Through human nature people surroundings influence who they become. The main character Amy is a long way from home, she is snatched by a tornado and taken to Oz. Nothing seems right to Amy at the time she gets there. As she goes through many ups and downs she is picked up by the ORDER, a group of the wicked who have joined together to kill Dorothy. Dorothy is back in Oz and is taking the magic.
Dorothy Must Die by Danielle Paige is a piece of fantasy. The main character in this book is Amy Gumm. Amy is transported into the world, Oz but the heroes are villains, and the villains are heroes. In Oz dorothy faces, witches, fairies, munchkins and flying monkeys. To get back to her mother, Amy has to, steal the scarecrow 's brain, remove the tin woodman 's heart, and take the lion 's courage.
The Land of the Munchkins were ecstatic that the Wicked Witch was gone. Munchkin Country praised Dorothy. Moving on, the death of the Wicked Witch of the West was also caused by Dorothy. Dorothy 'melted ' her by dumping a bucket of water on the Witch. Following the Wicked
Dorothy Must Die by Danielle Paige is about a young woman by the name of Amy Gumm whose life is turned upside down the moment she steps foot in Oz. Nothing is how she pictured it to be. Everything is dull and definitely less happy and magical than she expected. She soon finds out the reason for all this gloominess is because Dorothy has turned evil and is sucking all of the magic out of Oz to keep for herself. Amy meets a lot of people along the way, including some allies that help her through troubles, and some enemies such as the Tin Woodman who captures Amy and takes her to Dorothy in the Emerald City.
Despite just having met her, Dorothy recognizes this kindness and takes her advice to travel to Emerald City, the Land of Oz. Oz, the powerful wizard is said to grant people's wishes; Dorothy’s being getting back to Kansas to her Auntie Em and Uncle. On her way to the powerful Wizard of Oz, she runs into three unique characters: the
Did you know know that in both the book and the film, in The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, the supporting characters are struggling with their inner demons. You may not have realized this, but their internal conflicts are ironic to the personality of themselves. There are many different obstacles that the supporting characters in The Wizard of Oz encounter that relates to their internal conflicts and irony. All three supporting characters, the Scarecrow, the Tin Woodman, and the Cowardly Lion are face with problems, and they will have to solve them by using what they supposedly don't have. The Scarecrow does not have a brain, the Tin Woodman needs a heart, and the Cowardly Lion lacks courage.
The Wizard of Oz is a musical about a young girl, named Dorothy, who lives on a farm in Kansas. She desperately wants to get away, and decides to run away from home. After she meets a peddler who convinces her to go back home, she ends up going back home to find a “cyclone” heading right for her house. Dorothy, her dog, Toto, and her house
The movie Wizard of Oz is about a girl named Dorothy and her dog, Toto, get taken away in a tornado in Kansas. Dorothy goes on a trail called the Yellow Brick Road in Emerald City to meet a wizard and along the way she picks up a few friends. All of the character in the story are traveling along this Yellow Brick Road to find something for themselves. Dorothy wants to go back to Kansas. The scarecrow needs a brain.
The viewer can almost feel the fear of the men who are not able to move, the gruesome death of friends, and even one’s own nerves. Another important factor in the power of this scene on the viewer, is the use of color. The canvas is complete with a washed out palette of grays, blues and browns. These aspects help further immerse the audience into this historically fictitious world. These stark deficiencies not found in most film allow us to see the world in a different light, to show us the awful realities about
L. Frank Baum described his novel, The Wizard of Oz, as a modernized fairy tale. It is a story that expresses the theme of finding belonging and identity through a set of journeys and adversity. While with Aunt Em and Uncle Henry farm in Kansas a tornado sends the farmhouse with Dorothy and Toto hiding inside to the wonderful Land of Oz Upon landed in Oz, Dorothy kills the Wicked Witch of the East with her house, freeing the blue Munchkins, but the Munchkins or the Wicked Witch of the North could not tell her how to get back home. This is where Dorothy embarks on her first journey, and comes across some new friends. She meets the straw-stuffed Scarecrow who wants to come to Oz with her to get some brains; then she meets the Tin Woodman, who was originally Nick Chopper before he was cursed by a witch, and getting his limbs cut off; then finally Dorothy meets the Cowardly Lion who is
As the story of The Wizard of Oz plays out the character Dorothy goes through significant change, she is a dynamic character. Her heart turns from wanting to grateful as she matures into a young lady, which is important to this plot, because her journey of growing up impacts the entirety of the story and it impacts all of the characters she encounters along the way. The entire story begins with Dorothy frantically begging for the attention of her preoccupied aunt and uncle. Everything about her actions and words hint at self absorbent and immaturity. Not caring for the duties that her caretakers were tending to she throws herself into the mood and feelings of nobody loves me, driving her away from her home into danger, but the danger changes
On of the greatest examples of imagery that Alice Walker uses is the one that compares light and darkness. At the beguining of the story the author mentions delicate and calm setting of a farm. In creating this imagery the reader is able to understand that all the positive and upbeat words are associated with the farm setting. Myop’s light-hearted innocence is also shown when “watching the tiny white bubbles disrupt the thin black scale”. The effective description provides credibility to the environment, and makes the later events all the more shocking,
The death of the Wicked Witch of the East made her a national hero of the Munchkins. Baum characterizes Dorothy as a strong female character. She displays perseverance and independence in order to reach her goal, to go back to Kansas. Considering her young age, it is expected from her to feel disoriented and vulnerable, however she finds solutions to her problems and carries them through. At the start of the journey she travels alone with no guidance from a ‘strong’ male character, making her only companion is her dog Toto.
After Dorothy wakes up, and as she is helping the Tin Man, the scene once again zooms back out to the Wicked Witch and her crystal, before dissolving back to the group once more as they continue on their
The death of the Wicked Witch of the East made her a national hero of the Munchkins. Baum characterizes Dorothy as a strong female character. She displays perseverance and independence in order to reach her goal, to go back to Kansas. Considering her young age, it is expected from her to feel disoriented and vulnerable, however she finds solutions to her problems and carries them through. At the start of the journey she travels alone with no guidance from a ‘strong’ male character, making her only companion her dog Toto.