I read that Judy found it difficult to be scared of Maragret because she was a lovely lady in real life, and they were good friends for a while after completing this film
This maybe my favorite bit of acting from Garland in this movie. I love that she's not screaming and wailing with her cries. She's almost lost in how she should react. She's having a hard time comprehending how she got here and in the end, this is a child. This is a child who just wants to go home.
@JD Woodward Imagery like that had been around for some decades; it was most likely pioneered, or at least refined, by the legendary French filmmaker Georges Méliès.
Won’t lie I get the feels anytime Judy’s crying scenes come up. I read from somewhere that the director told her to act like if her own pet ran away or died and it caused her to do so good in these crying scenes. But at the same time I wonder if the torturous stuff she went through behind the scenes was also what she thought of too while doing these scenes which was why she was so good in them. Won’t lie it hurts even more watching these scenes thinking about it. As a kid I viewed it differently, but as an adult it changed knowing the circumstances behind this film.
Judy didn't go through any "torturous stuff." Stories of her being insulted, belittled, starved, drugged, raped, and all that kak are lies. As for crying on cue, she was one of those gifted artists who are able to do that. And she didn't really need any prompting; she had the ability to will up sad thoughts. I should think one thing she might have considered was her beloved father's death three years before.
I cry everytime she was so greatful to have toto saved she forgot about herself...and I love that cause that's what I would do for my pets..and this scene is satin trying to take a soul but hers was to greatful..just to save her dog..I cry every time
Yes, Margaret Hamilton left behind an amazing legacy and continues to be revered not only as an incredible actress, but as a very kind and loving woman, mother and grandmother that brought one of the most beloved all time story characters to life. Nobody who has known her and spoken on her has ever had anything to say except wonderful things about who she was and the life she lived
The irony that Margaret (the witch) was one of the few who was nice to Judy Garland while she was being heinously abused by her mother and the studio execs. She was and will forever be an icon
When I played Nikko in the stage version, I actually stood there rooting Toto on until the WWW yelled that at me, then I reacted like, "Oh, yeah!" and took off after him.
@@farrellmcnulty909 No, he was the King of the Winged Monkeys. In the movie, he was the Wicked Witch's familiar, and she had clipped his wings so he couldn't fly. In the RSC version, he's fully winged and commands the army.
@@johnsax1445 I’m here in Oz, Auntie Em. I’m locked up at the Witch’s castle, and I’m trying to get home to you, Auntie Em! 😢 Oh, Auntie Em, don’t go away! I’m frightened! Come back! Come back! 😭
Well the sad thing is Judy was bullied on the set during filming. She was slapped by Victor Fleming to keep her in character including the scene where she famously laughed when the cowardly lion cried. She was also forced to wear a corset and she was forced to put weight on and was fed drugs as well, which lead to her infamous drug addiction.
@@rstein926 She was not bullied. The slap was a desperation move because the studio was about to shut down for the evening; ordinarily when Judy got a giggle fit, they just waited for it to peter out. She was not *forced* to do anything, and the only meds she was on was an appetite suppressant to which she did not become addicted. It really is time for all those BS lies to stop.
That’s what I thought too. Because she was treated terribly by the directors and MGM in general, I wonder if that hit her so hard and that was why her emotions seem so real in this scene to me.
@@rprince418 Quite true, but if you take the whole movie into account, Toto only gets locked in a basket once. The "second" time is only in Dorothy's dream. ;-)
It really does. I have never gotten emotional watching this scene until I read the backstory behind this movie and knowing all the things she went through.
@@JudgeDunfeeTheParkitecter Not while making this movie. Her father was three years dead (but had loved her while he was alive) and her sisters had no problem with her.
The scene that always hits me in the throat is when the Witch flips the hourglass over and screams at Dorothy. Judy Garland did an amazing performance as a terrified little girl in response to it, and it breaks my heart every time. I can’t imagine how rotten Margaret Hamilton felt about doing it.
Margaret Hamilton mentioned it was so hard having to be mean to Judy during these scenes even though she really had to be for her character. And I don’t blame her. She also said it was hard to see Judy cry for her scenes.
That part always gave me such existential dread ever since I was a child, it’s such a horrifying thing to imagine yourself locked in a room with an hourglass counting down the last minutes of your life
@@Met-Tech either that or Hamilton and Garland worked it out before a take snd probably laughef about it befote they filmed it. God knows I couldn't keep a straight face if I were playing either character.
Margaret Hamilton truly was and is talented! I think anyone who’s studying acting and has to analyze an antagonist should study all the scenes with Margaret Hamilton in this movie!
her gestures, her animated movements are not spoken of nearly enough given that she alone set the bar high when it comes to wicked witches without even trying! Im mesmerized each time I watch this scene in particular when she declares .. “ I can’t wait forever to get those shoes!!! “ as she runs up the castle stairs! 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
I’ve watched this movie I bet a thousand times. It will always be my favorite but, it’s so hard to watch as an adult. Judy had a struggle within herself and you just care so much about her and the others you just can’t fathom what they had to go through. I don’t care how many film try to be like this one, there won’t ever be another movie better that The Wizard of Oz.
The crystal ball is genius in this scene. But I can't help thinking, here's another scene that's so terrible to show to children. Throughout the initial screenings I read they kept having to remove scenes. I think I read some of the tornado scenes were cut because so many children were being carried out of the theatres. They also edited out the "Or Die" after "Surrender Dorothy." Perhaps the scariest scene for kids would be the Tin Man violently being crashed down into the haunted forest after saying he doesn't believe in spooks. OMG sorry to ramble.
Honestly it is with me too. Because of what the other person said with the crystal ball and Judy literally did amazing in this scene. I read she was told by the director to imagine if her own pet ran away or died to do these crying scenes and it’s no wonder she did great in these. However I wonder if she also thought of the awful stuff she went through behind the scenes as well to cry for these scenes. Now as an adult, it hits me in the feels watching this scene.
@@artisticalex1206 I had not read that, but it sounds right. Yes, that raw emotion combined with her talent is a true rarity. Her voice is a masterpiece in itself.
I saw this aged 4 in a cinema and nothing in any film has scared me as much. It’s so cruel how the Witch mocks Dorothy’s distress. It’s a really sadistic moment and it shocked me to see an adult woman taking pleasure in a child’s suffering. Very subversive in its way!
I understand that so many children were so afraid of the Wicked Witch of the West. That and so much hard crying that the kids didn't want to see The Wizard of Oz with their parents.
0:37 when the witch orders the monkey to throw the basket into the river I always used to think she said "Throw that basket to the reverend browning" lmfao
After seeing Wicked the musical I will never look at The Wizard Of Oz the same way again. I loved this movie and Wicked Witch was my favorite and Toto too. Margret Hamliton will always be the Wicked Witch Of The West. Toto was adorable and he was a cute dog. RIP Toto. Judy Garland died over a drug overdose and she was only 16 when she play Dorothy and Judy Garland was a wonderful actress.
You’d probably only be able to fly on it if you was a witch as well. That’s why Dorothy couldn’t have flown it even if she spotted it, because she wasn’t a witch.
@@georgemiddleton3315 good point. Of course I see it a little bit different. Glinda asked her if she was a good witch or bad witch,(she said she always had the power, and she knew she had it from the start) plus she was able to use those powers of those shoes to get her home which meant she had to call into the sorcery within her. So she probably could’ve flown on that broom if she only believed she could.
It wasn't a franchise, it was only one movie. No doubt she carried it, but with a different Dorothy and otherwise the same cast, it would still have been successful. But probably not the phenomenon it's become.
She did get an academy juvenile award for her performance in this film which before you as yes, that was a category for Academy Awards back then so she did get an Oscar in someway. It’s just a shame she didn’t get the Oscar for best female performance in a movie
Everyone did! Judy and Terry grew so close that Judy offered Carl Spitz (Terry's trainer) $400.00 to adopt her. Alas, Terry had her career to get on with, so Spitz had to reluctantly refuse. Anyway, Judy already had two dogs. 🙂
So... the witch gave her an hour? I'm guessing. Was that how long she needed to research how the murder needed to happen? I doubt it was just a courtesy. If it was she would have had the monkeys bring her a bowl of bananas or some kind of last meal.
2:34 watching this part of the movie now I’m older and have an understanding of what Judy was put through on set breaks my heart, she was such a bright light and deserved so much better 😢❤
Kind of pretty emotionally she is with how her hair style. Shouldn't the Witch state only as long as remains in that room she'll die with the sand clock. For she got out of the room and didn't die.
Her oscar-worthy scene was her face appearing in the crystal ball - I'LL GIVE YOU AUNTIE EM, MY PRETTY. We were watching it one night and my sister's granddaughters were there, too, and as I began belly-laughing, I was chided for being a bad influence on the little girls. "THAT'S NOT FUNNY!!" "OH YES IT IS!" I die every time.
It’s very hard to explain, but for personal reasons I never realized how truly amazing the acting was on the part of everyone in this scene. As a kid it never did anything to me, but as an adult it literally brings tears to my eyes when Dorothy is crying for auntie Em while Auntie Em is frantically calling Dorothy’s name. It absolutely breaks my heart because Dorothy is now at the pentacle of fear and for the first time truly understands how much danger she’s in and not only does she fear not going home and seeing her family ever again, but also the guilt she still feels from the pain she believes she caused Auntie Em.
I think this scene was shot at least three times on different days: once early on in production, when Dorothy had blond hair and the witch's makeup was 'less ugly', a second time, which is the majority of this scene, and then a third time after a 'sad' reprise of Over the Rainbow was ordered to be cut. The witch's prosthetic nose may have been lost by the crew in between the second and third takes, so they had to make a new one quickly which was slightly different.
@@talkingtadpole3001 Interesting speculation. I was thinking they just could have bent it back upwards, like Lucy did in the Bill Holden scene! The crystal ball scene is one of those never-forget moments in all of cinema. The music is perfect, as it is in most of the movie. Thanks for the insight.
@@talkingtadpole3001 All the earliest footage was scrapped because of the changes in the costuming. Nobody in the crew would have been near the nose, since it was put on Miss Hamilton's face early in the morning by her make-up man.
What exactly did the hourglass running out mean? Did it mean that if it ran out while Dorothy was still in the room, she would die? If that’s the case, she could have just turned it over when it was low or tilted it on its side. Or maybe it meant that the witch would be back to kill her the moment the last sand grain fell? Whatever the case, there’s not much clarity.
The fool, I am! I should've remembered! Those slippers will never come off as long as you're alive. But that's not what's worrying me, it's how to do it. These things must be done delicately or you hurt the spell.
I always laugh when Glinda says, "Begone before somebody drops a house on you, too!" and the WWW flinches and looks up, worried that it might just happen!
DOROTHY (sobbing miserably): Where are you taking me? I should have gone home to Auntie Em! SCARECROW: She should have. She should have. Now she thinks of it!
Nikko since he clapped happy when the witch died . Im sure he know was pretending to be on her side . But inside he sure felt sick inside doing this like toto in basket
20th Century Fox (With 20th Century Fox Fanfare (Alfred Newman Orchestra Mockup Cover (Outdated) Version, 1997) Fanfare) A Sony Company Byline Version, (Original, 2009-Kr Films WHAT IF -) (My Version), Fanfare (A Sony Company Byline Version, Logo UPDATE 2009-2013) Variant - Version Intro.
Fox Searchlight Pictures (With 20th Century Fox Fanfare (Alfred Newman Orchestra Mockup Cover (Outdated) Version, 1997) Fanfare) A Sony Company Byline Version, (Original, 2011-Kr Films WHAT IF -) (My Version) Fanfare, Fanfare (A Sony Company Logo UPDATE 2011-2013) Variant - Version Intro.
I read that Judy found it difficult to be scared of Maragret because she was a lovely lady in real life, and they were good friends for a while after completing this film
And everytime Dorothy cried Margaret would get emotional. Sometimes actors are quite the opposite of the character they play.
Judy made friends easily; she'd already been friends with Buddy Ebsen, Billie Burke, and Jack Haley before this movie was made.
@@myfunnyvalentine9940 Where did you hear that?
@@MaskedMan66 I remember reading it somewhere (maybe some article).
@@myfunnyvalentine9940 Do you mean maybe that Miss Hamilton got emotional every time she'd watch the movie and saw Judy cry?
I'll bet that Toto was thinking as he ran off: "I got to get help!"
Run, Toto, run!
Or he may of been thinking, “Man, these people need help” 😂
Toto was the Real Hero of the Movie.
Toto would give both Beethoven and Lassie a run for their money
More like "Fuck this shit, I'm out!"
This maybe my favorite bit of acting from Garland in this movie. I love that she's not screaming and wailing with her cries. She's almost lost in how she should react. She's having a hard time comprehending how she got here and in the end, this is a child. This is a child who just wants to go home.
that was so beautifully said & I couldn’t agree more 🌈
Judy Garland said that Margaret Hamilton was the nicest person to her on set... she was heavily abused on this set... so were many others.
Margaret treated Judy like a daughter.
Nobody was abused, least of all Judy; Mervyn LeRoy would have fired anyone who mistreated his star.
Bolger, Haley and Lahr were friendly as well
@@metaknight4230I just feel it in side effects from me set up for Derek Llewellyn feel like
@@MaskedMan66you might want to do some research before you comment. Judy was heavily abused by the head of MGM and her mother.
Margret Hamilton’s superior acting as the Wicked Witch.
Auntie Em, Auntie Em! Come back! I’ll give you Auntie Em, my pretty! 😆
@@lisamcdonald1014I just feel like my mind myself before seeing me most times
@@lisamcdonald1014Judy Garland) Derek Llewellyn)
@@briskbronco8292 Simply The Best. Raise a glass to a comic genius who takes sn evil person and makes her lovable.
@@farrellmcnulty909 How do you figure her for lovable??
I still have no idea how they got the images in the crystal ball. It was magical to me as a kid and I still find it amazing.
Same!!!
I’m a grown woman and I can totally agree! It is still stunning to me!
It was probably a form of back projection.
@JD Woodward Imagery like that had been around for some decades; it was most likely pioneered, or at least refined, by the legendary French filmmaker Georges Méliès.
@@artisticalex1206 I just feel like same way crying myself before seeing it reel life
Sinks my Battleship EVERYTIME,
"He got away, he got away."
:'--)
Won’t lie I get the feels anytime Judy’s crying scenes come up. I read from somewhere that the director told her to act like if her own pet ran away or died and it caused her to do so good in these crying scenes. But at the same time I wonder if the torturous stuff she went through behind the scenes was also what she thought of too while doing these scenes which was why she was so good in them. Won’t lie it hurts even more watching these scenes thinking about it. As a kid I viewed it differently, but as an adult it changed knowing the circumstances behind this film.
Judy didn't go through any "torturous stuff." Stories of her being insulted, belittled, starved, drugged, raped, and all that kak are lies. As for crying on cue, she was one of those gifted artists who are able to do that. And she didn't really need any prompting; she had the ability to will up sad thoughts. I should think one thing she might have considered was her beloved father's death three years before.
@@MaskedMan66 Derek Llewellyn feel like same thing as Judy Garland
@@MaskedMan66it’s not a lie. Unfortunately.
@@BR-mh5ki Yes, it is a lie. Judy was not hated or mistreated. I mean, come on, name me one good reason that either would have been the case.
It's looks like new ride made maze it's looks good I love it so much it's looks like new movie sounds like
I cry everytime she was so greatful to have toto saved she forgot about herself...and I love that cause that's what I would do for my pets..and this scene is satin trying to take a soul but hers was to greatful..just to save her dog..I cry every time
Satin??
She was probably thinking that toto would find the other characters and they would all save her or she just loved him too much
The way the wicked witch taunts her in the magic ball is diabolical!
Yes, Margaret Hamilton left behind an amazing legacy and continues to be revered not only as an incredible actress, but as a very kind and loving woman, mother and grandmother that brought one of the most beloved all time story characters to life. Nobody who has known her and spoken on her has ever had anything to say except wonderful things about who she was and the life she lived
The irony that Margaret (the witch) was one of the few who was nice to Judy Garland while she was being heinously abused by her mother and the studio execs. She was and will forever be an icon
"CATCH HIM YOU FOOL!" haha idk why I always laugh at that part.
When I played Nikko in the stage version, I actually stood there rooting Toto on until the WWW yelled that at me, then I reacted like, "Oh, yeah!" and took off after him.
@@MaskedMan66 😆😆😆😆😆😆PRICELESS!
@@farrellmcnulty909 *bows*
@@MaskedMan66 was Nikko the old man who announced the witch was dead after the water? He had the only speaking part I remember.
@@farrellmcnulty909 No, he was the King of the Winged Monkeys. In the movie, he was the Wicked Witch's familiar, and she had clipped his wings so he couldn't fly. In the RSC version, he's fully winged and commands the army.
“I can’t wait forever to get those shoes!” Epic 😄
🔐 🚪
Dorothy: (sobbing and crying) 😭 I’m frightened. I’m frightened, Auntie Em! I’m frightened.
@@katielawrence5420 Dorothy! Dorothy! Where are you? It's me, it's Auntie Em. We're trying to find you. Where are you?
@@johnsax1445 I’m here in Oz, Auntie Em. I’m locked up at the Witch’s castle, and I’m trying to get home to you, Auntie Em! 😢 Oh, Auntie Em, don’t go away! I’m frightened! Come back! Come back! 😭
@@katielawrence5420 🤪aUNTIE eM. aUNTIE EM. cOME bACK. 😈I'LL GIVE YOU AUNTIE EM, MY PRETTY. 😆HA-HAHAHA. HA-HAHAHAH!
Sometimes I wonder if these tears were real and judy garland was very scared and frightened of life
Well the sad thing is Judy was bullied on the set during filming. She was slapped by Victor Fleming to keep her in character including the scene where she famously laughed when the cowardly lion cried. She was also forced to wear a corset and she was forced to put weight on and was fed drugs as well, which lead to her infamous drug addiction.
The tears were real, but Judy was the sort of performer who was able to cry on command, like Ricky Schroeder and others.
@@rstein926 She was not bullied. The slap was a desperation move because the studio was about to shut down for the evening; ordinarily when Judy got a giggle fit, they just waited for it to peter out. She was not *forced* to do anything, and the only meds she was on was an appetite suppressant to which she did not become addicted. It really is time for all those BS lies to stop.
That’s what I thought too. Because she was treated terribly by the directors and MGM in general, I wonder if that hit her so hard and that was why her emotions seem so real in this scene to me.
@@artisticalex1206 She was *not* treated badly! Her emotions seemed real because she was simply a damn good actress.
That lady just never thinks to put a lock on the box she shuts Toto in.
Of course, these things must be done delllllicately!
This is only the first time she has.
@@MaskedMan66 Toto also escaped from the box on Miss Gulch's bicycle because the lid wasn't secured shut.
@@stravinsky1300 That was Miss Gulch, not the WWW.
@MaskedMan66 she's supposed to be representative of her.
@@rprince418 Quite true, but if you take the whole movie into account, Toto only gets locked in a basket once. The "second" time is only in Dorothy's dream. ;-)
I got to see this in a movie house last year. As many times that I have seen this, that was the best!
My wife and I once went to an outdoor showing of the movie with two of the original Munchkins in attendance! 🙂
This scene is about as perfect as can be. The music, acting, tempo and stakes. Incredible that it’s 80 years and still looks fresh !
Poor Dorothy.
I'm a little sad that Dorothy just got yelled at by the Witch. 😔
@@russellsprague1746 I was as a kid watching this, but as I got older it was "GO, MAGGIE! GO!" Hamilton rocks and rolls in this movie.
@@russellsprague1746 What do you expect a villain to do, be nice?
Judy Garland’s acting is so good WOW
After knowing the truth of Judy Garland, the crying parts hit harder
What "truth" would that be, then?
@@MaskedMan66go away. You know nothing and are just a troll
Her family and MGM always abused her
It really does. I have never gotten emotional watching this scene until I read the backstory behind this movie and knowing all the things she went through.
@@JudgeDunfeeTheParkitecter Not while making this movie. Her father was three years dead (but had loved her while he was alive) and her sisters had no problem with her.
Just going to remind everyone that this movie is 86 years old and looks like it was done last year. Amazing!
I agree! This movie is magical. Always will be!
It’s actually incredible!
The scene that always hits me in the throat is when the Witch flips the hourglass over and screams at Dorothy. Judy Garland did an amazing performance as a terrified little girl in response to it, and it breaks my heart every time. I can’t imagine how rotten Margaret Hamilton felt about doing it.
*shrug* It was her job.
@@MaskedMan66 They both probably had a ball. I wouldn't worry about it.
Margaret Hamilton mentioned it was so hard having to be mean to Judy during these scenes even though she really had to be for her character. And I don’t blame her. She also said it was hard to see Judy cry for her scenes.
That part always gave me such existential dread ever since I was a child, it’s such a horrifying thing to imagine yourself locked in a room with an hourglass counting down the last minutes of your life
@@Met-Tech either that or Hamilton and Garland worked it out before a take snd probably laughef about it befote they filmed it. God knows I couldn't keep a straight face if I were playing either character.
Margaret Hamilton truly was and is talented! I think anyone who’s studying acting and has to analyze an antagonist should study all the scenes with Margaret Hamilton in this movie!
her gestures, her animated movements are not spoken of nearly enough given that she alone set the bar high when it comes to wicked witches without even trying! Im mesmerized each time I watch this scene in particular when she declares .. “ I can’t wait forever to get those shoes!!! “ as she runs up the castle stairs! 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
I’ve watched this movie I bet a thousand times. It
will always be my favorite but, it’s so hard to watch as an adult. Judy had a struggle within herself and you just care so much about her and the others you just can’t fathom what they had to go through. I don’t care how many film try to be like this one, there won’t ever be another movie better that The Wizard of Oz.
This is my favorite scene in the Wizard of Oz 😍😍😍
The crystal ball is genius in this scene. But I can't help thinking, here's another scene that's so terrible to show to children. Throughout the initial screenings I read they kept having to remove scenes. I think I read some of the tornado scenes were cut because so many children were being carried out of the theatres. They also edited out the "Or Die" after "Surrender Dorothy." Perhaps the scariest scene for kids would be the Tin Man violently being crashed down into the haunted forest after saying he doesn't believe in spooks.
OMG sorry to ramble.
Honestly it is with me too. Because of what the other person said with the crystal ball and Judy literally did amazing in this scene. I read she was told by the director to imagine if her own pet ran away or died to do these crying scenes and it’s no wonder she did great in these. However I wonder if she also thought of the awful stuff she went through behind the scenes as well to cry for these scenes. Now as an adult, it hits me in the feels watching this scene.
@@artisticalex1206 I had not read that, but it sounds right. Yes, that raw emotion combined with her talent is a true rarity. Her voice is a masterpiece in itself.
Guys I was in the play in wizard of oz I was winky general
I saw this aged 4 in a cinema and nothing in any film has scared me as much. It’s so cruel how the Witch mocks Dorothy’s distress. It’s a really sadistic moment and it shocked me to see an adult woman taking pleasure in a child’s suffering. Very subversive in its way!
Toto escapes to Mendelssohn's Scherzo, Op. 16. Definitely worth a listen
2:11 Dorothy during Wicked's "For Good" number
No one else can beat crying like Judy garland r,I,p
There are some gifted performers who are able to cry on command, tears and all, and they always amaze me.
Ikr? Wish I could do that!!
Her acting has always amazed me. Knowing the backstory of this movie and what happened with her, it makes these scenes more sad.
@@artisticalex1206 Be careful what you read. There's a lot of B.S. told about this movie in general, and about Judy in particular.
Toto is just so cute!! 🥰
If I had a new dog, I would named it after Dorothy's dog 😊❤
Time's running out Dorothy
I just noticed, when Toto first escapes no one notices until Dorothy draws attention to it by yelling “Run Toto!” 🤦🏼♀️
1:37 That side profile of the Wicked Witch has always terrified me! 😳
Some schnozz, eh?
I understand that so many children were so afraid of the Wicked Witch of the West. That and so much hard crying that the kids didn't want to see The Wizard of Oz with their parents.
I doubt there were that many. I never minded her much.
This scene makes me cry
She’s my housekeeper,who uses a broomstick for transportation
She revealed one of my nicknames”my pretty”
Ma’am can you vacuum my floor and stay and babysit for the house
@@amandacousins928 ???
Are you talking about _13 Ghosts?_
0:37 when the witch orders the monkey to throw the basket into the river I always used to think she said "Throw that basket to the reverend browning" lmfao
Lady Margaret Hamilton was actually wonderful
I probably would sh*t myself as a kid at this shot 2:55 😂
When I was a kid and watched part when Dorothy was talking to her aunt onmy for the Wicked Witch to taunt her really made me feel awful for her.
2:48 the way Margaret Hamilton acted LoL
After seeing Wicked the musical I will never look at The Wizard Of Oz the same way again. I loved this movie and Wicked Witch was my favorite and Toto too. Margret Hamliton will always be the Wicked Witch Of The West. Toto was adorable and he was a cute dog. RIP Toto. Judy Garland died over a drug overdose and she was only 16 when she play Dorothy and Judy Garland was a wonderful actress.
Wicked isn’t canon to the wizard of oz
Keep it going, Shaun. Xxxxx
Hard to believe this is older than my grandparents😅 before the end of the war
Before the start of the war -1939
@ whaaat omg
@ like a month before it started. Crazy isn’t it.
Broomstick spotted in background at 2:10 I would of grabbed the broom and flew out of the window
You’d probably only be able to fly on it if you was a witch as well. That’s why Dorothy couldn’t have flown it even if she spotted it, because she wasn’t a witch.
Me too. Lol
@@georgemiddleton3315 good point. Of course I see it a little bit different. Glinda asked her if she was a good witch or bad witch,(she said she always had the power, and she knew she had it from the start) plus she was able to use those powers of those shoes to get her home which meant she had to call into the sorcery within her. So she probably could’ve flown on that broom if she only believed she could.
The phrase is "would have,'' and how would you know how to work it?
@@ErosDaArt She had no "sorcery within her."
I love this part ❤️
Me too
Dorothy locked in the chamber while Elphaba is upstairs singing a heartfelt duet with Glinda about their friendship 😂
Judy Garland MADE this franchise. Without her it would be nothing. ❤
It wasn't a franchise, it was only one movie. No doubt she carried it, but with a different Dorothy and otherwise the same cast, it would still have been successful. But probably not the phenomenon it's become.
JUDY ACTING WAS AMAZING AND WAS TOP TIER .!
Disgrace that Judy didnt get at least an Oscar nomination! 3:00 is so real and raw!!
She did get an academy juvenile award for her performance in this film which before you as yes, that was a category for Academy Awards back then so she did get an Oscar in someway. It’s just a shame she didn’t get the Oscar for best female performance in a movie
85 YEARS AGO. WTF?!?!?!!!
Almost 2025 and gonna be 86 years ago!
2:09❤. I went into this Functional freeze state and would feel what I see at that time during the night in Basic training(Army).
Just keep upending the hourglass lol
0:05 Toto just goes into the basket like he wants to go in there, of course Terry was trained.
0:04-0:05 Always wondered is that Toto making a growling noise?
No it's the witch
Tbh first seeing this scene I was afraid for Dorothy safety once the hour glass emptied
That was the idea! 🙂
“He got away. “ 😢
0:03-0:05 I bet Margaret Hamilton loved playing with Terry on the set
Everyone did! Judy and Terry grew so close that Judy offered Carl Spitz (Terry's trainer) $400.00 to adopt her. Alas, Terry had her career to get on with, so Spitz had to reluctantly refuse. Anyway, Judy already had two dogs. 🙂
So... the witch gave her an hour? I'm guessing. Was that how long she needed to research how the murder needed to happen? I doubt it was just a courtesy. If it was she would have had the monkeys bring her a bowl of bananas or some kind of last meal.
It's all in the Wicked Witch's dialogue. She needs time to figure out a way of killing Dorothy without damaging the magic in the shoes.
2:34 watching this part of the movie now I’m older and have an understanding of what Judy was put through on set breaks my heart, she was such a bright light and deserved so much better 😢❤
Especially the deleted scene where she sang that reprise of over the rainbow in full tears. Even the staff cried 😢
Kind of pretty emotionally she is with how her hair style. Shouldn't the Witch state only as long as remains in that room she'll die with the sand clock. For she got out of the room and didn't die.
It's called an hourglass, not a "sand clock." And it was not going to be the means of Dorothy''s death.
@@MaskedMan66 Well that's what the Witch of the West said.
@@matthewkretschmer7010 That's because the WWW was going to spend that hour cooking up just the right way to kill Dorothy.
I bet Glinda and Elphaba the Wicked Witch of the West is having conversations upstairs and singing For Good about their true friendship together.
We need John Parr in High Tone back, too. Xxxx
I love how the wicked witch had a soft spot for toto
@@eliassanchez1112 What makes you think she did?
@@MaskedMan66 well by petting the dog is like at the entrance of was it the bridge i couldn't remember
@@eliassanchez1112 She was just winding Dorothy up, and was all ready to have Nikko drown Toto in the river.
@@MaskedMan66 yeah but that failed cause the dog snuck out of the basket
Dorothy: Can I still have my dog?
Wicked Witch: NO!!!!!!
I don’t know why but that made me laugh so hard! 😂😂😂😂😂😂
Yes, me too
It makes me laugh every time and idk why either lol
@@artisticalex1206 Just roll with it. You get into it, it's fun - it is what it is.
Her oscar-worthy scene was her face appearing in the crystal ball - I'LL GIVE YOU AUNTIE EM, MY PRETTY. We were watching it one night and my sister's granddaughters were there, too, and as I began belly-laughing, I was chided for being a bad influence on the little girls.
"THAT'S NOT FUNNY!!"
"OH YES IT IS!"
I die every time.
It’s very hard to explain, but for personal reasons I never realized how truly amazing the acting was on the part of everyone in this scene. As a kid it never did anything to me, but as an adult it literally brings tears to my eyes when Dorothy is crying for auntie Em while Auntie Em is frantically calling Dorothy’s name. It absolutely breaks my heart because Dorothy is now at the pentacle of fear and for the first time truly understands how much danger she’s in and not only does she fear not going home and seeing her family ever again, but also the guilt she still feels from the pain she believes she caused Auntie Em.
"Pentacle?" A five-pointed star?
she still terrifies me
Has anyone noticed that the witch's nose changes shape about half way through the scene? Compare 0:34 with 1:39 .
I think this scene was shot at least three times on different days: once early on in production, when Dorothy had blond hair and the witch's makeup was 'less ugly', a second time, which is the majority of this scene, and then a third time after a 'sad' reprise of Over the Rainbow was ordered to be cut. The witch's prosthetic nose may have been lost by the crew in between the second and third takes, so they had to make a new one quickly which was slightly different.
@@talkingtadpole3001
Interesting speculation. I was thinking they just could have bent it back upwards, like Lucy did in the Bill Holden scene! The crystal ball scene is one of those never-forget moments in all of cinema. The music is perfect, as it is in most of the movie.
Thanks for the insight.
@@talkingtadpole3001 Interesting, but the thought of the crew losing the false nose is cracking me up 🤣
Except that it doesn't. All the noses (and chins) that Miss Hamilton wore in the movie were made from the same mold.
@@talkingtadpole3001 All the earliest footage was scrapped because of the changes in the costuming. Nobody in the crew would have been near the nose, since it was put on Miss Hamilton's face early in the morning by her make-up man.
Awesome upload! I had never noticed the witch's
mortar & pestle were sitting beside the hourglass.
Neat!
👠
What do the slippers do anyway
Obey the wishes of the wearer.
I always fall apart on the line I'LL GIVE YOU AUNTIE EMMM MY PRETTY😂😂😂😂😂😂
What exactly did the hourglass running out mean? Did it mean that if it ran out while Dorothy was still in the room, she would die? If that’s the case, she could have just turned it over when it was low or tilted it on its side. Or maybe it meant that the witch would be back to kill her the moment the last sand grain fell? Whatever the case, there’s not much clarity.
2:48
So cruel 😂
I love how evil the wicked witch is! Truly horrible and sadistic the way she laughs at Dorothy’s suffering! Lol😂
Can I have trailers with high tone vol.30, please? Cxx
I Feel Like 😢😢This When I have Bullied And Bullied And Hurt 😢😢By Bad People Who Are Evil 😈 And Wicked People 😢😢
0:54 NO!!!!
The fool, I am! I should've remembered! Those slippers will never come off as long as you're alive. But that's not what's worrying me, it's how to do it. These things must be done delicately or you hurt the spell.
Run, Toto, run!
Catch him you fool
Run, Toto, run! Run, Toto, run! He got away! He got away! 😃
1:35
Margaret Hamilton played the wicked witch both scary and comically that’s why I always loved the Wicked witch
I always laugh when Glinda says, "Begone before somebody drops a house on you, too!" and the WWW flinches and looks up, worried that it might just happen!
She wants to be having her dog can help her reunite rescue her
bro the wicked wich eavil bro
I watched it on tv and it so sad 😭 in the castle
Hannah Olson
Margaret Hamilton. Class lady and a gentle loving woman to children
Toto, Super Dog!
1:54.
Love the witches run.
He got away he got away what we were all thinking (:
Dorothy's scared 🥺
Ya think?
DOROTHY (sobbing miserably): Where are you taking me? I should have gone home to Auntie Em!
SCARECROW: She should have. She should have. Now she thinks of it!
?????????
i can't wait forever
Nikko since he clapped happy when the witch died . Im sure he know was pretending to be on her side . But inside he sure felt sick inside doing this like toto in basket
He was trapped (as were all the Winged Monkeys) by the power of the Golden Cap; also, the Wicked Witch had clipped his wings so he couldn't fly.
20th Century Fox (With 20th Century Fox Fanfare (Alfred Newman Orchestra Mockup Cover (Outdated) Version, 1997) Fanfare) A Sony Company Byline Version, (Original, 2009-Kr Films WHAT IF -) (My Version), Fanfare (A Sony Company Byline Version, Logo UPDATE 2009-2013) Variant - Version Intro.
Fox Searchlight Pictures (With 20th Century Fox Fanfare (Alfred Newman Orchestra Mockup Cover (Outdated) Version, 1997) Fanfare) A Sony Company Byline Version, (Original, 2011-Kr Films WHAT IF -) (My Version) Fanfare, Fanfare (A Sony Company Logo UPDATE 2011-2013) Variant - Version Intro.
Saving charger.
I want to see to Dorothy in disney oz the great and powerful 2
I heard that they want to do that.
@@MaskedMan66 well, that would make up for most of this cast never being in a disney film.
Help Jesus to escape from the valley of the shadow of Death!
Jesus doesn't need any help!
I Feel Like This After What people have Done To You 😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢
1:57 Door Close
Run toto run
Catch him you fool
@@tanishalee586 He got away! He got away!
I Love Judy Garland ❤❤❤
1:13 run toto run!!!
CATCH HIM YOU FOOL