Walt Disney had always wanted to make an animated film based
on Frank L. Baum's The Wizard of Oz.
However, MGM beat him to the punch, acquiring the rights and producing their
classic musical starring Judy Garland. The closest Disney ever came was a
television special featuring the Mouseketeers as various characters and the
disturbing cult classic Return to Oz
with a young Fairuza Balk as Dorothy. Oz
the Great and Powerful is an interesting proposition since it’s a prequel
to another studio's movie. Despite the books now falling into public domain,
Disney is unable to use elements specifically created for the cinematic version
of Wizard of Oz, which is now owned
by Warner Brothers. Thus, there are no ruby slippers and even the design of the
Yellow Brick Road and the shade of green on the Wicked Witch's skin had to be
altered.
Spoilers Ahead.
Oscar Diggs (James Franco) is a sideshow magician in a
traveling circus that has found its way to the dustbowl of Kansas. He is not
only an illusionist, but an inventor with aspirations to become Harry Houdini
and Thomas Edison rolled into one. A jealous strongman chases Diggs into a hot
air balloon that is quickly sucked into a tornado that transports him to the
Land of Oz. Taking a cue from the 1939 version, Oz opens in black and white with the 1.33:1 aspect ratio before
expanding to widescreen and fading into color. There, he is greeted by Theodora
(Mila Kunis), a good witch who believes Diggs is the prophesized wizard that
will free them from the tyranny of the Wicked Witch. Theodora's sister, Evanora
(Rachel Weisz), promises Diggs he will become the new King of Oz and be
rewarded the treasure of Emerald City should he defeat the Witch.
Diggs is joined on his journey by a talking monkey with
wings named Finley (Zach Braff) and a living China Girl (Joey King), the only
survivor of a porcelain village shattered by the Witch's army of flying
baboons. But, the witch they are sent after is actually Glinda the Good
(Michelle Williams) whose father, the former King of Oz, was poisoned by the
true Wicked Witch, Evanora. When the truth comes out, Evanora manipulates her
sister into biting an enchanted apple that turns her into the hook nosed Wicked
Witch of the West.
It's clear that Disney is hoping to replicate the mammoth
success of Alice in Wonderland. Both
projects share a producer in Joe Roth and a production designer in Robert
Stromberg, who also worked on Avatar.
Those previous credits clearly shine through in the digital construction of Oz,
which looks like a Technicolor melding of Wonderland and Pandora. There are
enormous blossoms, river fairies with piranha-like teeth, and a glimmering art
deco Emerald City. However, what's lacking is a sense of awe. The CGI
environment never feels real and many scenes simply come off as actors walking
in front of a green screen. The soundstages and matte paintings of the original
film felt more real than the expensive special effects of Oz. Director Sam Raimi manages to inject some life into the action
with his trademark flourishes of whip pans, accelerated zooms, canted angles,
and cameos by brother Ted Raimi and Bruce Campbell. One set piece involves a
Looney Tunes-esque sequence on a cliff that is played out in silhouette. When
the heroes arrive at the Dark Forest, they are assailed by snapping vines in a
creepy callback to Evil Dead.
Thankfully, no one gets raped by tree branches. Raimi also tosses in several
cool shots of the witches hurling magical energy at each other, especially
Evanora who shoots lightning bolts like a Dark Lord of the Sith. The prologue
makes nice use of 3D with objects flying out of frame, but the effects become
less pronounced as the movie progresses.
James Franco never rises to the occasion of convincingly
portraying the young wizard as a vintage flim-flam man. You imagine the
character as someone like Robert Preston in The
Music Man or George Clooney in O
Brother, Where Art Thou, a scoundrel with the gift of gab. And it's easy to
imagine why Raimi would be drawn to Diggs because Raimi's early days as a
filmmaker required the same sense of invention, ingenuity, and salesmanship.
You can also draw parallels between Oz
and Army of Darkness, both of whom
feature a protagonist transported to another land who must overcome their own
selfish motivations to defeat an evil force with their unique knowledge.
Franco simply isn't up to the task, not surprising since he
wasn't the first choice. The studio wanted Robert Downey Jr. and when he turned
it down, they pursued Johnny Depp who was already committed to The Lone Ranger. While Franco could
hardly be considered a consolation prize, Depp's previous turns as Ed Wood and
Willy Wonka might have made him the perfect pick. Franco frequently takes a backseat
to Finley and the feisty China Girl, who fill the roles of adorable sidekicks.
Mila Kunis is equally out of depth as the Wicked Witch, a role that doesn't
take advantage of her natural comedic skills. Rachel Weisz and Michelle
Williams pick up the slack and are absolutely stellar as Theodora's fellow
spell-casters.
Oz the Great and
Powerful was lavished with a budget of $200 million, but all that money
couldn't buy this film any of the charm or timelessness of its predecessor.
Rating: ** (*****)
1 comment:
It was neither great nor powerful. It was just okay and that was fine with me because I had a good enough time just watching. Nice review Will.
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