
WIZARD OF OZ GIRL WITH GUN MOVIE
The film starts out with credits, which open up with a very cloudy background in a black and white sepia tone.Īfter the film dedicates the picture to the ones young at heart, we open with the movie taking place in rural Kansas, also filmed in gloomy sepia tone. 1.1 Differences between source material and adaptation." Are you a Good Witch, or a Bad Witch.?" ― Billie Burke as Glinda the Good (1939) " Now close your eyes, and tap your heels together three times, and repeat to yourself There's no place like home. The film is also famous for being traditionally played every year annually on various television stations during Thanksgiving and Christmas, allowing each generation to share the magic and fall under its irresistible spell. The book was originally published in the year 1900 and though the film version departs a great deal from the actual source material, leaving many characters out and dropping several elements in order for the story to translate on to the big screen for its time, The Wizard of Oz never loses the moral and tender message that the book gave and is known to be one of the most timeless, ceremonially watched family movies ever. The movie itself is loosely based upon the original book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by L. She won a Juvenile Academy Award for her performance as the little Kansas farm girl named Dorothy Gale.

Harburg, and one of them, " Over the Rainbow," won the Oscar for "Best Song of the Year." It was also the film that gave actress Judy Garland one of her most iconic roles. The songs were written by Harold Arlen and E.Y.


WIZARD OF OZ GIRL WITH GUN FULL
It was one of the very first full length pictures along with few others, such as Gone With The Wind (1939) and The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938), to be shot in Three Strip Technicolor instead of in all black and white or Two Strip Technicolor, The film was directed by Victor Fleming. The Wizard of Oz is a Hollywood musical produced by MGM in 1939, consisting almost of an all star cast.Ī richly detailed watercolor painting of The Wizard of Oz Aug" Toto, I've a feeling we're not in Kansas anymore." ― Judy Garland as Dorothy Gale (1939)
