians let the fire out too soon and the actress, Margaret Hamilton, had her hand badly burned. The Horse of a Different Color was created by rubbing Jell-O gelatin powder into the horse's fur. The Munchkins and the Winged Monkeys were played by little people -- they called them midgets then, but dwarves is the correct term today. Yes, that was an animal you saw in the forest near the Tin Man's house. They borrowed cranes and other birds from the Los Angeles Zoo to use as set decoration and to set the fantasy atmosphere. I could go on, but I will stop now.
@oliverbrownlow5615
@oliverbrownlow5615 3 ай бұрын
Dwarfs and midgets, then and now, are not the same thing. Dwarfs are small of stature AND have disproportionate body parts relative to a normal person. Midgets are simply small people with normally proportioned bodies. I believe most if not all of the Munchkins are midgets, rather than dwarfs. The group is actually credited as "Singer's Midgets" in the film's opening titles.
@SobiTheRobot
@SobiTheRobot Ай бұрын
*Dwarfs. Dwarves are the fantasy race thought up by Tolkein.
@j.woodbury412
@j.woodbury412 3 ай бұрын
Frank Morgan played the wizard, as well as Professor Marvel. the gatekeeper, the driver of the horse of a different color and the wizard's guard.
@Gen-ZChristian
@Gen-ZChristian 3 ай бұрын
This is such a great and nostalgic movie when I was younger, Can’t wait to see what you think of it!
@actualkarenokboomer3158
@actualkarenokboomer3158 3 ай бұрын
It is 1939 and of course some of it is painted. You do not get to make fun of what was breakthrough in 1939. The actress playing the witch was actually burned in one of the fire scenes. I had never noticed the big bird until I saw the movie in IMAX and it is a live emu.
@KennieDiaz-sg6fg
@KennieDiaz-sg6fg 3 ай бұрын
This movie’s a Gem No Franchise needed amazing acting gorgeous costumes, props, and soothing vocals & imagery
@TheHulk2008
@TheHulk2008 3 ай бұрын
This movie has the greatest transition in cinematic history along with 2001 and Lawrence of Arabia.
@majkus
@majkus 3 ай бұрын
"Brother Bear" has a moment when the aspect ratio changes from 4:3 to 16:9 and the color palette becomes more vivid. In movie theatres, curtains actually opened wider for the wider image at that point. I'm sure that the Disney people were thinking of this film when they did that.
@gmunden1
@gmunden1 3 ай бұрын
L. Frank Baum wrote "The Wizard of Oz" in 1900. It started as a series of books before adapted for film in 1939. Unrelated stories - Lewis Carroll wrote "Alice in Wonderland " in 1865, followed by " Through the Looking Glass," 1871. The story was conceived in 1862 when Carroll joined a friend on the river in Oxford with (Henry Liddell's three children, one named Alice). The first film adaptation was in 1903,then again in Hollywood 1933, followed by the animated Disney version in 1951.
@JUMPYCOOL
@JUMPYCOOL 3 ай бұрын
How does someone go their whole life without seeing The Wizard Of Oz at least once?
@johnnehrich9601
@johnnehrich9601 3 ай бұрын
I thought the same but at the same time, I envy the joy (I hope) of experiencing for the first time. And I'm GLAD he held off until now so he could share the experience with us.
@fantasy-writer-v5z
@fantasy-writer-v5z 3 ай бұрын
I know it’s beyond impressive
@TimotheeReacts
@TimotheeReacts 3 ай бұрын
Mention it in the intro! Only have seen parts of it, I remember they played it in school for a period, only played the first 40mins and I don't remember much. This movie is also 85 years old! 37 years before MY PARENTS where born. Also because of the language difference, french being my main language, did not grow up with as many movies in english, very iconic movie but maybe not in another languages society plus the 80 years.
@nathancruz9172
@nathancruz9172 3 ай бұрын
I saw the wizard of oz.
@majkus
@majkus 3 ай бұрын
But he _didn't_ go his whole life without seeing it! He's still alive, you know…
@morganghostbusters-egonfan
@morganghostbusters-egonfan 3 ай бұрын
11:45 “Only bad witches are ugly.” Literally the only quote I can think of when watching The Witches, the Anjelica Houston version, not the Robert zemeckis one. This quote was literal in that movie.
@ericjanssen394
@ericjanssen394 3 ай бұрын
And yet, Glinda still asks whether Dorothy is a bad witch. 😉
@bookwoman53
@bookwoman53 Ай бұрын
There are a couple of videos about the accidents and hazards the cast and crew endured during the making of the film. It’s worth watching.
@stephanniemorin
@stephanniemorin 3 ай бұрын
I remember this movie playing specifically around Thanksgiving, before all the Christmas and holiday movies started airing. I'm guessing it was a sort of "in-between" kind of movie. Fun fact: Margaret Hamilton, the one who played the Wicked Witch of the West, was a kindergarten teacher, and appeared on Sesame Street once. Sadly, the episode was pulled because the parents complained that it was too scary, and she spent the rest of her life trying to explain to the kids that she wasn't like the witch IRL, even going on Mister Roger's! Thankfully, the episode of Sesame Street where she appeared in was found. Also, fun fact: this was my fourth grade play; I was Dorothy number 5!
@zedwpd
@zedwpd 3 ай бұрын
If only bad witches are ugly, Glinda did Dorothy dirty by asking her if she was good or bad
@deedee67888
@deedee67888 3 ай бұрын
I never thought of that. 😆
@juju-zr5dp
@juju-zr5dp 3 ай бұрын
They cut at least 5 songs( and many snippets of dialogue) out of the movie. Perhaps most famously "The Jitterbug". Dorothy also sang a reprise of " Over The Rainbow" in the witches tower. 3 directors. Trivia galore.
@annabep14
@annabep14 Ай бұрын
My little sister and I never watched the movie as children growing up like most people my age. I got the chance to watch it in 2020 and we fell in love. I even got to go as Dorothy that same year
@brt5273
@brt5273 3 ай бұрын
Still difficult for me to comprehend that there are adults who never saw this film. I guess the end of broadcast television had a lot to do with it. Great fun watching it with you❤
@mollylea2643
@mollylea2643 3 ай бұрын
The little insect the Witch mentions at 38:45 is the Jitterbug, the basis for an eponymous number that was filmed, then left on the cutting room for the finished film. Only still images and maybe a few seconds of audio now exist.
@majkus
@majkus 3 ай бұрын
The complete audio exists, happily, and most high school and community productions nowadays do include The Jitterbug, which gives the whole company a chance to show off their retro dance steps.
@ImpossibleCaseEdits
@ImpossibleCaseEdits 3 ай бұрын
"The Jitterbug" sequence cost a fortune to film only for it to be cut. It's unlikely, but I wish the footage would turn up one day.
@thomasbradley4505
@thomasbradley4505 3 ай бұрын
@@ImpossibleCaseEditsthere is partial footage and the entire audio. In one of the early video releases in the 80s, one of the bonus features was the restored number with the audio, partial video, and still shots
@cjg8763
@cjg8763 3 ай бұрын
I believe this number included vocals from the original Tin Man before being affected by his poisonous makeup and nearly dying. IDK if this is why it was cut, or a possible one of a number of reasons why.
@cjg8763
@cjg8763 3 ай бұрын
@@ImpossibleCaseEdits I swear I've seen the entire scene somewhere before, if not the whole thing at least a little bit of it.
@beautifulbliss5883
@beautifulbliss5883 3 ай бұрын
What I appreciate about older stories of another world stories like Alice in Wonderland, Wizard of Oz, Narnia, classic Disney can count, they all had a life they want to escape from because their life is bad. They are all around the time of WW2. When the studios made them, they two wanted the audience to escape reality for an hour, too, so they had to commit to the vision of the sets or the animation. That being said what happened behind the scenes is actually crazy and would never go through today.
@majkus
@majkus 3 ай бұрын
In the book, the Wizard's gifts to the travelers were similarly symbolic and allowed their owners to believe the Wizard had helped them. The Scarecrow's head was mostly filled with a mixture of bran and pins and needles ("they show that he is sharp"), the Tin Woodman received a red silk heart stuffed with sawdust that was soldered into his chest, and the Lion drinks a bottle of a liquid - remembering that 'liquid courage' is a term for alcoholic drink. The film version, though not literally faithful, is perfect and has its own charm. Oz, left to himself, smiled to think of his success in giving the Scarecrow and the Tin Woodman and the Lion exactly what they thought they wanted. “How can I help being a humbug,” he said, “when all these people make me do things that everybody knows can’t be done? It was easy to make the Scarecrow and the Lion and the Woodman happy, because they imagined I could do anything. But it will take more than imagination to carry Dorothy back to Kansas, and I’m sure I don’t know how it can be done.”
@AlexOmar-q9n
@AlexOmar-q9n 3 ай бұрын
Alice in Wonderland was written in 1865 and The Wizard of Oz was written in 1900 so it may have borrowed the idea of a fairytale like land with characters that resemble "real" people from the "real" land
@courtneywallace871
@courtneywallace871 3 ай бұрын
Yes, the song was written for the movie. A shame you didn’t react to it. They actually used flavored Jell-O powder to color the horse. And Frank Morgan plays 5 characters in the movie including The Wizard, Professor Marvel, The doorman, the cabbie and the final guard.
@thomasbradley4505
@thomasbradley4505 3 ай бұрын
When Dorothy opens the door in Oz, while still inside Judy’s double was wearing a dress in sepia tones, and the door was painted to match the sepia tones. Once it’s opened, Judy steps in wearing the color costume and steps onto the colored set.
@heirtoheaven
@heirtoheaven 2 ай бұрын
Myra Gulch, the original Karen. Judy Garland was about 16 years old when she played Dorothy in this movie. With the singing voice of a 40-year-old woman. She was incredible.
@gwenrutherford6240
@gwenrutherford6240 2 ай бұрын
Almira Gulch is her name.
@theatergeek82
@theatergeek82 3 ай бұрын
It was a trap door and she suffered from some burns because of that effect. When she was recovering, she said that she would come back only if they did no more fire effects around her. Luckily they agreed to that condition.
@stephanniemorin
@stephanniemorin 3 ай бұрын
Toto is a Cairn Terrier, native to the Scottish Highlands. He (technically, she, as the actor, is a girl dog) certainly has that Highlander spirit throughout Dorothy's adventure!
@PokhrajRoy.
@PokhrajRoy. 3 ай бұрын
People will be surprised to learn that the movie gained popularity only very recently after It was on syndicated television.
@johnnehrich9601
@johnnehrich9601 3 ай бұрын
Well, "recently" as in the late 1950's. One of the problems for the movie was when the movie came out, Europe was embroiled in a war, so they lost the overseas market. Back then, there was no way to see the film except in a theater. It was re-released in 1955. Then CBS wanted broadcast Gone With The Wind, but MGM didn't let them. As a sort of consolidation prize, they let them show WoO. It stared appearing once a year, a little before Christmas. When it showed each time, it became a big deal with the entire family gathered around.
@Square-ow7oq
@Square-ow7oq 3 ай бұрын
I'm sorry, but this is very easy to google. Yes, the movie reached its culural phenomenon status decades later after it was released. But that's obvious. When it was released, it was a success, but not a box office juggernaut. It was nominated for 5 Oscars, and it was the 5th top grossing movie of 1939, so it was fairly popular upon release. Not to mention the popularity that the books had enjoyed for decades.
@jonathancruz5932
@jonathancruz5932 3 ай бұрын
Three Awards winner for best original score music, best original song: Somewhere Over the Rainbow, and best actress: Judy Garland
@serenitytoepper
@serenitytoepper 3 ай бұрын
I know during each shot there were 3 different horses for the horse of a different color, and you can tell each one is a different breed too. First one was purple, and it was muscular and then there's the red hose it was a smaller and skinny, and then there's yellow which is the smallest of the 3 horses and it's dancing like it's a show pony. But they switched 3 horses.
@johnnehrich9601
@johnnehrich9601 3 ай бұрын
They "painted" them with Jello and the horses kept trying to lick the color off.
@serenitytoepper
@serenitytoepper 3 ай бұрын
@@johnnehrich9601 I was told during scenes they switched out three different horses.
@johnnehrich9601
@johnnehrich9601 3 ай бұрын
@@serenitytoepper This is the first time I heard it but it makes absolute sense. Otherwise all the actors, etc. would have had to wait, perhaps an hour or more, while the horse was washed down and recolored.
@serenitytoepper
@serenitytoepper 3 ай бұрын
@@johnnehrich9601 From what I was told and how they shot, you see the horse one moment then the camera's zoom on just the couch and everyone in it, and then another was shot into scene and so on and so on. They zoom out on purpose to do the switch for the 3 horses that's what I was told they did on set.
@serenitytoepper
@serenitytoepper Ай бұрын
@@johnnehrich9601 Exactly. They had 3 horses painted and ready to go for on set, but during each scene when the camara would be taken off the horse, each time They'd switched them out.
@serenitytoepper
@serenitytoepper 3 ай бұрын
I spent a lot of years watching this movie as a kid. It was my grandma's favorite movie. So, we watched it a lot when I was visiting with her. But I always laughed seeing Lion just jump dived out the window of the wizard's castle. Lion had a lot of funny lines.
@rhudoc3745
@rhudoc3745 3 ай бұрын
"...some people with no brains do an awful lot of talking..."
@bethking7348
@bethking7348 3 ай бұрын
Mad Tv did several hilarious parodies on this movie 😂😂. The original movie, they used a nylon stocking to make the tornado. This was a once a year family gathering to watch. Great memories ❤
@kaijukid1443
@kaijukid1443 3 ай бұрын
It’s a little hard for me to think of this movie without the many f-ed up behind the scenes facts coming to mind.
@fynnthefox9078
@fynnthefox9078 3 ай бұрын
We need a movie about the living nightmare that is the bts of Thr Wizard of Oz.
@kaijukid1443
@kaijukid1443 3 ай бұрын
@@fynnthefox9078 Kinda shocked that doesn’t exist, already
@fynnthefox9078
@fynnthefox9078 3 ай бұрын
In the original Oz books, Oz is actually a land you can get to, unlike the movie where it seems to be just a dream. As for the horse, they didn't put actual paint on it. They colored it with Jello powder. That way it wasn't toxic for the horse. However, it'd constantly lick the powder off.
@davidfox5383
@davidfox5383 3 ай бұрын
When I was a kid in the late 60s/early 70s, before home video, the annual network showing of The Wizard of Oz was an event - every bit as exciting to kids as birthdays or Christmas. It has a huuuge nostalgic value which nails the films message of HOME.
@matityaloran9157
@matityaloran9157 3 ай бұрын
4:56, in the book? No. In this movie? Yes.
@ScooterBond1970
@ScooterBond1970 3 ай бұрын
Fun Facts: (well, some fun, some sorta creepy but not really 😜) 22:45 That big bird toward the back of the set was, for many years, mistaken for the body of a little person who had supposedly hung himself on the set. And, somehow, no one noticed this "hanging body" during filming or editing, even when the three actors had to walk directly past it. (Also, somehow, the perpetrators of the rumour failed to notice the "body" extending its wings toward the actors.) Pretty sure none of this was filmed on location; it was all on soundstages. The tornado, IIRC, was a huge tarp/towel or something rolled up into a tube, hung from the studio rafters and attached to a turntable or fan or something spinny. 38:45 "I've sent a little insect on ahead to take the fight out of them!" This bit of orphaned foreshadowing actually refers to a sequence removed from the film, in which the Witch (...) sends the "Jitter Bug" after them, presumably to tire them out by making them dance uncontrollably. And finally, yes, all of the Kansas side characters (except Uncle Henry and Aunt Em) are represented in Oz. The circus guy (Prof Marvel) is The Wizard and a couple other bit parts; the dude who saved Dorothy from falling in the pig pen is The Lion; the dude who tells her she's got no brains is The Scarecrow. And of course Mrs Gulch is The Wicked Witch.
@MilasMixMedia
@MilasMixMedia 3 ай бұрын
People say i do look like Dorothy i am not sure why though it’s a mix between Audrey Hepburn and Judy Garland, i heard that the Wizard Of Oz behind the scenes of the movie is like curse or something like the Tin Man got like metal poisoning from it cause all the paint from it, and Judy Garland they told her to smoke on set because to make her look skinnier even though she is already skinner, so it kinda makes you wonder like how did this movie become so beloved an such a classic movie as it is today, when they’re stories like that.
@JohnRandomness105
@JohnRandomness105 3 ай бұрын
14:20 The book had four witches, one for each direction. The movie combined the two good witches into the Witch of the North. 15:10 Yes, that was a trap door and platform, and yes, that was a dangerous special effect. As I understand it, this was the first take (imperfect, because the smoke begins before the witch is there) and the second take burned Margaret Hamilton. 21:10 "Wherefore art thou, Romeo?" was voiced by the voice actress of Snow White. (As usual, it was said wrong.) 31:20 "That's a horse of a different color!" 39:30 I read that the winged monkeys were West Point cadets in costume. Not sure, though. 41:40 That last mile, just over the mountain. That background music as Dorothy is rescued is "A Night on Bald Mountain". 44:40 Maybe the Wicked Witch is a Fire Elemental, and water her weakness. 48:20 "E Pluribus Unum" something like, "Out of many, one". The (unofficial?) motto of the USA before the McCarthyist "In God We Trust". I read the book "Wicked" a couple years after it was published, and it was a rather grizzly take on the Land of Oz. A couple years later, I started seeing billboards billing "Wicked" as a musical, with a picture of the green WWotW. I kept thinking, no way could they ever make a Broadway Musical of that book. But sure enough... a Lighter and Softer, Pragmatic Adaptation, highly approved by the author and very popular with teen and preteen girls. At a book signing, the author had to say that getting the book for a 12yo girl would be child abuse.
@dionysiacosmos
@dionysiacosmos 3 ай бұрын
Private citizens cannot act as agents of law enforcement. So unless the Sheriff swore Mrs Gulch into his office as a deputy, she can be criminally charged with impersonating an officer of the law. If they had known this, the Gayle family could have pointed this out, and probably have talked her into both of them dropping the charges. She's just a proto-Karen. In the movie it's all a dream, but the books don't erase Dorothy's accomplishments.
@ScooterBond1970
@ScooterBond1970 3 ай бұрын
Makes me wonder if she really did have a Sheriff's order in the first place. If not, she's potentially in even bigger trouble... and that much more a proto-Karen. (LOL, I never made that connection but you're so right! 🤣)
@Venejan
@Venejan 2 ай бұрын
Well, Aunt Em says that Miss Gulch owns the whole county, so she presumably owns the sheriff too, no matter what the law says. We can only hope the tornado finished her off, which is implied but never actually stated in the movie.
@k_salter
@k_salter 3 ай бұрын
Those flying monkeys were my introduction to fear and terror when I was about 5 or 6. They scared me sooooo much. This used to be on every Wednesday night before Thanksgiving for years; kept us kids out of mom's way of precooking for turkey day. I think of ribbon candy and wafer mints when I see this now.
@jeandoten1510
@jeandoten1510 3 ай бұрын
Yup, I was also terrified by the flying monkeys. The place where the Wicked Witch of the East's feet roll up under the fallen house also gave me nightmares.
@Venejan
@Venejan 2 ай бұрын
The flying monkeys are terrifying at any age. The fairly simple effect of the tornado still chills my blood today!! I've never seen any CGI match it.
@SobiTheRobot
@SobiTheRobot Ай бұрын
The monkeys are STILL terrifying. The way they hoot and holler as they close in, then they just start swarming the group en masse.
@myfootballjesus
@myfootballjesus 3 ай бұрын
yes it was REAL fire, the actress was burned , it happened back then
@002DrEvil
@002DrEvil 3 ай бұрын
Other classics could include:- On the Town (1949), Snow White & the 7 Dwarfs (1937), Dumbo (1941), Bambi (1942), The Great Escape (1963), Charade (1963), Roman Holiday (1953), It's a Wonderful Life (1946), Some Like it Hot (1959) and The Odd Couple (1968)
@paulybarr
@paulybarr 18 күн бұрын
In answer to your question about " what's shot on location and what is a a painting?' the answer is that the entire movie was shot in the MGM studios ( now Sony) in Los Angeles. The fabulous panoramas of Kansas are as much a product of the brilliant scenic designers as the gorgeous fantasy backdrops in the Oz section that makes up the rest of the movie. And, yes, the witch does descend through a trap door, and the flames are real- in fact, Margaret Hamilton was badly burnt on one take, and was hospitalised for some time.
@jenfries6417
@jenfries6417 3 ай бұрын
Alice in Wonderland and Alice's Adventures Through the Looking Glass came first. The stories of Alice and Wonderland are British, written by Lewis Carroll in the 19th century. The Wizard of Oz and the whole extensive series of books and stories set in the land of Oz is American, written by Frank L. Baum in the 20th century. Oz is the first, if not the only, fully realized fantasy world that is based on the USA. Also, E Pluribus Unum is the motto of the United States. It means "From the Many, One." It's on the Great Seal of the US and printed on our money and a bunch of other official stuff.
@gugurupurasudaikirai7620
@gugurupurasudaikirai7620 3 ай бұрын
"The land of E Pluribus Unum" I can see why a non American would wonder what that is. E Pluribus Unum is latin for "out of many, one" and is the motto of the United States, it's frequently printed somewhere on American currency. The Wizard is basically saying he's taking her back to the US
@nickmasuen1859
@nickmasuen1859 Ай бұрын
The motto E Pluribus Unum "out of many, one" is on the $1 bill because that motto is part of the Presidential stamp which is on that bill and it goes all the way back to July 4th 1776 when the Founding Fathers signed the Declaration of Independence. A committee made up of John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, & Thomas Jefferson were the ones tasked with designing a seal & motto for the U.S at the time and when many in Congress, in the 1770's & 80's, opposed to a theistic motto for the nation that would be relating to or characterized by belief in the existence of a god or gods.
@artsysabs
@artsysabs 3 ай бұрын
By the way, the lion’s costume is made from a real lion pelt 😳
@MegaTurkeylips
@MegaTurkeylips 3 ай бұрын
E Pluribus Unum= Out of many, one. Particular to the United States, It represents a Republic. Its Latin. . Rome was also a republic, until the Caesars showed up.
@devsargent-macatangay
@devsargent-macatangay 3 ай бұрын
43:01 HERE'S JOHNNY 😂
@gugurupurasudaikirai7620
@gugurupurasudaikirai7620 3 ай бұрын
I'm sure they'd be happy that this became such an enduring classic because this was a miserable movie to film. The Technicolor required lighting that made the set very hot, sometimes over 100 degrees Fahrenheit (pushing 40C). Most of the cast had to arrive on set at 4 in the morning for makeup and costumes, and frequently wouldn't leave until 7 pm or later. They had to replace the first actor for the Tin man because the first one suffered a toxic reaction to the aluminum dust and had to be hospitalized
@jeffmande4671
@jeffmande4671 2 ай бұрын
I always think what it must've been like to be in the theater in 1939, when Dorothy opened the door to Munchkinland.
@Jacismiles4u2
@Jacismiles4u2 3 ай бұрын
I was 6 or 7 when I first watched this movie. It terrified me so badly I had nightmares for weeks. (The part about the monkeys). I was not able to watch it again for 10 years or more. ;-)
@SalGomezVillanueva-ex4ot
@SalGomezVillanueva-ex4ot 3 ай бұрын
Check out the sequel made by Disney called Return to Oz (1985) really good and scary sequel 😊
@jeandoten1510
@jeandoten1510 3 ай бұрын
The wizard mentions the land of "e pluribus unum"-- which means "out of many, one" and is the "motto" of the United States of America and printed on most of not all of our currency iy's been a while since I checked my pocket chsmfe.)
@scruffyjanny555
@scruffyjanny555 3 ай бұрын
This freaking guy and his Karan face all throughout the reaction just itching to find something to be offended over in a movie that’s almost a century old. Sad.
@t.o.toonstubetwo.4138
@t.o.toonstubetwo.4138 3 ай бұрын
23:35 fun fact in the book he looked like a real lion.
@matityaloran9157
@matityaloran9157 3 ай бұрын
44:04, remember when Dorothy met him he said his only fear was “a lighted match”. He’s scared of fire.
@adrianflores2423
@adrianflores2423 3 ай бұрын
A masterpiece and all-time classic. This film is a well-known turning point in cinema. Love every moment of this film.
@zedwpd
@zedwpd 3 ай бұрын
The witch sent a little insect to slow them down in the haunted forest. She sent the Jitterbug and they cut that dance sequence out of the movie during editing.
@morganghostbusters-egonfan
@morganghostbusters-egonfan 3 ай бұрын
There is a Tom and Jerry animated re-telling of this movie, but however, it skips a few parts.
@theshadowfax239
@theshadowfax239 3 ай бұрын
Yes, there are 4 witches in the books. Two good witches and two wicked witches. Glinda is the good witch of the Sorth.
@jacobjimenez07
@jacobjimenez07 3 ай бұрын
The wizard of oz movie: 😁😁😁🌈 Behind scenes of making the movie: 😳😰
@teenflash19
@teenflash19 3 ай бұрын
13:37 those small people dancing is a crisis but red smoke appearing is
@morganghostbusters-egonfan
@morganghostbusters-egonfan 3 ай бұрын
Can’t wait to see Wicked when it comes to theaters
@marezesim8119
@marezesim8119 3 ай бұрын
everyone should see this movie.. it is a timeless classic for a good reason.. some of the acting and costume work is spectacular but sadly the filming restrictions were low level ... love the way you edit and so glad you show subtitles on the film ... notice in Oz whenever they show her house it is still sepia colored ... not 100% sure but I think this predates Dr Seuss.. the trap door was real and the actress actually got burned doing the stunt ... scarecrows line about people without brains do a lot of talking is my favorite
@oliverbrownlow5615
@oliverbrownlow5615 3 ай бұрын
Dr. Seuss published his first children's book, AND TO THINK THAT I SAW IT ON MULBERRY STREET in 1937, but the vast majority of his works were published after World War II (starting in 1950). Dr. Seuss made a fascinating live-action movie himself, however, called THE 5,000 FINGERS OF DR. T (1953).
@brandonflorida1092
@brandonflorida1092 3 ай бұрын
Dorthy's comment to the scarecrow that she thinks she'll miss him most of all comes from a story subplot that was edited out in which Dorothy and he had a little romance. If you want classics, you might try "Stalag 17." It takes place during World War 2 in a Nazi concentration camp for American officers. The men know that there is a collaborator in their midst who is secretly reporting to the guards. They decided it is one officer who isn't well liked anyway and beat him to a pulp. He isn't the traitor and after being misidentified as the traitor, he resolves to figure out who it really is.
@ink-cow
@ink-cow 3 ай бұрын
Oz was a very real place in the original books. It wasn't even "over the rainbow" but located in some mysterious place in the USA, surrounded by a deadly impassible desert. Making it a dream with characters from her real life was devised for this musical adaptation. They probably got the idea from the earlier silent version, where Dorothy was swept to Oz with some of the farm hands who took on the disguise of a straw man and tin man. The dream version for the musical helped soften the story somewhat, because the books are actually pretty gruesome fairy tales. The tin man, for example, got that way because a curse was put on him, and he chopped off parts of his real human body bit by bit, until he finally chopped off his head too. Melting witches with water is a consistent phenomenon, and one witch is executed for her crimes by being thrown into a lake. Each quadrant of Oz was ruled over by a witch until Dorothy arrived. The wicked witches controlled the east and west, and the good witches controlled the north and south. An unimportant deviation, Glinda was the witch of the south, not north. The munchkins were watched over by a different witch. Glinda does not intervene; Dorothy has to travel south (more adventures) after the Wizard's balloon takes off, in order to get help from Glinda.
@TheLoonyLovebad1
@TheLoonyLovebad1 3 ай бұрын
In the book its not a dream. When she gets back to Kansas she falls out of the sky into the field and runs back home. I don't love the change to it being a dream
@RYMAN1321
@RYMAN1321 3 ай бұрын
One of the most iconic films in history. And the theme song “Over The Rainbow” will forever be one of the greatest soundtrack songs ever. I also appreciated the fact that they changed Dorothy’s slippers which in the book were silver to Ruby red in the film. Red definitely stood more out. PS the lion jumping though the window at 37:44 will never *not* be hilarious 😂
@EastPeakSlim
@EastPeakSlim 2 ай бұрын
In 1998, for a Wizard of Oz listing on TCM, writer Rick Polito wrote, "Transported to a surreal landscape, a young girl kills the first person she meets and then teams up with three strangers to kill again."
@RFReactions
@RFReactions 3 ай бұрын
15:10 yea the actor that played the wicked witch got badly burnt with that flame when she disappeared
@a.g.demada5263
@a.g.demada5263 3 ай бұрын
Ouch
@johnnehrich9601
@johnnehrich9601 3 ай бұрын
The original book, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz was written in 1900. In it, Oz is a real place, and a lot scarier than this movie. The author went on to write about a dozen sequels. All these books, with their original illustrations (so you can see how the characters were originally imagined) are in the public domain and can be read free of charge. The books are inspired quite a lot, sometimes close, sometimes way over the edge. Oz was meant to be an American fairy tale but the author, L. Frank Baum, had a crazy imagination. Disney purchased the rights to all the sequels, even though MGM still held the rights to the first book. In the 1980's, Disney produced Return to Oz, mostly based on the second and third books, Land of Oz and Ozma of Oz. This was not a musical and was very dark like the books. Many people hated it, particularly if they hadn't read any of the books. Oz fans consider this movie a sort of love letter to Baum's books.
@johnnehrich9601
@johnnehrich9601 3 ай бұрын
In the book, for instance, the four are attacked by a number of wolves, sent by the witch. The tin woodsman winds up chopping off the head of each. Also a flock of crows, which the scarecrow deals with by twisting the neck of each.
@matityaloran9157
@matityaloran9157 3 ай бұрын
Baum insisted that his goal in writing the Oz books was to rid fairy tales of their dark elements
@ednafenton7558
@ednafenton7558 3 ай бұрын
The Wizard of Oz is my favorite movie! Couldn't wait to watch it every year when it came on tv(1960s/70s)! I just watched it today with my great nephew(6yr old). He loves it to. Introduced him to it when he was 4.
@bobchisholm7487
@bobchisholm7487 9 күн бұрын
Someone may have already mentioned the conspiracy theory that Glinda used Dorothy to get rid of her rivals.
@genericcartoonreactionchan3890
@genericcartoonreactionchan3890 3 ай бұрын
I thoroughly enjoy your animated movie reactions, but there are many classics you haven't yet covered. I suggest you explore the history of animation by starting with "The Adventures of Prince Achmed" from 1926. From there, you could proceed chronologically, reacting to each subsequent film and observing the evolution of animation. You may include both cartoons and anime, excluding recap films and those you've already seen. Alternatively, you could create a separate video summarizing and reviewing the films you've already watched. This is merely a suggestion, but I believe it would be a fascinating journey through the history of animation.
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