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		No. 48 - 
				Willie Wonka & the Chocolate Factory  (1971)Wolper 
				Pictures/The Quaker Oats Company, Paramount 
				Pictures
 It's 
		Scrumdidilyumptious!
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				Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory (1971), 
				DML Rating: 
				★★★★★★★★★★ 
				- perfect Director: Mel 
		Stuart; 
		Screenplay: Roald Dahl; based on the novel Charlie and the 
		Chocolate Factory by Roald Dahl;
		
		Rated G Starring: Gene 
				Wilder, Jack Albertson, Peter Ostrum, Roy Kinnear, Julie Dawn 
				Cole, Leonard Stone Movie Introduction: A 
		sweet boy, Charlie, from a poor European family, dreams of finding one of five 
		golden tickets hidden inside Wonka chocolate bars. The winners will be admitted 
		into the 
		eccentric Willy Wonka's magical candy factory. One after 
		another, tickets are found, all with greedy parents 
		pulling various strings to find give their spoiled children an unfair 
		advantage. As he last 
		ticket is found, Charlie's hopes are dashed. But wait, the last ticket 
		was a fraud! With his last dollar, he runs to the local candy story and 
		buy one more bar... Will this be Charlie's lucky day? Of course it is! 
		 Defining Moment: 
		Wonka's first appearance The movie builds toward one 
		moment, and it is pure cinema magic. Our five children have their golden 
		tickets in hand, and it finally time to meet the mysterious, reclusive 
		Mr. Wonka, the curator of the factory that nobody has ever visited. The 
		door opens and a sour-faced man, clad in a strange purple jacket and top 
		hat, begins to approach the gathered crowd beyond the locked gate. The 
		man 
		appears frail, using a cane to accommodate his noticeable limp. The 
		smile on Charlie’s fades as silence covers the crowd. Slowly he 
		approaches, removing his hat as he stops. Then he falls forward toward 
		the rock walkway… (Watch this great scene on
		
		YouTube.) 
		Something subtle you might have missed:  a dark, scary boat 
		ride There are elements at play in 
		this film that elevate it above simple children's fare. Honestly, I 
		don't know how this scene made it past the ratings board. I am speaking of the 
		not-so-fun boat ride. It's a part of the film where we start to learn 
		that Willie might be a little insane. Wonka, the children and parents 
		climb aboard a small boat that chugs through the chocolate river, then 
		into a tunnel. Once inside the dank cave, the boat picks up speed, the parents become 
		concerned, and several really disturbing images flash in the darkness: a 
		flying cockroach, a millipede crawling over a human face, an extreme 
		close-up of a human eye, Wonka's rival Slugworth, a lizard eating a bug, 
		a close-up of a scorpion's mouth, and even a chicken being decapitated. 
		Then our mysterious host begins singing a somewhat disturbing song. The 
		actor's reactions were real, as they had no idea Gene Wilder was going 
		to act that way. It's bizarre and unsettling, which is exactly how the 
		weird Wonka desires it. 
		 Memorable Quotes: 
		 
				"Invention, my dear 
				friends, is 93% perspiration, 6% electricity, 4% evaporation, 
				and 2% butterscotch ripple." - Willie Wonka 
				"How could you do 
				something like this, build up a little boy's hopes and then 
				smash all his dreams to pieces? You're an inhuman monster!" –
				Grandpa Joe 
				"So shines a good deed in a 
				weary world." – Willie Wonka Dad's Review: 
				It is every kid's wildest 
				dream to visit a chocolate factory. It's probably why I live 40 
				minutes from Hershey, PA. They have a wonderful ride within 
				their
				
				Hershey's Chocolate World building. You board the ride's cars and it 
				loops you through everything chocolate: How is grown, how it's 
				made into cocoa power, how they mix and blend it to create the 
				wonderful candies they produce - all while the wonderful smell of 
				chocolate is pumped into the air to whet your appetite. At the ride's end, you are 
				given a sample of their latest candy and welcomed to their gift 
				shop, bakery and soda fountain. It literally is "The Sweetest 
				Place on Earth."     
				You're craving some 
				chocolate right now, aren't ya? It's OK to admit it.  
				
				 It's 
				with this in mind that I begin my review of one of my all-time 
				favorite films. This wonderful musical presents a ton of 
				colorful, happy imagery for children, yet it is also serves as a cautionary tale. 
				Children who misbehave, and the parents who spoil them, might 
				need to rethink their actions. 
				This wondrous family 
				classic is broken down into two primary acts: the quest for the 
				golden ticket, and the adventure within the factory.  
				The film centers on Charlie 
				Bucket, a poor boy living with his mother and several bed-ridden 
				elderly relatives including his grandfather, Grandpa Joe. In 
				their small European town, mystery surrounds the Wonka chocolate 
				factory. It produces delectable sweets of all kinds, however 
				nobody enters or leaves the building.  
				Then Wonka announces that 
				he has hidden five golden tickets inside Wonka chocolate bars. 
				Finders will receive a tour of the factory and a lifetime supply 
				of chocolate! 
				After a case of ticket 
				fraud, Charlie dashes to the candy store, with his last dollar, 
				and finds the final ticket! He's in for a memorable journey.
				 
				The second half of the film 
				takes place within the factory itself. There the five winners 
				are encounter a miniature world beyond their dreams, a factory 
				where tiny men, called Oompa Loopas, perform all the work to 
				make the wonderful chocolate. The children can eat the flowers and 
				drink from a cocoa river. It's curator is the strange, eccentric Willie Wonka. This was my first exposure to Gene Wilder who was 
				destined to play the title role.   
				I must confess that I 
				really enjoy the fates of each of the spoiled, bratty kids. They 
				are soooo annoying. When, one by one, they fall prey to 
				their well-deserved (and non-lethal) outcomes, I inwardly cheer.   
				NOTE: Unless you are 
				somehow a glutton for punishment, I recommend skipping the Tim 
				Burton film on the same subject titled 
				
				Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005), starring 
				Johnny Depp. I am a huge Burton and Depp fan, but this effort 
				just misses the mark, in my opinion.    
				  
		
		Onto No. 49... Ruffians of the West Indies: 
		The Hex of the Inky Globule   |