A second "Wizard of Oz" project, set up at Warners proper, skews a little darker -- it's written by "A History of Violence" screenwriter Josh Olson and focuses on a granddaughter of Dorothy who returns to Oz to fight evil. "Clash of the Titans" producer Basil Iwanyk and his Thunder Road Pictures are behind that one. ("Spawn" creator Todd MacFarlane is potentially involved in a producerial capacity, to give you some idea of the tone.)
A second "Wizard of Oz" project, set up at Warners proper, skews a little darker -- it's written by "A History of Violence" screenwriter Josh Olson and focuses on a granddaughter of Dorothy who returns to Oz to fight evil. "Clash of the Titans" producer Basil Iwanyk and his Thunder Road Pictures are behind that one. ("Spawn" creator Todd MacFarlane is potentially involved in a producerial capacity, to give you some idea of the tone.)
Cognitive Gear (post: 1379878) wrote:
Edit: Why can't they just make the Wicked movie instead of this?
KhakiBlueSocks wrote:"I'm going to make you a prayer request you can't refuse..." Cue the violins.
USA Today wrote:With the 3-D film Alice in Wonderland booming at the box office, Hollywood apparently thinks the time is right for remakes of the 1939 classic The Wizard of Oz, the Los Angeles Times reports.
Tuesday, the Times reported on Warner Bros. plans, which include one project that "skews a little darker" and focuses on a granddaughter of Dorothy who returns to Oz to fight evil.
The Times, in today's exclusive, says Universal and Disney have their own Oz-related projects.
Universal has Wicked, the Broadway musical that is a prequel to events in the film and the children's books by L. Frank Baum, while Disney's project tackles how the wizard came to sit behind the curtain in the first place.
"Some critics may bray, but if it's done well, the movie could be kind of brilliant, a deepening of the mythology that started with The Wiz and continued with Wicked," say Times reporters Steven Zeitchik and Claudia Eller.
(Posted by Doug Stanglin)
legal (post: 1380728) wrote:]Looks as if this movie is already finished ..so everyone is trying to jump on the band wagon.....Check it
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1592287/
Christopher Lloyd as the Wizard!!!! Love him!!
Also I found this
http://www.followtheyellowbrickroad.com
creed4 (post: 1382200) wrote:I want to see close adaptation of the book, not a remake, so far no one has done the journey to the good witch of the south. I'd love to see the valley of living china doll, and more of those adventures on film
It's hard to say whether the current climate in Hollywood and the culture is right or wrong right now. If I was working on this, I would focus on the "man behind the curtain" angle, with the Emerald City functioning as a dual metaphor for the media and economic machine. You could play head games with the audience to break the spell of suspension of disbelief while immersing them in brilliant special effects. I would cast a gay icon in the role of Dorothy, and draw attention to the fact that her companions are androgynous males trying to work out their gender issues. I would develop Dorothy into a more active and outspoken heroine, with a no-nonsense attitude about anyone messing with her and her friends (rather like the original novels, apparently). I would blur the lines as to whether it is the wicked witches or the Wizard of Oz that are the real villain, and whose is the real black magic. And I would highlight the conflict between Dorothy's stifling protestant agrarian environment, and the colorful, passion-affirming land of Oz.bigsleepj (post: 1379914) wrote:I really like the overall idea of a Wizard of Oz remake because I always wanted a movie that was closer to the book. But somehow, with the current climate in Hollywood, I can't see them as doing it right.
GhostontheNet wrote:her companions are androgynous males trying to work out their gender issues
I would blur the lines as to whether it is the wicked witches or the Wizard of Oz that are the real villain
GhostontheNet (post: 1382885) wrote:It's hard to say whether the current climate in Hollywood and the culture is right or wrong right now. If I was working on this, I would focus on the "man behind the curtain" angle, with the Emerald City functioning as a dual metaphor for the media and economic machine. You could play head games with the audience to break the spell of suspension of disbelief while immersing them in brilliant special effects. I would cast a gay icon in the role of Dorothy, and draw attention to the fact that her companions are androgynous males trying to work out their gender issues. I would develop Dorothy into a more active and outspoken heroine, with a no-nonsense attitude about anyone messing with her and her friends (rather like the original novels, apparently). I would blur the lines as to whether it is the wicked witches or the Wizard of Oz that are the real villain, and whose is the real black magic. And I would highlight the conflict between Dorothy's stifling protestant agrarian environment, and the colorful, passion-affirming land of Oz.
You might not like my creative decisions, but the first rule of any Wizard of Oz remake is that if it doesn't pay its dues to the legacy of Judy Garland, it's dead in the water. The Wizard of Oz was a film released against the backdrop of a decade of The Great Depression, amidst times of great social instability, rather like our own. In this respect, the original film can either be viewed as an escapist fantasy on the eve of World War II, or as a political allegory about the economic institutions that constituted this state of affairs. As the former interpretation is quite common, the film has been widely lampooned. This is made all too clear by the runaway success of Wicked, which deconstructs the film by enabling identification with its villain's subjective point of view. As one of the first color films that reminds viewers to pay heed to "the man behind the curtain", a film that has left quite a cultural legacy, any new Wizard of Oz film will be as much about the art of filmmaking and Hollywood, the other magic city, as it is about the plot. Let's face it, people don't take this on the surface level like they used to, so the film will have to establish its credibility against a new cultural backdrop.chibiphonebooth wrote:Thank you, but no
The simple fact that the lion is cowardly, and that his manes are curled and tied with ribbons cue the audience in that this is no ordinary lion. If he is to become a king of the lions, then he will become a glamour king. Remember, "androgynous" means possessing characteristics associated with both masculinity and femininity, and The Cowardly Lion is no typical male lion.Nate (post: 1382896) wrote:The Cowardly Lion has a mane and only male lions have manes. So um that is pretty much the opposite of "androgynous."
Dorothy begins by dropping a house on the other wicked witch, which in political terms send as clear a signal as the assassination of an allied leader. If the wicked witch is cruel to Dorothy and her friends, it is in no small part because they pose a personal threat to her and her dominion. The Wizard, meanwhile, does not so much give away free stuff as strike a bargain that he says he will honor in the event of Dorothy's elimination of his political rival. Once the deal is done, he tries to weasel out of honoring his part of it by hiding behind a menacing illusion, and only in the event of the exposure of his personal vulnerability does he stick to his side of the bargain. The mere fact that he has already prepared and hides behind such a menacing illusion hints that he has a far less than benevolent relationship with his subjects, who are terrified by the threat of the "great and powerful Oz". In short, the Wizard's rule is one of terror and deception. And what indeed would become of Dorothy and her friends if she neither destroyed, nor intended to destroy either of the wicked witches? My guess is that they would be in for a much less warm reception...The witch tried to set the Scarecrow on fire and the Wizard gave him some free stuff so I think it is pretty clear who the villain is unless setting people on fire is considered common courtesy these days. If so I would like you to act as my defense lawyer in the near future.
GhostontheNet (post: 1382906) wrote:The simple fact that the lion is cowardly, and that his manes are curled and tied with ribbons cue the audience in that this is no ordinary lion. If he is to become a king of the lions, then he will become a glamour king. Remember, "androgynous" means possessing characteristics associated with both masculinity and femininity, and The Cowardly Lion is no typical male lion.
GhostontheNet wrote:The simple fact that the lion is cowardly, and that his manes are curled and tied with ribbons cue the audience in that this is no ordinary lion. If he is to become a king of the lions, then he will become a glamour king.
Remember, "androgynous" means possessing characteristics associated with both masculinity and femininity, and The Cowardly Lion is no typical male lion.
Dorothy begins by dropping a house on the other wicked witch, which in political terms send as clear a signal as the assassination of an allied leader.
If the wicked witch is cruel to Dorothy and her friends, it is in no small part because they pose a personal threat to her and her dominion.
The Wizard, meanwhile, does not so much give away free stuff as strike a bargain that he says he will honor in the event of Dorothy's elimination of his political rival.
Once the deal is done, he tries to weasel out of honoring his part of it by hiding behind a menacing illusion, and only in the event of the exposure of his personal vulnerability does he stick to his side of the bargain.
The mere fact that he has already prepared and hides behind such a menacing illusion hints that he has a far less than benevolent relationship with his subjects, who are terrified by the threat of the "great and powerful Oz".
And what indeed would become of Dorothy and her friends if she neither destroyed, nor intended to destroy either of the wicked witches? My guess is that they would be in for a much less warm reception...
Nate (post: 1382901) wrote:Ha ha good jokes.
Wait that is a joke...isn't it?
Now I don't know.
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