Friday, March 10, 2006

The Fear of Magic

My Film Music class watched The Wizard of Oz last night, followed by my daughter watching it today while home sick. I then read the first three chapters of the book to my daughter, thanks to Project Gutenberg. There are many differences between the book and movie versions, including the switch from silver to ruby slippers (which ruins the Populist movement metaphor). But the biggest difference is that the book Dorothy really did go to a magical land, whereas Judy Garland's Dorothy just had a concussion-induced dream. Why was this change made? In the same year the film version of Wuthering Heights didn't make Cathy's ghost a figment of Heathcliff's imagination. So fantasy films weren't unheard of in 1939. But Cathy's ghost was the supernatural representation of adult longings (mostly, though I found Heathcliff and Cathy to be rather immature). Oz was the supernatural representation of a child's desire to run away and explore new things. I think society did not encourage this desire in their children. World War I and the Depression might have made trips abroad a frightening idea. The cost was unbearable and isolationism was back in vogue.

I always felt that the movie version's ending was a gyp, taking away the wonder of a magical new place. And it saddens me a little when my daughter points out that it is all just a dream, so she hasn't been transported to a new place of adventure and magic either. Thus we are reading the book version, so we can both be lifted away by a cyclone to a magical land surrounded by a great desert.

Update: I just found out via IMDB that the all-just-a-dream idea came from the 1925 silent film that had Oliver Hardy as the Tin Woodman. And Frank Baum didn't like the idea.

2 comments:

MJW said...

I never thought to wonder why they'd changed the ending till I read this, somehow. I know that in the original cut, after Dorothy's last line, the camera panned to the foot of her bed where the ruby slippers sat.

By the way: L. Frank Baum always denied that The Wizard of Oz was a political allegory or anything else but a children's book, and since he was a rabid Republican it's not likely he would have had pleasant things to say about populism or the silverite movement.

Scott said...

Yes, I know about Baum's intent. This is a good site of information on the books. Makes for a good joke, though.

I was not aware of this original cut that you mention. The opening cyclone sequence would contradict that, as we see nonsense figures in the cyclone and Miss Gulch turn into the Wicked Witch. These visuals, coming right after Dorothy was knocked out by a window, already tell us that we are taking a journey into her subconscious. Was that also altered from the original cut?