Topic: The Wizard of Oz
I have a tendency to fix your typos.
You are not logged in. Please login or register.
The Bobby Mcferrin bit Teague was talking about. I don't agree that Bobby is making this up on the fly, this is totally a bit he has in his repertoire. But either way, it's amazing!
Last edited by BigDamnArtist (2013-08-20 08:31:05)
What happens if you sync this commentary up with Dark Side Of The Moon...?!
Indeed Bobby McFerrin's Wizard of Oz bit is not entirely improv. Notably he also did it here:
He is also amazing at improvisation though. For example, the Montreal Jazz Festival concert that was taken at consisted half of surprise (for him) guests that he collaborated with on the spot.
Last edited by Phi (2013-08-20 12:44:45)
I'm just going to leave this here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surrender_Dorothy
I remember said graffiti. From time to time, someone tries to put it back.
Ok, so at 6m this morning, roughly, I started to have a panic attack. I have no idea why, it may have something to do with the fact I couldn't sleep and my cat was doing my head in, who knows? Anyway, to try to calm me down, I decided to listen to this commentary and I'm glad I did. It's a fun listen and it had me laughing, which helped me. so thank you guys
Some of the best fun I've ever had was a couple years ago when John Waters, who adores the film, introduced a screening, then sat for an interview afterward. I regularly quote his little synopsis:
Girl leaves drab farm, becomes a fag hag, meets gay lions and men that don't try to molest her, and meets a witch, kills her. And unfortunately - by a surreal act of shoe fetishism - clicks her shoes together and is back to where she belongs. It has an unhappy ending.
Yeah, I posted this on Twitter already, but Lydia The Tattooed Lady is always worth reposting
Thanks for doing this movie.
I've been encountering references to it all my life, so, a few years ago, I've finally decided to watch it. It brought me to tears; I was sobbing like a little girl. What a charming piece of film.
Re: the female protagonist... Who's the most popular role model for modern girls? Bella Swan. An unlikable bitch with no personality to speak of. Go figure.
Thanks for doing this movie.
I've been encountering references to it all my life, so, a few years ago, I've finally decided to watch it. It brought me to tears; I was sobbing like a little girl. What a charming piece of film.
Re: the female protagonist... Who's the most popular role model for modern girls? Bella Swan. An unlikable bitch with no personality to speak of. Go figure.
Boy, now we can have a mash-up of Bella Swan singing "If I only had a brain..."
And after I read "Wicked" a few months back, I get to listen to this gem of a commentary tonight! WAHOO!!! Once I listen I shall return with my own comments, but to quote an old cartoon classic..."Happy Happy Joy Joy!!!"
There are two things I wish, with regard to The Wizard of Oz. One, for someone to do an adaptation that follows the later books (even Return to Oz insisted on having Dorothy involved in the events of the second book, instead of the "boy who would be queen"). Second, I'd love to see a production of the original OZ musical. For those who don't know, the author made most of his money not from the books, but from a four hour musical that has lots of dancing girls and very little to do with the original plot. MGM almost just did an adaptation of that, before deciding to go back to the book, but many of the staging elements they came up with were used in the film and it's the reason it is a musical.
You can read the script here: http://static.nypl.org/MOTM/Oz/Oz.pdf
The second book was written with the intent that it become a play, which is why there are armies of women who could double as dancing girls. The second stage play he DID write flopped, so he recycled it into one of the later books.
Props to Teague for mentioning Lydia!
Teague, have you ever played "Somewhere My Love Lies Sleeping" on loop?
What happens if you sync this commentary up with Dark Side Of The Moon...?!
I actually tried doing "The Dark Side of Oz" and came to the conclusion that it is total, utter bullshit.
Try different drugs
The guy who played the coroner of Munchkinland was a hoot.
That character is either the fastest medical examiner of all time or a fraud. Within five minutes of the person’s death, he’s able to positively I.D. the body (which is pancaked underneath a house) and proffer an official death certificate written in calligraphy. He proceeds to claim that he "thoroughly examined her." Really? Thoroughly. In five minutes? Now it doesn't take long to pronounce someone dead, but the document is clearly a forgery created to impress the mayor. Take your eye off these Munchkinland civil servants for a split second, and they try to pull a fast one.
DOROTHY IS NOT ELIGIBLE TO WEAR THE SLIPPERS. SHOW US THE LONG FORM DEATH CERTIFICATE!
- Munchkinland Teaparty Guild
I was so psyched to hear Ian on this! Awesome.
Except of course, he couldn't get a word in Edgewise, poor guy!
But still. Ian. Man.
Any more Dynamo coming soon?
/Z
He totally could have, he just... he's polite. He sat quietly and watched the movie and gaped at Dorkman when he knew facts.
DOROTHY IS NOT ELIGIBLE TO WEAR THE SLIPPERS. SHOW US THE LONG FORM DEATH CERTIFICATE!
- Munchkinland Teaparty Guild
This is clearly an attempt to disrupt normal order and pollute our child's minds with foreign ideas.
Donald Trumpkin
Industrial Guild Leader
Dorkman: "He also played Woody.... Make your jokes here."
THERE'S A SNAKE IN MY BUTT!.... (I'm sorry)
Teague: "Water! My only weakness!"
Brian: "Just like in the movie, Signs!"
Well, she IS Green!
Anytime I hear the line, "Surrender, Dorothy," I am happily reminded of the Scorsese film, After Hours wherein a character is mentioned yelling that out whenever he climaxes during sex.
Dorkman: "He also played Woody.... Make your jokes here."
THERE'S A SNAKE IN MY BUTT!.... (I'm sorry)
Teague: "Water! My only weakness!"
Brian: "Just like in the movie, Signs!"Well, she IS Green!
Anytime I hear the line, "Surrender, Dorothy," I am happily reminded of the Scorsese film, After Hours wherein a character is mentioned yelling that out whenever he climaxes during sex.
This disturbs me on a number of levels...
Yeah so awesome to hear Ian introduced... and the again at the end. Like a celebrity appearance on Happy Days. Never heard him so quiet.
So Ozception... could it be that Dorothy awakes in a second dream? Who is the architect and what song is the kicker?
So Mike's three movies are Ghostbusters, Annie and The Wizard of Oz. What about the rest of y'all?
My three are The Last Unicorn, The Princess Bride, and The Neverendng Story. All three are adaptations of books and take place in a fantasy setting, which was fine growing up in the 80s, but left me with a pretty barren landscape as the years passed. Without a doubt, my love of The Last Unicorn is responsible for my enduring love of animation, because I never made the connection that animation=kid's fare=crap. It's also one of the reasons I tend to like movies that avoid clear-cut happy endings. The Princess Bride had a major influence on my sense of humor, in that much of it is based on wit and wordplay rather than slapstick. Not that the physical comedy isn't there, but it takes a back seat to people saying interesting and clever things. And for a children's movie, The Neverending Story is pretty dark. I've read some reviews that make reference to the whimsical, fanciful, and fantastic but all seem to ignore its unrelenting undercurrent of sorrow. There's a dead mom, a dead horse, and a dying princess, the whole world is slowly being destroyed, and the hero actually fails in his task. The parts I aways remembered about this movie were the gloomy, sad ones and that terrifying scene at the end between Atreyu and the Gmork.
Powered by PunBB, supported by Informer Technologies, Inc.
Currently installed 9 official extensions. Copyright © 2003–2009 PunBB.