Tags
Language
Tags
April 2024
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
31 1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 1 2 3 4

The Wizard of Oz (1939) [3-Disc Collector's Edition] [Repost]

Posted By: ETRU
The Wizard of Oz (1939) [3-Disc Collector's Edition] [Repost]

The Wizard of Oz (1939) [3-Disc Collector's Edition]
3xDVD9 | ISO | NTSC 4:3 | Covers + DVD Labels | 1:41:36 | 7,58 Gb + 7,48 Gb + 7,57 Gb
Audio: English AC3 5.1/1.0 @ 448/192 Kbps; French AC3 1.0 @ 192 Kbps | Subs: English, French, Spanish
Genre: Adventure, Family, Fantasy

Directors: Victor Fleming, George Cukor, Mervyn LeRoy, Norman Taurog, King Vidor
Stars: Judy Garland, Frank Morgan, Ray Bolger

In this charming film based on the popular L. Frank Baum stories, Dorothy and her dog Toto are caught in a tornado's path and somehow end up in the land of Oz. Here she meets some memorable friends and foes in her journey to meet the Wizard of Oz who everyone says can help her return home and possibly grant her new friends their goals of a brain, heart and courage.

IMDB - Top 250 #187 | Won 2 Oscars | DVDbeaver | Wikipedia | Amazon

"There's no place like home. There's no place like home. There's no place like home."

It's remarkable to think that the 1939 movie classic "The Wizard of Oz" we all know and love wasn't always as popular as it is today. At the film's opening, observers gave it mixed reviews. "As for the light touch of fantasy," wrote critic Otis Ferguson, "it weighs like a pound of fruitcake soaking wet." And critic Richard Mallett said, "I don't see why children shouldn't like it, but for adults there isn't very much except Bert Lahr."

The Wizard of Oz (1939) [3-Disc Collector's Edition] [Repost]

Although the film enjoyed a profit at the box office, being re-released in the U.S. in 1949 and 1955, it would not realize its current status as a cultural icon until it began appearing as an annual special event on TV, premiering on network television in 1956 and beginning its historic run in 1959. After that, there was no stopping it. When MGM made the film, they had hoped it might achieve the success of Walt Disney's "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs." Little did they know it would take more than a quarter of a century to date…one of the most enduring musical fantasies of all time.

The Wizard of Oz (1939) [3-Disc Collector's Edition] [Repost]

Now, after issuing several previous DVD editions, Warner Bros. have released the movie in their biggest and best sets yet, the one reviewed here a "Three-Disc Collector's Edition," with a totally restored picture, improved sound, and ton of extras. Who'da thunk?

The Wizard of Oz (1939) [3-Disc Collector's Edition] [Repost]

You see, it's a wonder "The Wizard of Oz" got made at all. Based largely on the first book (1900) in a long series of children's novels by L. Frank Baum and his successors, the 1939 movie followed a handful of silent versions that never achieved great distinction. MGM went through a number of directors, including Richard Thorpe, George Cukor, and King Vidor, with Victor Fleming receiving the credit, to get the thing done. The studio had originally wanted W.C. Fields or Ed Wynn to play the Wizard, but they got Frank Morgan, who, coincidentally, wore the author's own coat in the film (the coat had been discovered in a used-clothing store). Also, the studio had wanted Shirley Temple to play Dorothy, Ms. Temple being the leading child actress of the time, but she was under contract to a rival studio, Fox, who wouldn't loan her out. Sixteen-year-old Judy Garland had to have her chest bound to look more like an eleven-year-old, a discomforting ordeal. Ray Bolger was unhappy as the Tin Man and asked to exchange roles with Buddy Ebsen, who was to have been the Scarecrow, but then Ebsen became allergic to the silver paint, and Jack Haley came in to replace him.

The Wizard of Oz (1939) [3-Disc Collector's Edition] [Repost]

What more could go wrong? Well, the studio almost cut "Over the Rainbow," which won an Academy Award for composers Harold Arlen and E.Y. Harburg, because they thought it slowed down the action. Thank heaven common sense prevailed. Then, some of the veteran troopers–Bolger, Haley, and Bert Lahr–were afraid Garland would upstage them, Garland later saying she was unhappy during the shooting because of the way her costars subtly snubbed her. Bolger always denied the fact. What they all agreed on, though, was that they suffocated in their costumes under the hot studio lights, and everyone was probably getting pretty edgy. To add to the misery, Margaret Hamilton as the Wicked Witch (who, amazingly, was only in her thirties at the time but looked older) was severely burned in an accident involving the fire and explosion of her scene leaving Munchinland, and she couldn't work for the next six weeks. Furthermore, the little people playing the munchkins were said to be partying extensively every night at a nearby hotel, and the studio was glad when they finished their parts in the movie and left. The stories go on and on. Nor did the film stick entirely to the Baum classic, changing the Wicked Witch from an old crone afraid of the dark to the archetype we now recognize, Dorothy's adventure from a reality to a dream, her silver slippers to ruby, and so on. None of it mattered.

The Wizard of Oz (1939) [3-Disc Collector's Edition] [Repost]

What was important was the result, and who can deny that the combination of stars, music, and fantasy in "The Wizard of Oz" doesn't still enchant almost everyone who watches it? Judy Garland elevated herself to the level of Shirley Temple as one of the world's best-loved movie youngsters; Ray Bolger endeared himself to audiences everywhere; Bert Lahr always made us laugh; Jack Haley was a commendable Tin Woodman; Frank Morgan, in all the parts he played as Professor Marvel, the Wizard, and various citizens of Emerald City, could hardly have been topped; Billie Burke as Glinda the Good Witch was beautiful and charming; Clara Blandick and Charley Grapwin as Aunt Em and Uncle Henry were as loveable as any kinfolk could be; Toto became everybody's favorite little dog; and, of course, dear Margaret Hamilton positively embodied the Wicked Witch of the West and would thereafter often be typecast as an old grump or gossip (in a career that lasted for the next forty years, all the way up until 1979).

The Wizard of Oz (1939) [3-Disc Collector's Edition] [Repost]

Interestingly, I used to show "The Wizard of Oz" to my film classes every year because most of the students hadn't seen it since they were children, and I wanted them to see it with newer, older eyes. Afterwards, when they wrote about it and analyzed it, most of them expressed amazement at how different it was. For instance, many of them didn't realize that the characters at the beginning of the film–Professor Marvel (Frank Morgan), Miss Gulch (Margaret Hamilton), Hunk (Ray Bolger), Zeke (Bert Lahr), and Hickory (Jack Haley)–were the same people who would show up in Dorothy's adventure as the Wizard, the Wicked Witch, the Scarecrow, the Cowardly Lion, and the Tin Man. Likewise, many of them had no idea the movie was filmed almost entirely in a studio (only the opening clouds were real). "Why, the Emerald City is just painted on a screen!" many of them would exclaim. "When I was little, I thought they were really in the Land of Oz!"

The Wizard of Oz (1939) [3-Disc Collector's Edition] [Repost]

No, it's world of soundstages, backdrops, and matte paintings, even the celebrated tornado a muslin wind sock hooked to an overhead scaffold. But does it matter? No more so than knowing that the dinosaurs in "Jurassic Park" are computer animations. It's the magic of movies that the best of them force us willingly to suspend our disbelief and enjoy them in spite of themselves.

The Wizard of Oz (1939) [3-Disc Collector's Edition] [Repost]

"The Wizard of Oz" remains one of the most enduring musical fantasies of all time, and WB's new "Three-Disc Collector's Edition," with its restored print, remixed sound, and multitude of extras, makes it better than ever. How much do I like it, personally? When DVDs appeared on the scene in 1997, the very first three discs I bought were "Batman," "Blade Runner," and "The Wizard of Oz." I couldn't be happier than to see "The Wizard of Oz" in its new, improved wrappings.
The Wizard of Oz (1939) [3-Disc Collector's Edition] [Repost]

DISC ONE:
Audio commentary with film historian John Fricke (introduced by Sydney Pollack), with archival interview segments from Barbara Freed-Saltzman, Ray Bolger, Jack Haley, Margaret Hamilton, John Lahr, Jane Lahr, Hamilton Meserve, Dona Massin, William Tuttle, Buddy Ebsen, Mervyn LeRoy and Jerry Maren
"The Wonderful Wizard Of Oz Storybook" - featurette (read by Angela Lansbury - 10:27 min)
"Prettier Than Ever: The Restoration Of Oz" - featurette (11:27 min)
"We Haven’t Really Met Properly…" - Biographies (narrated by Angela Lansbury - 21:19 min)
Isolated Music And Effects Track

DISC TWO:
"The Wonderful Wizard Of Oz: The Making Of A Movie Classic" documentary [hosted by Angela Lansbury] (50:52 min)
"Memories Of Oz" -featurette (27:36 min)
"The Art of Imagination: A Tribute to Oz" -featurette (narrated by Sydney Pollack - 29:44 min)
"Because of the Wonderful Things It Does: The Legacy of Oz" -featurette (25:04 min)
"Harold Arlen’s Home Movies" -clips (4:39 min)
Outtakes and Deleted Scenes:
- "If I Only Had A Brain" - 'Scarecrow' Dance (5mins)
- "If I Only Had A Heart" - Buddy Ebsen Audio Track (1min)
- "Triumphal Return To Emerald City" (2mins)
- "Over The Rainbow" (2mins)
- "The Jitterbug" (4mins)
"It’s a Twister, It’s a Twister: The Tornado Tests" -special effects sequences (8:16 min)
"Off To See The Wizard": 8 cartoon segments (by Chuck Jones - 3:56 min):
- "The Cowardly Lion Needs A Light"
- "The Tin Man Creaks"
- "The Scarecrow Sneezes"
- "Toto Gets A Bone"
- "Wizard Gets A Sign"
- "Wizard Gets A Crystal Ball"
- "Gypsy Shows Wizard Cards - It's All In The Cards"
- "Wizard Walks Through Door"
"From The Vault (vintage shorts)":
-Another Romance of Celluloid: Electrical Power (10:29 min)
-Excerpt From 1939 Cavalcade Of Academy Awards (2:14 min)
-Texas Contest Winners (1:25 min)
Audio Supplements:
- The Jukebox (286 min)
–- 1) "Over The Rainbow" - Various Takes
–- 2) "Munchkinland Medley" - Rehearsal Recordings (with Harold Arlen & E. Y. Harburg and Piano Temp Track)
–- 3) "Munchkinland Medley" - Sequence Recordings
–- 4) "Munchkinland Medley" - Voice Tests And Rehearsal Tracks
–- 5) "If I Only Had A Brain" - Various Takes
–- 6) "We're Off To See The Wizard" - Various Takes
–- 7) "If I Only Had A Heart" - Buddy Ebsen & Jack Haley Versions
–- 8) "If I Only Had The Nerve/ We're Off To See The Wizard" - Various Takes
–- 9) "Emerald City/ The Merry Old Land Of Oz"
–- 10) "If I Were King Of The Forest" - Various Takes
–- 11) "The Jitterbug" - Various Takes & Rehearsal Recording
–- 12) "Over The Rainbow/Triumphal Return To Emerald City"
–- 13) "Kansas Underscoring" - Kansas Sequences
–- 14) "Munchkinland Underscoring" - Munchkinland Sequence
–- 15) "The Road To Oz Underscoring" - Dorothy Meets The Scarecrow, Tin Man & The Cowardly Lion
–- 16) "Emerald City Underscoring" - Emerald City Sequence
–- 17) "The Witch's Castle Underscoring" - The Witch's Castle
–- 18) "Finale Underscoring" - Finale
- MGM Radio Show: "Good News Of 1939" (60:53 min)
- MGM Promotional Radio Trailer: "Leo Is On The Air!" (12:13 min)
- Lux Radio Theater Radio Broadcast (features Judy Garland, from 25.12.1950 - 60:46 min)
Stills Galleries:
- Oz on Broadway
- Pre-MGM
- Sketches and Storyboards
- Costume and Makeup Tests
- Richard Thorpe's Oz
- Buddy Ebsen
- Oz Comes to Life
- Behind the Scenes
- Portraits
- Special Effects
- Post Production
- Deleted Scenes
- Original Publicity
- 8/15/1939 Hollywood Premiere
- 8/17/1939 New York Premiere
- 2/29/1940 Academy Awards Ceremony
- Oz Abroad
- Oz Revivals
6 Theatrical Trailers:
- "What Is Oz?" Teaser [1939] (1min)
- B&W Loews Cairo Trailer [1940] (feat. alternate take of "Over the Rainbow" - 1:57)
- Re-Issue Trailer [1949] (3mins)
- "Grown Up" Re-Issue Trailer [1949] (2mins)
- Children's Matinee Re-Issue Trailer [1970] (1min)
- Warner Bros. Theatrical Re-Issue Trailer [1998] (1min)

DISC THREE:
"L. Frank Baum: The Man Behind The Curtain" - featurette (27:43 min)
"The Wizard Of Oz (1910)" - silent film (13:17 min)
"The Magic Cloak Of Oz (1914)" - silent film (38:26 min)
"His Majesty, The Scarecrow Of Oz (1914)" - silent film (59:04 min)
"The Wizard Of Oz (1925)" - Restored silent version (71:48 min)
"The Wizard Of Oz (1933)" - Technicolor animated short (8:12 min)

Thanks to Someonelse for initial post.
–––––––
All Credits for DVD goes to Original uploader.

No More Mirrors, Please.



397A79E318C90D439750F11E7E23FDF8 *Fisozz.d1.part1.rar
EB92063B49681AD85EEAFC8FBA53AEC8 *Fisozz.d1.part2.rar
633F265BA45F3EB865BB76D90863BBA2 *Fisozz.d1.part3.rar
369BD870A6B9F46E50F8FB9F702152D0 *Fisozz.d1.part4.rar
FF7BEA74F9A56274C6AC6A009026DEFF *Fisozz.d1.part5.rar
25A7735571F36278BD77660CF2D926D9 *Fisozz.d1.part6.rar
6049647C1D51259C1FA06595336149DB *Fisozz.d1.part7.rar
8C54D2DE6C5E2D4CE896FEC5A595202A *Fisozz.d1.part8.rar

49016D113DC5019ABEC5890CE5B6DE60 *Fisozz.d2.part1.rar
6F83C67D1E1B3B34266C229B9D36031C *Fisozz.d2.part2.rar
179DB9E21F3411FAF8C52BFBF82C9CCC *Fisozz.d2.part3.rar
3F8146274FDC0C700977933F90E62D2B *Fisozz.d2.part4.rar
59029D61E25370C9CCD8BF89AC0BC07B *Fisozz.d2.part5.rar
AA0B737D9201E71B29B0436C16B74504 *Fisozz.d2.part6.rar
C8B5DD2155545DD62CD3C6B06A5C1639 *Fisozz.d2.part7.rar
9165B62E5E7A8F3C1D0493E258E56A28 *Fisozz.d2.part8.rar

BDCE81A0EA09BCFD1C05FE2D7FE42CF0 *Fisozz.d3.part1.rar
393BDEFABF7686033E72301D1CF378D2 *Fisozz.d3.part2.rar
F8D5DB5CCDD38358ADCAE03EA6F0C540 *Fisozz.d3.part3.rar
BB3C436E3CE1F1066D5CAFF6D1CEA63A *Fisozz.d3.part4.rar
E3506D403F55750DC71366E282BD981B *Fisozz.d3.part5.rar
BA43DEC99BE065E3F9A3CF1C4C7E8702 *Fisozz.d3.part6.rar
AE02F6AD0F5129121A8DA162DD03F444 *Fisozz.d3.part7.rar
CB1DA4597DB7356445E4C800C944421C *Fisozz.d3.part8.rar