Great Oz Rip-Job

When the spirit is upon N.Y. Times critic Manohla Dargis, whether in positive or negative mode, it’s always a great read. So I love her disemboweling of Sam Raimi‘s Oz The Great and Powerful, and especially this graph:

Oz the Great and Powerful is exactly the kind of extravagant misfire that professional pessimists offer as proof that ‘they’ — as in the big studios and that amorphous easy target called Hollywood — don’t make movies like they used to. One of the delightful things about the original Wizard of Oz film is that it turns a girl’s reverie, specifically her dream of escape and her own imagination, into a beautiful metaphor for movies. When Dorothy opens her front door onto a Technicolor wonderland, the moment evokes what a 1930s moviegoer might have experienced when watching a color film for the first time. Come into this magical place, the filmmakers and, by extension, Hollywood itself seemed to be telling the audience, and share in this dream — a dream called Oz that we also call the movies.

“The studios sometimes still gamble on fantasies that sweep audiences up and away, though often the biggest-budgeted releases are war movies in superhero drag or cartoons about characters whose adventures, much like that of Oz in this telling, track like therapeutic journeys (follow your dream of self-actualization) instead of transcendent excursions (just dream!). Loaded with special effects, big bangs and generic narrative beats, these movies nonetheless sometimes take you where you’ve never been before. Mostly, though, like Oz the Great and Powerful, these fantasies drag you back to the same dreary, heavily trod destination, to the same exhausted formulas, gender stereotypes, general idiocy and a mind-set that values special effects over storytelling. Yes, companies make movies for shareholders; they have for decades. But who is the audience for the numbly mistitled Oz the Great and Powerful?”

  • Mr Bohemian

    Are they rerunning the same reviews they did for Return to Oz with a title change. I am glad Walt didn’t make Rainbow Road to Oz the reviews might have dear uncle cry.

  • Anthony Thorne

    NIGHTMARE MOVIES author Kim Newman, (probably the most genre-savvy author over at SIGHT AND SOUND), gave it a very positive and laudatory review, so I’m not putting on Manohla’s hairshirt just yet. The pissy, handwringing reference above to ‘gender stereotypes’ in a fantasy based on source material more than a century old is pretty funny though.

  • chien_clean

    Every reviews made by Dargis always end up being about feminism. That’s like the only thing she thinks about.

  • http://twitter.com/childerolandusa childerolandusa

    James Franco is terrible in this. Kunis is okay until she turns. Her storyline is too abrupt anyway, and he’s such a schmuck that her lovesickness over him is as unpersuasive her insistence that he is some great savior. (According to “the prophecy” — because you can’t have a fantasy adventure without some chosen one, apparently.) Weisz and Williams are really good, though.

  • http://www.facebook.com/john.wages.5 John Wages

    Just be thankful it wasn’t directed by Baz. Isn’t there a new Almodovar we can discuss?

  • Guest

    The last Disney release with a female screenwriter was Alice in Wonderland and before that Freak Friday in 2003. Thank God Dargis points this out. Has there ever been a Disney film directed by a woman? I wish other journalists would say the obvious which is that these sexist stereotypes that studios use to sell movies are old and stale. There is a reason Wicked has made over a billion dollars and is the largest grossing piece of material Universal owns and they move hasn’t been made yet.

  • George Prager

    I saw FOR THE LOVE OF THE GAME on a Peter Pan bus. Played much better than it did in the theater.

    • http://twitter.com/jessecrall Jesse Crall

      I saw that in theatres when I was 9 and as soon as “Psycho” Steve Lyons came on I knew it would blow.

  • fitz-hume

    I’ve yet to see this but based on the trailers James Franco seems like a major casting mistake.

  • zantetsupowaa

    Pro-tip. The ’39 Wizard of Oz is not the “original” adaptation of the books.

  • Circumvrent

    I usually have a high-tolerance for big blockbusters – I mean, I won’t go, but I don’t mind people who like to, and anticipate them. They’re part of Cinema’s DNA since the beginning, and I’m sure that their financial success makes a lot of smaller movies possible.

    That said, I cannot wrap my head around the fact that anyone sought to write, sought to direct, did craft services for, acted in, lit, shot, edited and marked a sequel to THE WIZARD OF FUCKING OZ, a stone-cold classic bonafide perfect movie, and that, on top of it, a whole shitload of people were eager to see it, and plopped down anywhere from 8 to 14 American Dollars to do so.

    Watching a Franco-starring prequel to The Wizard Of Oz sounds like something to do in a brand new circle of hell.

  • zantetsupowaa

    So why is Mila Kunis dressed like a pimp, anyway?

  • JLC

    I suspect that once this weekend is over, Disney will be having the last laugh. How many HE posts on Oz has this been? 7? 8? I don’t recall Alice in Wonderland getting this much attention. And Smurfs, Chipmunks, etc. gets none at all.
    Disney is already working on the sequel. And don’t be surprised if it isn’t a remake of Wonderful Wizard. The source material is vastly different from the MGM film, which used about a third to half the book. The rest of the book isn’t very good, but it provides enough extra stuff for Disney to put it’s own stamp on it. Then Dorothy does meet-and-greets at the Magic Kingdom and that’s that.

  • Bobby Peru

    “James Franco is terrible in this”

    No, sorry — wrong. Franco is the best part of this mess by a long shot. He knows exactly what kind of film he is in and the audience I saw it with reacted strongly to him and his every wink-wink, self-effacing gesture. It’s a knowing and smart performance.

  • Bob Hightower

    The Wizard of Oz in that picture looks just like Lincoln. Just sayin’, Jeff.

  • Bob Hightower

    I still haven’t caught up with the 1925 WIZARD OF OZ, directed by Larry Semon, who plays the Scarecrow.