Except in Wonka's case, it was a test of character. He wanted to give the factory to someone who demonstrated the honesty that Charlie showed in admitting to breaking the rules and returning the Fizzy Lifting Drink.
HotWax93 also was a test to see if somebody really would dedicate themselves to his Chocolate Factory. He gives it away he's not going to give it to some kid who would sale it to the next highest bidder.
+Tom Mantle That was very weird when he said that since because, he was the one who made the decision to tour the factory with kids. I guess he only said "whole day wasted" just to get rid of Charlie and Grandpa Joe.
"Whole day wasted" was meant to illustrate no one passed his test, that his efforts at finding a successor were in vain. It's not weird at all. But it is savage af
I was always impressed on the fact Charlie asked Willy Wonka about the well being of the other kids BEFORE ever even asking ANYTHING about any grand prizes...
Because people cared in the past, unlike today. I was born during a time when any person would drop their problems (Big, or small) to help someone in need. And now, people just don't care about much of anything anymore.
@@MrArcadia2009Sorry to break it to you, but the world isn’t black and white like that. There’s been evil people for centuries just as much as there have been good people that care to this day.
The "Whole day wasted" was Wanka's disappointment 😞 in not finding a decent child (or human). That's why he was mad. He had already written off Charlie at the time ⏲️. That's why he was so furious 😠 😡 👿 😤. The change was when all of a sudden, Charlie actually dropped 🫳 the candy 🍬 returning it to Wonka after all. That's when Wonka slowly cane to the realization 😳 that the day wasn't wasted.
You know, as much as people may not like it, Willy Wonka was right. Charlie was the only one who broke a rule and got off scott-free. Fortunately, he was wise enough to recognize what he did wrong, and gave the thing back to him.
It's not that wonka wasn't wrong, but that he did in such an angry and vindictive way. Especially considering he responded to the other kids' behavior with simple disinterest.
+George Liapes I love the way he did that, when Mike Teevee zaps himself through the TV, Wonka says "stop, don't come back!" in such a sarcastic, "ugh, I don't give a S***" tone, lol.
Grandpa Joe:“You’re a crook. You’re a cheat” Also Grandpa Joe: Pretended to be disabled for 20 years when his family was in poverty, and only got up to dance at the opportunity for free chocolate
I know it still makes me laugh " how could you do a thing like this all I ever did was scam my daughter out of housework and my grandson taking partime jobs to support my greedy behind.
Wonka was not mad at Charlie. He was pointing and yelling at Grandpa Joe because he had Charlie break the rules. Wonka wanted Charlie to win the whole time.
Why did Charlie have to be involved? I didn't think about it until now, but I would think that, when Grandpa Joe said "I'm gonna find out.", it was just going to be him and Wonka talking privately about what happened. (like it was none of Charlie's business) I think a better (less traumatic) way to do the scene would have been just those two yelling, with Charlie out of the picture so he wouldn't hear them. Then, after they were done yelling, Grandpa Joe would walk out of the room, close the door and say everything he said before Charlie turns around and gives Wonka the gobstopper. "Come on, Charlie, let's get out of here..." Then Charlie would enter the room and give Wonka the gobstopper. Gene couldn't warn Peter about the yelling. But if they did it this way, it would be sort of a subtle warning. (Before Grandpa Joe entered the room, he would say something like "Charlie, you wait out here while I talk to Wonka.".)
not really though,he was judging the kids as actual people,so when Charlie breaks the rules,he is not being better than anyone else,and Wonka shouting here is proof of that,what makes him a good kid is that he has no intention of harm to Wonka,he has respect for him,grandpa Joe is already a product of society,as much as every other parent,he however thinks highly of his grandson and knows that you shouldn't do that to a kid...build up his dreams only to make it fall under a line of a contract,like a scheme...
Wonka was pretending to be mad, just to see how Charlie would react, if he would be a good sport, or be a bad sport and try to give everlasting gobstopper to Slugsworth. Charlie was a good sport, which made him pass the test and won!
Does anybody besides me compare this movie to our elections? My mom (and I'm pretty sure other people) said rich people and corporations knew from the beginning exactly who would be the nominee, just like Willy Wonka knew from the beginning that Charlie was going to be the winner. This movie doesn't really make me think about that, because Charlie almost lost. But the 2005 movie does.
I think Wonka only yelled at Charlie and Grandpa Joe because he wanted Charlie to win all along. He knew the other children would inevitably fail, and so he wouldn't want any of them to win anyway. But when Charlie and Grandpa Joe took those drinks they betrayed Wonka's trust, and it hurt him more than anything the other children did.
Mia He knew Charlie was good at heart just curious. The fuzzy lifting drinks didn't seem that big a deal for him Bc everyone makes mistakes. The point is he was testing Charlie and he passed.
The look in Wilder’s eyes is so pure after Charlie returned the gobstopper. One of the greatest lines ever uttered in the English language, first by Shakespeare in the Merchant of Venice “So shines a good deed in a weary world”.
"So shines a good deed in a weary world..." Rest in Peace, Mr. Wilder. The world is wearier without your gentle smile, your hilarious hysteria, and your dewy-eyed tenderness. You showed us how the purest heart can come from the most humble beginnings. You taught us that monsters are often just misunderstood (and often the funniest dancers). You delighted us on stage and screen, and though you left us today, we've missed you for a very long time. I can't open a chocolate bar without the kid in me searching fruitlessly for a shimmer of gold. I can't listen to a violin without thinking about how its strains can tame the most frightening creatures. You can entertain an audience once, but you can make them laugh for a lifetime. Mr. Wilder, generations will be laughing forever as they take a tour in your world of pure imagination. Adieu, Mr. Wonka, and thanks for the memories!
People keep joking about everything being chopped in half because of a divorce. Wonka: You get nothing! Grandpa Joe: Well, at least you got half. Hehe.
"They'll be completely restored to their normal, terrible old selves." The way he effortlessly delivers that line, judging these kids without any hint of emotion, almost like he's deadpanning, just makes Gene Wilder's performance perfect.
As I got older and learned to put my feelings to the side, I became more of a fan of Wonka. There's a reason he lives in a factory 🏭 away from the normie population that are all indoctrinated and crab 🦀 in a bucket 🪣 minded individuals. Wonka is the up front and tell it like it is persona while everyone else is either politically correct or selfish and spoiled. I even see the resemblance of what their civilization is in today's society. That's why Wonks doesn't even try to stop them from doing asinine things and watched as the parents do little to nothing to stop their bratty kids. Call me a sadist, bust I was as satisfied as Wonka watching 👀 the kids learn their lessons the hard way (if they learned).
+joseph stanford I'll try my best but even this rant doesn't do the topic full creative justice. This adaptation of Dahl's book has heavy jewish allegorical cultural references due to director and actors heritage. From oompa loompa songs with bits of solomons wisdom. to artsy 3/4 (numbers reference) waltz imagination song crouching back to stature of child. Satan (mr slugworth is the polar opposite of wonka) but works for Wonka too despite his seemingly nefarious purpose. everything is halved in wonka because we are wired to only see half the truth. the whole thing is loaded with symbolism and the gobstopper is like the pinnacle of science where we "bump into the ceiling" because getting high and alcohol. Then Charlie sees the fan drawing near, panics and burps back down sobering up (Grizzly Reaper Mowing allegory). I'd wager this is fractal geometry that is infinite and manifests itself in the Lord's creation patterns (rivers, veins, lightning, wind, beaches, ferns, branches, roots, black holes, etc...) all have it. So by giving back to God his knowledge and not seeking to manipulate its natural laws for profit (slugworth) we can return to a state of paradise. A psychedelic tunnel ride into our minds reveals the light at the end of the tunnel. wonkavision is ultimately a symbolic 4D teleporter which is a God concept too. metaphorically its like if humans could observe a sim city universe develop with machine learning AI given free will and an instruction manual of riddles that no one person could ever solve on his own but rather takes a group of earths wisest men a predictably long time to sort out. The artists of today are capturing the theme well to an open third eye observer. They are the Music Makers and the Dreamers of Dreams. If you watch Mr robot at all, Abrahamic allegory show up a lot too. Dog returning to vomit proverbial scene and more by Sam Esmail.
+Fabisch Factor but that defeats the purpose of the illustration. the fine print copy of the contract is the law of the holy books. its really a well disguised theater scene of allegorical wisdom. and as always perspective is key that is it unlocks the safe.
The acting was so good, not a single emotion seems forced or faked at all. Half the time during the film the kids didn't know what Wilder would do because he wanted all of the kid's reactions to be genuine fear or joy. R. I. P. Gene Wilder, but damn did he live a life.
yup, on the psychedelic boat ride the girl who played Violet thought Gene actually went mad when he started saying the poem. And in this scene, nobody knew what Gene was gonna do and the boy who played Charlie was really shaken up. He wanted to tell Peter (who played Charlie) he was only acting but the director wanted Charlie's reaction to be real.
@@stevarino1989 Oh, Charlie's reaction was real alright.If I was Gene Wilder, I would have let the director have it, the same way Wonka let Grandpa Joe and Charlie have it. Look what you did to my good friend Peter! You wanted a real reaction? You got one! I HOPE YOU'RE HAPPY, ASSHOLE!!!!!!
@Allen Edwards fair play but I enjoyed Johnny Depp's performance in the "reboot". I always saw it as a follow up. Not a direct follow up but like this a New Willy Wonka comes in, old one goes out. Hits retirement and repeat until everything goes up in smoke..
He did but at the same time Wonka was only pretending to be overly angry to see if Charlie would have given into temptation or do the right thing. Wonka knew that all contestants would make mistakes but only one of them would make up for it in the end.
Wonka is more furious that Grandpa Joe suggested they steal the drinks and leading Charlie to do the same. Joe didn’t think it was such a big deal but rules are rules.
The older I get, the more I appreciate Peter Ostrum's performance as Charlie. He exudes innocence from his eyes. It doesn't come off as fake. Great casting.
People miss the point, Grandpa Joe isn’t evil or a mistakenly written character, he’s intentionally representative of the adults who are jaded and have given up hope on the world. Meanwhile Charlie represents purity and optimistic faith and goodness, and it’s his act of selflessness that continuously rewards him and teaches the old (Grandpa Joe) how to have hope again. It’s a brilliant contrast of characters two generations apart bonded by family. Dahl’s good writing shows because Grandpa Joe doesn’t completely snap out of it right away (not after the golden ticket, not after entering the factory, not after being treated, etc) because he’s still an adult and his jaded adulthood and selfishness is what creates conflict for Charlie. But in the end, you see Grandpa Joe finally understand the reward of true selflessness. The bad guys are the families who lose, and the spoiled children who are born rotten and have little hope of ever being good, only ever failing upwards in life. It seems like Ronald Dahl write this book from the perspective of Wonka. Working hard his whole life and maintaining his childlike hopefulness at his core through candy (or for Dahl, children’s books). The message of this movie resonates with a lot of kids whether you’re a Charlie or a spoiled brat. And for adults, they relate to Grandpa Joe but their jadedness is tested by Charlie. Dahl/Wonka are the puppeteers of the world in this story, engineering the outcome so that good triumphs in the end.
You know Wonka was right in the contract (Latin was correct too) but he let a good deed in a dreary world overlook the contract and give him his dreams. Makes me cry every time when I see the ending. Gosh, great film from the 70s.
I'm more surprised ruining a child's dream of getting a lifetime's supply of chocolate, which is a horrible thing to take from a child BTW, is undercut by him allowing children to break his rules and literally mutate when he had plenty of opportunities to stop them. Seriously, Oompa loompas are clumsy. Why is there not a fence in front of the river?
Fun Fact: The actors playing Charlie and Grandpa Joe were not informed of Gene Wilder's furious, enraged refusal to give Charlie his reward beforehand, so all of their reactions are essentially genuine and unscripted. Wilder and Peter Ostrum (The actor who played Charlie) had become close friends during filming and Gene really wanted to let Ostrum know beforehand he was just acting, but the director refused to let him.
Believe me if I was Gene I would've also been really afraid to blow up at my friend and startle him like that, even if it was just acting. I always thought it was Gene's idea not to tell anyone what he was going to do. What a wonderful man.
To his credit even though Wilder couldn't forewarn Ostrum about what was about to happen, he keeps his rage focused on Grandpa Joe (both because Joe was an adult and could handle being yelled at, and ultimately because it was his idea to steal the drinks and should've known a lot better)
"Fax mentis incendium gloriae" = The torch of glory kindles the mind. "Memor bis punitor delictum" = I am mindful that the crime is punished twice. :) GOOD DAY SIR
Loosely translates, what Wonka was reading from the contract meant, "I'll gladly forfeit my rights to the lifetime suppply of chocolate if I break any rules, as I am aware that all misdeeds go punished and I wish learn from my mistakes.
Thanks for translating that. Hard to find good translations for Latin since it’s a dead language. A lot of online translators for Latin that I find tend to slip towards Italian.
The reason why Willy Wonka has half of everything in his office is that director Mel Stuart couldn’t bear the idea of ending the film in an ordinary, boring office after the whimsical and extraordinary rooms in the rest of the factory, so they created the ‘Half-Office’ to give Wonka that extra dose of eccentricity. Later on the Wonka website, this would summarised by Wonka saying “Half an office is better than none.”
@@tonycanabal1659a genius never gets tired of inventing. He wasn’t tired of running the factory, you know. He gave it to Charlie because he had grown old, and he didn’t want his legendary factory to fall apart when he died. He needed someone to run it when he wasn’t there to do so. The half office was just a display of his eccentricities.
+Devin Tariel Two random quotes strong together, with the second being flat wrong. Memor non bis punitur peccatum is probably what he meant. I like to think t was likely garbled intentionally to sound more like legalese or maybe Wilder got it wrong, and they said screw it. Wonka's dialogue is loaded with literary references-- like Shakespeare in this seen. The screenwriters and directors for this film weren't dummies.
Why did Charlie have to be involved? I didn't think about it until now, but I would think that, when Grandpa Joe said "I'm gonna find out.", it was just going to be him and Wonka talking privately about what happened. (like it was none of Charlie's business) I think a better (less traumatic) way to do the scene would have been just those two yelling, with Charlie out of the picture so he wouldn't hear them. Then, after they were done yelling, Grandpa Joe would walk out of the room, close the door and say everything he said before Charlie turns around and gives Wonka the gobstopper. "Come on, Charlie, let's get out of here..." Then Charlie would enter the room and give Wonka the gobstopper. Gene couldn't warn Peter about the yelling. But if they did it this way, it would be sort of a subtle warning. (Before Grandpa Joe entered the room, he would say something like "Charlie, you wait out here while I talk to Wonka.".)
Charlie breaking the rules is part of what cements him being a kid. Others broke the rules in a selfish way, Charlie did it with a glimmer of love for the factory. So much, he did what he did in the end. 🍬
Not really since Wonka made it explicitly clear that no one should drink the fizzy lifting drinks. Charlie disobeyed and if he didn't give up the gobstopper, he likely would've gone empty handed
Perfectly summed up! That goes to show you that even good people make mistakes and can give into temptation. Charlie is the only kid with good behavior but he’s not meant to be perfect.
@@armorpro573Charlie did break the rules, I agree with you. And yeah, Willy Wonka had the right to dismiss him like he did. But Charlie was very nice and well-behaved unlike the other four kids. He knew what he did wrong, felt bad about it and gave back what was given to him. And Wonka extended his grace and gave Charlie the prize.
+Lord Prince Zuko The remake was pretty trash but I like remake Charlie better than original Charlie. Both play pretty one dimensional characters but the remake charlie does it better.
2:12 How dare Grandpa Joe say that! It was his idea to drink the fizzy lifting drinks even though Mr. Wonka told him not to. Then he calls him a crook because he thinks they didn’t break any rules!
You’re right. He didn’t even heed his rules when the contract distinctly said so.(even tho the rest of the texts were Latin and microscopic…) Damn… now that I think about it, That old man Joe’s to blame.
Honestly, I think Mike Teavee should’ve won. What Charlie and Grandpa Joe did with the Fizzy Lifting Drinks wasn’t any better than what the other kids did. They should’ve been eliminated and therefore Mike Teavee would’ve won. I’m glad they didn’t include the Fizzy Lifting Drinks scene in the 2005 version!
I really love the original Willy Wonka, Gene Wilder really showed us how upset and troubled Wonka was but how he changed his mind when saw the purity of Charlie returning the gobstopper, the final scene in the elevator was so incredibly magical and heartwarming as a child, RIP Gene Wilder
Except for Grandpa Joe being greedy!! “What’s in it for me??” That’s the point Wonka should have thrown him out of the elevator onto the cold hard floor he claimed was the reason he couldn’t get out of bed!! 😂
@@jamesbudd1022I wonder if the Charlie from the 2005 movie was concerned about their wellbeing as well especially since violet called him a loser and took the candy apple he was reaching for
This film taught me as a young boy the value of moral beliefs, Charlie Bucket was one of my favorite role models. If only kids today took to his example.
Ain’t no way Michael Scott said it first 💀 firstly, it’s a quote from The Merchant of Venice by Shakespeare, and secondly, this movie was made in 1971.
Fun fact: Grandpa Joe’s script had Willy having a serious conversation without yelling. When they filmed the scene and Gene started yelling, his face of confusion when he says “You’re a crook” is genuine. He was not expecting Gene to react like that since he knew he hated yelling. This scene is amazing.
This whole film is a masterpiece. I don’t care what anyone says!! The whole point of this film was for wonka to find a successor and I love every moment of it!!!
Personally, I wouldn't call it a masterpiece. I think the film is flawed with its share of good and bad qualities. However, this scene and Wilder's performance are definitely in the good
This scene demonstrates a powerful life lesson for all of us: to be responsible and to do the right thing. Wonka wasn’t mad at Charlie, he was mad at Grandpa Joe for not being a responsible guardian because he urged Charlie to break the rules by drinking the Fizzy Lifting Drinks. Charlie was unaware what they were doing was wrong. Unlike the other kids, Charlie wasn’t selfish or spoiled and that’s why Wonka wanted Charlie to win. He blew up like this because he wanted to test Charlie if he would do the right thing. Charlie had an easy out where he could’ve walked out with the Everlasting Gobstopper’s secret recipe and made so much money. So much he could’ve gotten his entire family out of poverty, but he didn’t. He chose to do the right thing and therefore was rewarded. Doing the right thing is never wrong. What you put out there in life will come right back at you.
Correction, Charlie knew what he did was wrong because He knew Wonka told them not to drink it. But instead of listening to him, he listened to his grandpa and trusted him that it would be fine to rebel. Sure the grandpa urged and tempted him to do it but He still was also at fault. Wonka was disappointed in Charlie and mad at the grandpa. The rest of what you said though was correct.
And he did. After filming this scene, Gene hugged it out with Peter Ostrum (the boy who played Charlie), apologising for what happened. Because, as it turns out, the director, Mel Stuart, refused to let Gene tell Peter that it was only acting.
@@quantasium I consider selfishness to be an accomplishment. I define it as the process of using your mind to take care of yourself, long term. If everybody did that then the world would be a much better place.
@@zr3755 If you must know: I am an atheist, I have read Ayn Rand, my age is unimportant. I would not consider myself edgy, I simply consider most people to be left behind (through no fault of their own). There’s nothing particularly special about me, other than my appreciation for reason and individualism-which is rather hard to find in this world.
Swear theres something almost golden about 60/70s movies. Maybe its the clothes and colours everyone wore then or that it was shot on film. Everything just looks mad vibrant you know
I hate doing comment essays but this one I gotta try. I presumed Willy Wonka was just a weird movie about candy but I believe it’s truly about beauty, creativity and the love that cannot be bought nor sold from making dreams a reality. Wonka was testing them. This was a final test, if Charlie were to inherit the factory he would inherit the pain that Wonka himself had to go through in franchising his product. Legal work and the “sell” can truly rob the beauty and innocence of the experience it is to make something fantastical. In the end Grandpa Joe was no different than the other parents. “If you want this, I’ll get it for you, screw him.” Charlie didn’t want the chocolate. He was amazed and in love with the wonder of it. Which stood out when he passed this test. Doesn’t matter if you’re rich or poor, you can either embrace life with love and thankfulness for its beauty or pessimistically and greedily because of your own selfishness. Charlie’s humility to bring the candy back to Wonka made him immediately qualified. It’s not about what you get. What you get is in fact what you give, and the giving the candy back to Wonka because it still would mean that much to Charlie regardless if he inherited it or not was what the gesture meant. So, movie ain’t just about chocolate. Especially in the room with everything halfway done. The office shows something is missing, half of it. Don’t sell your authenticity and love of life for a buck. Share it with others.
Good deeds and kindess are their own rewards. That's what "a good deed shines in a weary world" means. Most people in life are more like Wonka's character here in some fashion. Bitter or selfish or greedy, envious, pigheaded, whatever. The point is that not only is there a reason behind everyone (like being only half-complete here) but to show that person kindness anyways is an incredibly and totally possible thing. The world is weary and dark and grey but doing good even to the people who spite you brightens it up. Maybe one day they can look back and do the same or at the very, very least, the world got a little bit less horrible to both of them. Also, the point is one-liners and candy and corny music.
what about the beginning when they first enter the factory and they have the coat hangers on the wall that are actual hands and then the psychedelic room that has a magic door that somehow opens into the Alice in Wonderland hallway ... lol. I love that.
@@tommybakes5972wonka: will then, violet then? Charlie: she broke the rules too! Wonka: uhh, Augustus? Charlie: he also broke the rules! Wonka: Mike? Charlie: he did the same thing! Wonka: well than, both you and the other kids then! Grandpa joe: Damn Straight!! Now we can have the life time supply of chocolate! Augustus’s voice: *LET ME OUT I’M STARVING!!* Wonka: Augustus?! Charlie: Where’s Augustus? Grandpa joe: other there! [grandpa joe points to a near by pipe with Augustus in it]
I have a good idea as to why Wonka treated this like a test. He was trying to prepare Charlie for the real world by being assertive and using what happened with the fizzy lifting drinks as a template for why he needs to protect the legacy of the factory and such. There was no question that Charlie was going to get the lifetime supply of chocolate, but Wonka saw this as an opportunity to teach him one final lesson that not everyone in the world should be rewarded and that the Gobstopper would only be given to people who forgive others with a fair heart and mind.
Since the end of Fishtank, 60% of my recommendations have been Sam Hyde, Willy Wonka, and Lynyrd Skynyrd/Simple Man videos. I’m not even mad. But to be fair, two of those things were already heavily recommended to me.
3:09 When I was a little kid, I wondered how and why a funny looking Nintendo 64-themed Lego/school eraser was enough to completely switch off Wonka's shouty bipolar episode.
He basically did what we all do and clicked "I accept the terms and conditions" without reading them.
+Travalon And Wonka did what all companies do, pull fast ones on people.
+Travalon But very few of those contracts include a notion that a noble deed earns one the right to own a chocolate factory.
+Travalon WHY CAN'T IT REEEEEEEEEEEEEEAD
Except in Wonka's case, it was a test of character. He wanted to give the factory to someone who demonstrated the honesty that Charlie showed in admitting to breaking the rules and returning the Fizzy Lifting Drink.
HotWax93 also was a test to see if somebody really would dedicate themselves to his Chocolate Factory. He gives it away he's not going to give it to some kid who would sale it to the next highest bidder.
"I'm terribly busy. Whole day wasted." LOL
+Tom Mantle That always makes me laugh, too.
he was savage af
Tom Mantle mdmdmkddkkdkdkdkdjdkdkdkdkddjdjjd
+Tom Mantle That was very weird when he said that since because, he was the one who made the decision to tour the factory with kids. I guess he only said "whole day wasted" just to get rid of Charlie and Grandpa Joe.
"Whole day wasted" was meant to illustrate no one passed his test, that his efforts at finding a successor were in vain. It's not weird at all.
But it is savage af
I was always impressed on the fact Charlie asked Willy Wonka about the well being of the other kids BEFORE ever even asking ANYTHING about any grand prizes...
Though you’d think Mr. Wonka would’ve put that under consideration.
It has proved how much of a good soul charlie really is and how wonka choose the right one to be his successor 😊
Because people cared in the past, unlike today. I was born during a time when any person would drop their problems (Big, or small) to help someone in need. And now, people just don't care about much of anything anymore.
@@MrArcadia2009Sorry to break it to you, but the world isn’t black and white like that. There’s been evil people for centuries just as much as there have been good people that care to this day.
@@MrArcadia2009that doesnt include you tho does it. Everyone else doesnt care except you
R.I.P. Gene Wilder..."So shines a good deed in a weary world."
That's my favorite quote from him.
Mine too. And he has a LOT of good ones to choose from!!
"Hold your breath...Make A Wish...Count To Three"🍬🍫🍭😥😢😭
" We are the music makers, And we are the dreamers of dreams"
-Gene Wilder
Crazy Piano Genius wrong...
that quote is from Arthur O'Shaughnessy
from mid 1800s
Fun fact: Gene hated doing this scene because he didn’t like yelling at people, especially kids
but because he doesnt like doing it that he played it so well
He was a wonderful man.
Also charlies actor didn't know he was gonna yell like that either so charlies expression is genuine.
And he and Peter Ostrum were friends when they were filming and felt terrible that he had to keep it secret from him.
@@kobizarre2003 ganó la segunda
"Terribly sorry, whole day wasted" what a cold line to say to someone you spent the day with 😅
What I don’t understand?
basically one of my exes
@@jessicademarco3446 Wonka probably commenting on how his efforts to find a successor were in vain (until Charlie passes the test)
The "Whole day wasted" was Wanka's disappointment 😞 in not finding a decent child (or human). That's why he was mad. He had already written off Charlie at the time ⏲️. That's why he was so furious 😠 😡 👿 😤. The change was when all of a sudden, Charlie actually dropped 🫳 the candy 🍬 returning it to Wonka after all. That's when Wonka slowly cane to the realization 😳 that the day wasn't wasted.
@younglove3362 Go easy on the emoji's, kid.
You know, as much as people may not like it, Willy Wonka was right. Charlie was the only one who broke a rule and got off scott-free. Fortunately, he was wise enough to recognize what he did wrong, and gave the thing back to him.
It's not that wonka wasn't wrong, but that he did in such an angry and vindictive way. Especially considering he responded to the other kids' behavior with simple disinterest.
+George Liapes Yes.
+George Liapes I love the way he did that, when Mike Teevee zaps himself through the TV, Wonka says "stop, don't come back!" in such a sarcastic, "ugh, I don't give a S***" tone, lol.
+Stephen R yeah I laughed at that
+Rachel McBain I think the first 4 things were tests for all of the kids, but Charlie's true test, like you said, came at the end, so yeah, I agree.
Wonka must've had a rough divorce
this needs more likes!!
Hold this W
Well his wife did take half of everything.
+Fishbone Holy shit.
either that or his carpenter was only half himself that day.
Grandpa Joe:“You’re a crook. You’re a cheat”
Also Grandpa Joe: Pretended to be disabled for 20 years when his family was in poverty, and only got up to dance at the opportunity for free chocolate
exactly why i hate grandpa joe lmao
I know it still makes me laugh " how could you do a thing like this all I ever did was scam my daughter out of housework and my grandson taking partime jobs to support my greedy behind.
The irony is real xD
As they say: it takes one to know one.
I guess he's been on his back for so long he didn't even realize he still had some kick into him.
Wonka was not mad at Charlie. He was pointing and yelling at Grandpa Joe because he had Charlie break the rules. Wonka wanted Charlie to win the whole time.
Why did Charlie have to be involved? I didn't think about it until now, but I would think that, when Grandpa Joe said "I'm gonna find out.", it was just going to be him and Wonka talking privately about what happened. (like it was none of Charlie's business)
I think a better (less traumatic) way to do the scene would have been just those two yelling, with Charlie out of the picture so he wouldn't hear them. Then, after they were done yelling, Grandpa Joe would walk out of the room, close the door and say everything he said before Charlie turns around and gives Wonka the gobstopper. "Come on, Charlie, let's get out of here..." Then Charlie would enter the room and give Wonka the gobstopper.
Gene couldn't warn Peter about the yelling. But if they did it this way, it would be sort of a subtle warning. (Before Grandpa Joe entered the room, he would say something like "Charlie, you wait out here while I talk to Wonka.".)
not really though,he was judging the kids as actual people,so when Charlie breaks the rules,he is not being better than anyone else,and Wonka shouting here is proof of that,what makes him a good kid is that he has no intention of harm to Wonka,he has respect for him,grandpa Joe is already a product of society,as much as every other parent,he however thinks highly of his grandson and knows that you shouldn't do that to a kid...build up his dreams only to make it fall under a line of a contract,like a scheme...
Wonka was pretending to be mad, just to see how Charlie would react, if he would be a good sport, or be a bad sport and try to give everlasting gobstopper to Slugsworth. Charlie was a good sport, which made him pass the test and won!
Does anybody besides me compare this movie to our elections?
My mom (and I'm pretty sure other people) said rich people and corporations knew from the beginning exactly who would be the nominee, just like Willy Wonka knew from the beginning that Charlie was going to be the winner.
This movie doesn't really make me think about that, because Charlie almost lost. But the 2005 movie does.
Evev Wonka knew Charlie was human
if only he yelled like that at Veruca.
yes he should have
I'm sure having her large father land on her and break her neck is punishment enough.
+Kevin Beswick I agree, he should have unless he was too nervous to yell like that because of her being a grouchy whinny complainer.
I think Wonka only yelled at Charlie and Grandpa Joe because he wanted Charlie to win all along. He knew the other children would inevitably fail, and so he wouldn't want any of them to win anyway. But when Charlie and Grandpa Joe took those drinks they betrayed Wonka's trust, and it hurt him more than anything the other children did.
Mia He knew Charlie was good at heart just curious. The fuzzy lifting drinks didn't seem that big a deal for him Bc everyone makes mistakes. The point is he was testing Charlie and he passed.
"Go on Charlie we got nothing to lose!"
30 minutes later
"What rules? We didn't see any rules did we Charlie?"
I didn’t expect to see you here. Good to see you man.
they saw a large contract with shrinking words, half written in latin. they didn't see any rules.
Hey good to see you man!
Yoooo holy I know you
What rules 🥴
The look in Wilder’s eyes is so pure after Charlie returned the gobstopper. One of the greatest lines ever uttered in the English language, first by Shakespeare in the Merchant of Venice “So shines a good deed in a weary world”.
I thought it was "Still shines"
@@CrazyManhog no
@@cdub531 yes
@@crypastesomemore8348 nes
The way Wonka says, "My boy... ", so heartwarming.
So shines a good deed, in a weary world...
any movie?
Not any movie, Charlie Chaplin, remember?
THE TEST THAT ALL MY EX GIRLFRIENDS FAILED.
Robert Martinez good one
Best line because, ya know, Shakespeare wrote it.
"So shines a good deed in a weary world..."
Rest in Peace, Mr. Wilder. The world is wearier without your gentle smile, your hilarious hysteria, and your dewy-eyed tenderness. You showed us how the purest heart can come from the most humble beginnings. You taught us that monsters are often just misunderstood (and often the funniest dancers). You delighted us on stage and screen, and though you left us today, we've missed you for a very long time. I can't open a chocolate bar without the kid in me searching fruitlessly for a shimmer of gold. I can't listen to a violin without thinking about how its strains can tame the most frightening creatures. You can entertain an audience once, but you can make them laugh for a lifetime. Mr. Wilder, generations will be laughing forever as they take a tour in your world of pure imagination. Adieu, Mr. Wonka, and thanks for the memories!
Also Jack Albertson 😢Grandpa Joe
Also the other actors who played the adults and the actress who played Violet
When someone starts shouting in Latin, you know shit just got real
Hahahahahahaha XD
Still beats what the priest said in "Top Secret" :D
Stephen R DM!dmdkskdkdkkekddkejkejkekdkrjekemjdjeiekjdkrkdjjddkkdkekekjrjjroe
if you're easily beguiled.
Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum videteur.
"You Get Nothing! You Lose! Good day Sir!" Those words have helped me get out of some bad relationships.
SantaDog81
i might try that🤣
People keep joking about everything being chopped in half because of a divorce.
Wonka: You get nothing!
Grandpa Joe: Well, at least you got half. Hehe.
Brilliant comment!😆
Tell us more
"They'll be completely restored to their normal, terrible old selves."
The way he effortlessly delivers that line, judging these kids without any hint of emotion, almost like he's deadpanning, just makes Gene Wilder's performance perfect.
As I got older and learned to put my feelings to the side, I became more of a fan of Wonka. There's a reason he lives in a factory 🏭 away from the normie population that are all indoctrinated and crab 🦀 in a bucket 🪣 minded individuals. Wonka is the up front and tell it like it is persona while everyone else is either politically correct or selfish and spoiled. I even see the resemblance of what their civilization is in today's society. That's why Wonks doesn't even try to stop them from doing asinine things and watched as the parents do little to nothing to stop their bratty kids. Call me a sadist, bust I was as satisfied as Wonka watching 👀 the kids learn their lessons the hard way (if they learned).
1:35 - I love that he opens the safe door that he doesn't have to open. :)
Oh but he did. The metaphorical religious symbolism goes deeper than words can express my friend.
explain what you mean please, don't get it?
+joseph stanford I'll try my best but even this rant doesn't do the topic full creative justice. This adaptation of Dahl's book has heavy jewish allegorical cultural references due to director and actors heritage. From oompa loompa songs with bits of solomons wisdom. to artsy 3/4 (numbers reference) waltz imagination song crouching back to stature of child. Satan (mr slugworth is the polar opposite of wonka) but works for Wonka too despite his seemingly nefarious purpose. everything is halved in wonka because we are wired to only see half the truth. the whole thing is loaded with symbolism and the gobstopper is like the pinnacle of science where we "bump into the ceiling" because getting high and alcohol. Then Charlie sees the fan drawing near, panics and burps back down sobering up (Grizzly Reaper Mowing allegory). I'd wager this is fractal geometry that is infinite and manifests itself in the Lord's creation patterns (rivers, veins, lightning, wind, beaches, ferns, branches, roots, black holes, etc...) all have it. So by giving back to God his knowledge and not seeking to manipulate its natural laws for profit (slugworth) we can return to a state of paradise. A psychedelic tunnel ride into our minds reveals the light at the end of the tunnel. wonkavision is ultimately a symbolic 4D teleporter which is a God concept too. metaphorically its like if humans could observe a sim city universe develop with machine learning AI given free will and an instruction manual of riddles that no one person could ever solve on his own but rather takes a group of earths wisest men a predictably long time to sort out. The artists of today are capturing the theme well to an open third eye observer. They are the Music Makers and the Dreamers of Dreams. If you watch Mr robot at all, Abrahamic allegory show up a lot too. Dog returning to vomit proverbial scene and more by Sam Esmail.
I mean he could just reach from the side and he opens the door instead. :)
+Fabisch Factor but that defeats the purpose of the illustration. the fine print copy of the contract is the law of the holy books. its really a well disguised theater scene of allegorical wisdom. and as always perspective is key that is it unlocks the safe.
The acting was so good, not a single emotion seems forced or faked at all. Half the time during the film the kids didn't know what Wilder would do because he wanted all of the kid's reactions to be genuine fear or joy. R. I. P. Gene Wilder, but damn did he live a life.
yup, on the psychedelic boat ride the girl who played Violet thought Gene actually went mad when he started saying the poem. And in this scene, nobody knew what Gene was gonna do and the boy who played Charlie was really shaken up. He wanted to tell Peter (who played Charlie) he was only acting but the director wanted Charlie's reaction to be real.
@@stevarino1989 Oh, Charlie's reaction was real alright.If I was Gene Wilder, I would have let the director have it, the same way Wonka let Grandpa Joe and Charlie have it.
Look what you did to my good friend Peter! You wanted a real reaction? You got one! I HOPE YOU'RE HAPPY, ASSHOLE!!!!!!
damn,i would probably leave
@Allen Edwards fair play but I enjoyed Johnny Depp's performance in the "reboot". I always saw it as a follow up. Not a direct follow up but like this a New Willy Wonka comes in, old one goes out. Hits retirement and repeat until everything goes up in smoke..
And to think this had to be done right in one take, to get the authentic reaction.
As a kid, I hated Willy Wonka in this scene but as an adult, you realize that Wonka was right. Charlie broke the rules
True, but he probably wouldn't have if Grandpa Joe hadn't egged him on.
He did but at the same time Wonka was only pretending to be overly angry to see if Charlie would have given into temptation or do the right thing. Wonka knew that all contestants would make mistakes but only one of them would make up for it in the end.
It was a test
Wonka is more furious that Grandpa Joe suggested they steal the drinks and leading Charlie to do the same. Joe didn’t think it was such a big deal but rules are rules.
The remake got it right.
50 years have passed, and this movie stills a Masterpiece.
50 years? Yeesh…
Holy snit the 70’s were that long ago?
@@SonicXtreme99akaCreeperMario Yup.
@@SonicXtreme99akaCreeperMario time marches on, for whom the bell tolls!
It sucks
The older I get, the more I appreciate Peter Ostrum's performance as Charlie. He exudes innocence from his eyes. It doesn't come off as fake. Great casting.
People miss the point, Grandpa Joe isn’t evil or a mistakenly written character, he’s intentionally representative of the adults who are jaded and have given up hope on the world. Meanwhile Charlie represents purity and optimistic faith and goodness, and it’s his act of selflessness that continuously rewards him and teaches the old (Grandpa Joe) how to have hope again. It’s a brilliant contrast of characters two generations apart bonded by family. Dahl’s good writing shows because Grandpa Joe doesn’t completely snap out of it right away (not after the golden ticket, not after entering the factory, not after being treated, etc) because he’s still an adult and his jaded adulthood and selfishness is what creates conflict for Charlie. But in the end, you see Grandpa Joe finally understand the reward of true selflessness.
The bad guys are the families who lose, and the spoiled children who are born rotten and have little hope of ever being good, only ever failing upwards in life. It seems like Ronald Dahl write this book from the perspective of Wonka. Working hard his whole life and maintaining his childlike hopefulness at his core through candy (or for Dahl, children’s books).
The message of this movie resonates with a lot of kids whether you’re a Charlie or a spoiled brat. And for adults, they relate to Grandpa Joe but their jadedness is tested by Charlie. Dahl/Wonka are the puppeteers of the world in this story, engineering the outcome so that good triumphs in the end.
Dahl didn't like children and was angry in general.
@@grabble7605 doesn't make sense. Why did he write Wonka and Charlie then?
@@grabble7605 he dedicated half of his life to writing books for children. Much of the childhood of adolescents around the world are shaped by him.
Nah rlm convinced me hes a crook lol
I like to think that most kids are somewhere in the middle. A Charlie and a spoiled brat.
wtf he kept slugworth in a closet how nice
Slugworth was "in the closet"??
So he’s gay?
Justus
Wanka:Get out of the Closet Slugworth
Slugworth:Ya but I’m not in here.
kermitkid I think that his office
He's got R Kelly in there too
You know Wonka was right in the contract (Latin was correct too) but he let a good deed in a dreary world overlook the contract and give him his dreams. Makes me cry every time when I see the ending. Gosh, great film from the 70s.
How did he even know about the drinks
***** or perhap its oompah loompas recording video tapes
I'm more surprised ruining a child's dream of getting a lifetime's supply of chocolate, which is a horrible thing to take from a child BTW, is undercut by him allowing children to break his rules and literally mutate when he had plenty of opportunities to stop them. Seriously, Oompa loompas are clumsy. Why is there not a fence in front of the river?
and he probably knew something was up when they were missing from the tour for a few minutes
How does the Latin translate?
I read that Peter Ostrum was completely unaware the Gene was going to blow his stack like that. So Charlie's reaction was 100% genuine
Yeah, Mel Stuart wouldn’t let Gene tell Peter beforehand that he was going to react that way.
I vaguely recall that being mentioned in the commentary of the movie that had all the kids’ actors doing the commentary.
@@Boundwithflame23gene wilder said it himself in an interview that he wanted the reaction to be real
Fun Fact: The actors playing Charlie and Grandpa Joe were not informed of Gene Wilder's furious, enraged refusal to give Charlie his reward beforehand, so all of their reactions are essentially genuine and unscripted. Wilder and Peter Ostrum (The actor who played Charlie) had become close friends during filming and Gene really wanted to let Ostrum know beforehand he was just acting, but the director refused to let him.
upon hearing of gene's death peter said that working with him was the greatest experience he ever had he felt he had indeed won the golden ticket
+sapphirestar316 That is the sweetest thing I've ever heard. This movie rocks in every aspect.
Believe me if I was Gene I would've also been really afraid to blow up at my friend and startle him like that, even if it was just acting. I always thought it was Gene's idea not to tell anyone what he was going to do. What a wonderful man.
+Stephen R He was trully a national treasure.
To his credit even though Wilder couldn't forewarn Ostrum about what was about to happen, he keeps his rage focused on Grandpa Joe (both because Joe was an adult and could handle being yelled at, and ultimately because it was his idea to steal the drinks and should've known a lot better)
Smoking a cigar in a children's movie. Ahh yes, those days.
+MrCelroy Guess it shows you how wrecked Wonka is at that moment, along with all the "halves" in the room
Engineer Diep Surprised he didn't smoke a halved cigar.
But he can end up with half of his lungs gone
Engineer Diep ;) Good point
+MrCelroy smoking a cigar inside, at work, at his desk. Those WERE the days.
"So shines a good deed in a weary world"
Gets me every time!
RIP Mr Wonka. :(
:(
Good day sir . . . :(
he will be in our hearts❤
+Stephen R question
He certainly played that character with pure passion.
"Fax mentis incendium gloriae" = The torch of glory kindles the mind. "Memor bis punitor delictum" = I am mindful that the crime is punished twice. :) GOOD DAY SIR
Loosely translates, what Wonka was reading from the contract meant, "I'll gladly forfeit my rights to the lifetime suppply of chocolate if I break any rules, as I am aware that all misdeeds go punished and I wish learn from my mistakes.
This is what Id hope the internet would be used for!
The Happy Nihilist humor shqip
So if they understood Latin, they would know they broke the rules? lol
Thanks for translating that. Hard to find good translations for Latin since it’s a dead language. A lot of online translators for Latin that I find tend to slip towards Italian.
The reason why Willy Wonka has half of everything in his office is that director Mel Stuart couldn’t bear the idea of ending the film in an ordinary, boring office after the whimsical and extraordinary rooms in the rest of the factory, so they created the ‘Half-Office’ to give Wonka that extra dose of eccentricity.
Later on the Wonka website, this would summarised by Wonka saying “Half an office is better than none.”
I always thought that office represents Mr.Wonkas weariness of running that factory.
@@tonycanabal1659a genius never gets tired of inventing. He wasn’t tired of running the factory, you know. He gave it to Charlie because he had grown old, and he didn’t want his legendary factory to fall apart when he died. He needed someone to run it when he wasn’t there to do so. The half office was just a display of his eccentricities.
@@mukherjeerumela Thanks, you described it very well!
@@tonycanabal1659 thank you 😊
nah his ex-wife took half in the divrce..
When I was a kid I thought those nonsense words in Wonka's rant were words in English I didn't know yet. Phew, luckily English isn't quite that bad.
*****
Yeah. It's actually Latin, just in case you were wondering.
MilesEdgeworth129 It is Latin, but it is total gibberish- it is just random Latin words strung together.
+verkaforever Supposed to be a phrase about not being punished twice but it in the script all wrong.
+Devin Tariel Two random quotes strong together, with the second being flat wrong. Memor non bis punitur peccatum is probably what he meant. I like to think t was likely garbled intentionally to sound more like legalese or maybe Wilder got it wrong, and they said screw it. Wonka's dialogue is loaded with literary references-- like Shakespeare in this seen. The screenwriters and directors for this film weren't dummies.
+testodude I read in the Making Of book by director Mel Stuart that they made the legal language into "Wonkaese." lol.
"I must answer that note from the queen" damn that line really hits now. Rip Gene Wilder and the queen 😔
Elizabeth |||?
I'll never get over him opening the safe up and still grabbing from open half side lmao
Lol omg I never caught that.
We all lose. Bad day, sir. RIP
Yes Willy, karma is a bitch.
There is NO such thing as "karma". This is a man-made concept.
Steven, you sound so sure of yourself. Have you proof?
OneWeirdDude
Karma is a Buddhist Concept. God is the One Who controls EVERYTHING.
Steven Scott Well, I'm a Christian, but can't Karma be at least a metaphor for something, like divine justice?
Amazing acting! The actor who played Charlie had no idea that Gene would be yelling, thus making his reaction completely genuine.
Why did Charlie have to be involved? I didn't think about it until now, but I would think that, when Grandpa Joe said "I'm gonna find out.", it was just going to be him and Wonka talking privately about what happened. (like it was none of Charlie's business)
I think a better (less traumatic) way to do the scene would have been just those two yelling, with Charlie out of the picture so he wouldn't hear them. Then, after they were done yelling, Grandpa Joe would walk out of the room, close the door and say everything he said before Charlie turns around and gives Wonka the gobstopper. "Come on, Charlie, let's get out of here..." Then Charlie would enter the room and give Wonka the gobstopper.
Gene couldn't warn Peter about the yelling. But if they did it this way, it would be sort of a subtle warning. (Before Grandpa Joe entered the room, he would say something like "Charlie, you wait out here while I talk to Wonka.".)
Good day sir!
And Gene HATED doing it. He HATED yelling at the kid.
and Gene himself didn't like doing this scene because he didn't like yelling at people
The loud ticking clock magnifies the sadness of the first part of the scene. Wonka’s time is nearly up, Charlie was truly destined to be his heir.
To be fair, Wonka died about 46 years later. 😉
how could anybody thumb down this, one of the best scenes in movie history.
Maybe it's people that agree since they stole fizzy lifting drink, they shouldn't have won anything.
opinions
Because they GET NOTHING! THEY LOST!
I love how his hair is all fucked up. RIP Gene Wilder.
Well that's what happens when you wear a hat all day XD. But yeah, R.I.P. Gene :(
Wtf
Jonathan French In the 2005 film, Wonka had a better hairdo.
@@Ih8kone
Get that Vector bowl cut out of here 😂😂😂😂😂
@@Ih8konebut timmothe chalamet's willy wonka hair looks exactly the same it's just a more darker brown
I love how wonka still opens the safe to get a copy of the contract when there’s half of it missing
And reads it with half a magnifying glass 🔍 😂
Even the contract is cut in half
This whole movie is spiritual. The half material in his office signifies the physical from the spiritual. A lot of hidden meanings in this movie
Charlie breaking the rules is part of what cements him being a kid.
Others broke the rules in a selfish way, Charlie did it with a glimmer of love for the factory. So much, he did what he did in the end. 🍬
Not really since Wonka made it explicitly clear that no one should drink the fizzy lifting drinks. Charlie disobeyed and if he didn't give up the gobstopper, he likely would've gone empty handed
@@armorpro573 wasn't that grampa Joe's idea not Charlie's? I don't really remember since it's been years since I've watched the movie.
@@diegoguzman8843 Yeah it was, but Charlie still went along with it. He clearly knew Wonka’s rule and still disobeyed.
Perfectly summed up! That goes to show you that even good people make mistakes and can give into temptation. Charlie is the only kid with good behavior but he’s not meant to be perfect.
@@armorpro573Charlie did break the rules, I agree with you. And yeah, Willy Wonka had the right to dismiss him like he did. But Charlie was very nice and well-behaved unlike the other four kids. He knew what he did wrong, felt bad about it and gave back what was given to him. And Wonka extended his grace and gave Charlie the prize.
why this movie means more to me than the remake
Mike C i know
Ryan Delgado this one just has a better moral
+Lord Prince Zuko The remake was pretty trash but I like remake Charlie better than original Charlie. Both play pretty one dimensional characters but the remake charlie does it better.
Cormac O'Donovan original Charlie was better and was't an Angelic saint like the remake's
+Lord Prince Zuko
I'm about to put my squirrel suit on and go foraging for nuts.
2:12 How dare Grandpa Joe say that! It was his idea to drink the fizzy lifting drinks even though Mr. Wonka told him not to. Then he calls him a crook because he thinks they didn’t break any rules!
You’re right. He didn’t even heed his rules when the contract distinctly said so.(even tho the rest of the texts were Latin and microscopic…)
Damn… now that I think about it, That old man Joe’s to blame.
@@judahthelion01 Explains why Wonka's mostly yelling at Grandpa Joe here.
Honestly, I think Mike Teavee should’ve won. What Charlie and Grandpa Joe did with the Fizzy Lifting Drinks wasn’t any better than what the other kids did. They should’ve been eliminated and therefore Mike Teavee would’ve won. I’m glad they didn’t include the Fizzy Lifting Drinks scene in the 2005 version!
I really love the original Willy Wonka, Gene Wilder really showed us how upset and troubled Wonka was but how he changed his mind when saw the purity of Charlie returning the gobstopper, the final scene in the elevator was so incredibly magical and heartwarming as a child, RIP Gene Wilder
the message and morals of the second are much better though
Except for Grandpa Joe being greedy!!
“What’s in it for me??”
That’s the point Wonka should have thrown him out of the elevator onto the cold hard floor he claimed was the reason he couldn’t get out of bed!! 😂
@@TheLifeLaVitawrong
@@mihaimercenarul7467 you wish xD
@@TheLifeLaVita yup, The first movie was way better
I like how Charle is worried about Augustus Violet Veruca and Mike after Everything they’ve done to him
What did the kids do to Charlie?
The kids didnt really interact with Charlie at all. They just were bad apples and it shown.
@@jamesbudd1022 Or a bad egg.
Or spoiled milk
@@jamesbudd1022I wonder if the Charlie from the 2005 movie was concerned about their wellbeing as well especially since violet called him a loser and took the candy apple he was reaching for
“So shines a good deed in a weary world.” Best line in the whole film in my view.
It's Shakespeare ...
This film taught me as a young boy the value of moral beliefs, Charlie Bucket was one of my favorite role models. If only kids today took to his example.
He’s a good example of taking responsibility for his actions and accepting the consequences.
The manic, yet gentle nature of Gene Wilder. Never met him, but LOVED the man.
@Abdullahi Abdi write out your words in full, u idjit!
@Abdullahi Abdi thank you for catching that!
it seems like you're the one who doesn't know what manic is. @abdullahiabdi1969
"So shines a good deed in a weary world" that was always a favorite quote from Willy Wonka of mine 👍
Thats what I want on my gravestone
Think it was said by Michael Scott first, but Wilder delivers it better.
Ain’t no way Michael Scott said it first 💀 firstly, it’s a quote from The Merchant of Venice by Shakespeare, and secondly, this movie was made in 1971.
Gene Wilder probably has that on his gravestone. RIP Gene
Fun fact: Grandpa Joe’s script had Willy having a serious conversation without yelling. When they filmed the scene and Gene started yelling, his face of confusion when he says “You’re a crook” is genuine. He was not expecting Gene to react like that since he knew he hated yelling. This scene is amazing.
Maybe he didn’t heed his distinct rules of the tour…
On the contrary, he’s the one to fall into temptation and encouraged Charlie to do so.
This whole film is a masterpiece. I don’t care what anyone says!! The whole point of this film was for wonka to find a successor and I love every moment of it!!!
but i still wonder why Grandpa Joe faked being infermed for years while his family was stuck in poverty.
"I don't care what anyone says" implying people say this is a bad film? literally never heard that opinion before.
Personally, I wouldn't call it a masterpiece. I think the film is flawed with its share of good and bad qualities. However, this scene and Wilder's performance are definitely in the good
Very memorable RIP MR WILDER AS WELL THE CAST WHO PASSED AWAY.
Ah Mr wilder a fantastic actor and extraordinary man, taken too soon from a world that still loved and needed him. Rip old friend RIP
This is one of the saddest moments in this movie that quickly turns into the most heartwarming, as Charlie winning the factory felt so earned.
what a beautiful human being i will truly miss him :(
Mr. Wilder, you were a beacon of joy, pure imagination, and laughter. Thank you, for all of it.
This is absolutely one of the most memorable scene in Hollywood history. R.I.P. Gene Wilder. An adorable soul and wise mind.
"YOU LOSE! YOU GET NOTHING! GOOD DAY SIR!
Me with bad relationships
My reaction to all the comments about Wonka getting a divorce:
Wonka: YOU LOSE! YOU GET NOTHING!
Grandpa Joe: Well, at least you got half. Hehe.
wow beautiful message, moral of the story, accept you did wrong and work on it that's what life is all about.
That's weak that's not the moral of the story failure. Tell me how far has that gotten you in life? Not very far your not famous powerful or rich.
@@uioongbion2074 what's so bad about not being a loser asshole? Sounds like you're the one getting nowhere in life
@@uioongbion2074 lotta walking arguments here, huh?
That’s not what life is all about.
This scene demonstrates a powerful life lesson for all of us: to be responsible and to do the right thing. Wonka wasn’t mad at Charlie, he was mad at Grandpa Joe for not being a responsible guardian because he urged Charlie to break the rules by drinking the Fizzy Lifting Drinks. Charlie was unaware what they were doing was wrong. Unlike the other kids, Charlie wasn’t selfish or spoiled and that’s why Wonka wanted Charlie to win.
He blew up like this because he wanted to test Charlie if he would do the right thing. Charlie had an easy out where he could’ve walked out with the Everlasting Gobstopper’s secret recipe and made so much money. So much he could’ve gotten his entire family out of poverty, but he didn’t. He chose to do the right thing and therefore was rewarded. Doing the right thing is never wrong. What you put out there in life will come right back at you.
Correction, Charlie knew what he did was wrong because He knew Wonka told them not to drink it. But instead of listening to him, he listened to his grandpa and trusted him that it would be fine to rebel. Sure the grandpa urged and tempted him to do it but He still was also at fault. Wonka was disappointed in Charlie and mad at the grandpa.
The rest of what you said though was correct.
This scene and the famous boat scene are the reason why Gene Wilder terrified me as a child...
Gene wilder seems like the type of person that would likely cry after this type of thing,because he would feel so guilty.
And he did. After filming this scene, Gene hugged it out with Peter Ostrum (the boy who played Charlie), apologising for what happened. Because, as it turns out, the director, Mel Stuart, refused to let Gene tell Peter that it was only acting.
Fact:the actor who played Charlie at first had no idea that Gene Wilder was going to yell at him making the actor cry
Bet the girls who played Veruca and Violet were fighting over who'd comfort him (they both had a crush on the actor playing Charlie)
@@tommybakes5972They did. Julie Dawn Cole admitted it.
Gene Wilder an incredible actor, person too good for this world Rest in peace Mr Willy Wonka!!
His tone, his expressions, his acting performance. Gene Wilder one of a kind.
I like your picture
I like your picture
Sad the actor who played Grandad Albert died two days after this was filmed. RIP
who's grandad albert ?
@AntonChigurh355 and he died 10 years after this was filmed lol
Even if it looked like he wasn't gonna get anything, Charlie still did the right thing.
Another legend gone. RIP Gene Wilder
3:12 My heart literally sunk to my stomach; Wonka recognizes his selflessness and is taken aback
I wouldn’t call it selflessness. I would call it integrity. Selfless people rarely do anything worthwhile.
@@Shozb0t Umm…humans are inherently selfish.
@@quantasium
I consider selfishness to be an accomplishment. I define it as the process of using your mind to take care of yourself, long term. If everybody did that then the world would be a much better place.
@@Shozb0t Are you an edgy atheist teen who just read Ayn Rand or something similar?
@@zr3755
If you must know: I am an atheist, I have read Ayn Rand, my age is unimportant. I would not consider myself edgy, I simply consider most people to be left behind (through no fault of their own). There’s nothing particularly special about me, other than my appreciation for reason and individualism-which is rather hard to find in this world.
3:28 HA! Grandpa Joe’s face is all like “WTF?!”
This is honestly one of the best lessons I’ve ever seen in a movie.
56 people would have given the everlasting gobstopper to Slugworth
I wouldn't.
Now it’s 120
127 bruh
133 Now 👀
134?
Goodbye Gene u will be missed. The Oompa Loompas are crying tonight. And so are all of us. Goodbye RIP
There should have been an "Oompa Loompa" song at his funeral. I wonder what that would be.
Im not
Gene had the best yelling voice such a talent!
God, Wilder's acting in this scene is phenomenal.
Peter Ostrum's acting is too. He genuinely looks heartbroken
Only Jack Albertson can make "inhuman monster" line so compelling
I really liked Jack Albertson in this movie. And really enjoyed watching him as Mr. Brown in Chico And The Man.
I said GOOD DAY, SIR!!!
Charlie showed that he was worthy by being honest and responsible.
Charlie Bucket such a nice kid :(
sonic jet and selfless too.
Wrong
U get nothing
Well Charlie showed he was not going to be a sore loser and as a result he passed the test and won!
@@CeilingFanVideosOnYT more like he refused to stab Wonka in the back.
Swear theres something almost golden about 60/70s movies. Maybe its the clothes and colours everyone wore then or that it was shot on film. Everything just looks mad vibrant you know
I hate doing comment essays but this one I gotta try. I presumed Willy Wonka was just a weird movie about candy but I believe it’s truly about beauty, creativity and the love that cannot be bought nor sold from making dreams a reality.
Wonka was testing them. This was a final test, if Charlie were to inherit the factory he would inherit the pain that Wonka himself had to go through in franchising his product. Legal work and the “sell” can truly rob the beauty and innocence of the experience it is to make something fantastical.
In the end Grandpa Joe was no different than the other parents. “If you want this, I’ll get it for you, screw him.” Charlie didn’t want the chocolate. He was amazed and in love with the wonder of it. Which stood out when he passed this test. Doesn’t matter if you’re rich or poor, you can either embrace life with love and thankfulness for its beauty or pessimistically and greedily because of your own selfishness.
Charlie’s humility to bring the candy back to Wonka made him immediately qualified. It’s not about what you get. What you get is in fact what you give, and the giving the candy back to Wonka because it still would mean that much to Charlie regardless if he inherited it or not was what the gesture meant.
So, movie ain’t just about chocolate. Especially in the room with everything halfway done. The office shows something is missing, half of it. Don’t sell your authenticity and love of life for a buck. Share it with others.
R.I.P! MR WONKA! GOOD DAY SIR! I CRY EVERYTIME!
kappelmeister123 he died.....
+Ubey The Beast I know right, I'm so sad :(
Geez, when am I going to grow up? I'm 50 years old and I tear up at this scene.
+Brian Wilson Instead of tearing up, instead write us some more great Beach Boys songs!
+Gary Stump Sr. If I was Charlie I would be like him and...that's that
Brian Wilson don't ever grow up that much.. makes me tear up too.
I’m 34 soon and I still tear up too
Brian Wilson make the line. Lol
Grandpa Joe: You're a crook, You're a cheat.
Also Grandpa Joe: Convinced Charlie to drink the fizzy lifting drink
I mean it was just two tho lol
“Bit of projection there, Joe??” 😂
ikr old hag mf is just being selfish😑
Brilliant Actor. Rest in Paradise. God Bless.
Some might think at first that Charlie was just too nice for his own good. But in the end, all his kindness really paid off!!
Good deeds and kindess are their own rewards. That's what "a good deed shines in a weary world" means. Most people in life are more like Wonka's character here in some fashion. Bitter or selfish or greedy, envious, pigheaded, whatever. The point is that not only is there a reason behind everyone (like being only half-complete here) but to show that person kindness anyways is an incredibly and totally possible thing. The world is weary and dark and grey but doing good even to the people who spite you brightens it up. Maybe one day they can look back and do the same or at the very, very least, the world got a little bit less horrible to both of them.
Also, the point is one-liners and candy and corny music.
“It’s all there. Black and white. Clear as crystal!”😂😂😂 I love that line after he started reading Latin 😂😂😂
I love how his office has everything cut in half. Love the old kids films when there so twisted. :D
what about the beginning when they first enter the factory and they have the coat hangers on the wall that are actual hands and then the psychedelic room that has a magic door that somehow opens into the Alice in Wonderland hallway ... lol. I love that.
3:18 Charlie?..................................YOU LOSE!
Charlie: what? Then who won?
Wonka: oh I'm gonna give the win to Veruca
Charlie: but she broke the rules too
@@tommybakes5972wonka: will then, violet then?
Charlie: she broke the rules too!
Wonka: uhh, Augustus?
Charlie: he also broke the rules!
Wonka: Mike?
Charlie: he did the same thing!
Wonka: well than, both you and the other kids then!
Grandpa joe: Damn Straight!! Now we can have the life time supply of chocolate!
Augustus’s voice: *LET ME OUT I’M STARVING!!*
Wonka: Augustus?!
Charlie: Where’s Augustus?
Grandpa joe: other there!
[grandpa joe points to a near by pipe with Augustus in it]
Rip Gene Wilder you were the true Willy wonka to this day!
I absolutely love Charlie’s actor he has purity glowing from him and his sad face and uplifting smile is so genuine I love it haha
Facts I also like Freddie Highmore as Charlie
@@funwithanthony6133 same here !
I have a good idea as to why Wonka treated this like a test. He was trying to prepare Charlie for the real world by being assertive and using what happened with the fizzy lifting drinks as a template for why he needs to protect the legacy of the factory and such.
There was no question that Charlie was going to get the lifetime supply of chocolate, but Wonka saw this as an opportunity to teach him one final lesson that not everyone in the world should be rewarded and that the Gobstopper would only be given to people who forgive others with a fair heart and mind.
Since the end of Fishtank, 60% of my recommendations have been Sam Hyde, Willy Wonka, and Lynyrd Skynyrd/Simple Man videos. I’m not even mad. But to be fair, two of those things were already heavily recommended to me.
One of the best scenes of all time. Great writing, great acting. So good.
I had forgot Wilder's acting performance here. Incredible acting genius. No one does it better.
If we all did one simple act of kindness once a day the world would be a much better place.
3:09
When I was a little kid, I wondered how and why a funny looking Nintendo 64-themed Lego/school eraser was enough to completely switch off Wonka's shouty bipolar episode.
2:05😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣😂😂😂😂😂😂 The part that made me laugh is when he says so you get nothing that part made me laugh
2:45 are we just gonna ignore da fact that hes sitting on a half chair 😂;)