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Wizard Of Oz Research Paper

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A Whole New World Individuals start life with an open mind and an open imagination. With the ability to perceive things that are real versus things that are inanimate, the mind is a powerful thing. Without the use of a strong imagination, movies such as Alice in Wonderland, Willie Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, and the most significant, The Wizard of Oz would be movies that could not possibly exist or make sense. Growing up kids imagine being pirates, princesses, and even doctors. Without the ability to believe in the things that cannot be seen, the world would be a pretty simple place. Some are born with a greater ability to imagine such as Frank Baum, author of The Wizard of Oz. A fierce cyclone carries a house in the air for what seems …show more content…

Frank Baum. (Fricke The Wizard of Oz). The film starts in a sepia toned Kansas in the early 1900s. Notable for its use of Technicolor, fantasy storytelling, musical score and unusual characters, over the years it has become an icon of American popular culture. It was nominated for six Academy Awards, including Best Picture but lost to Gone with the Wind (Fricke The Wizard of Oz). There were several means of color used in the production and reasons behind the colors as well. In his book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, Baum describes Kansas as being 'in shades of gray.' Further, Dorothy lived inside a farmhouse which had its paint blistered and washed away by the weather, giving it an 'air of grayness. Aunt Em and Uncle Henry were 'gray with age.' Effectively, the use of monochrome sepia tones for the Kansas sequences was a stylistic choice that evoked the dull and gray countryside (Clarke Get Happy). With the production and the making of The Wizard of Oz being a magical time of imagination, the story and meaning behind the movie makes it worth

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