By Chris Luckett
4 stars out of 5
Image property of Walt Disney Pictures |
After the success of Return to Oz, Broadway’s “Wicked,” and television’s “Tin Man,” it
shouldn’t be so surprising to see someone attempt an extension of The Wizard of Oz. Yet all most people
could seem to talk about in the lead-up to Oz
the Great and Powerful’s release was how it would compare to the original.
Let it be said: it manages pretty well.
Set 34 years before Dorothy flew over the
rainbow with Toto, Oz the Great and
Powerful features a carnival magician named Oscar Diggs (James Franco),
whose hot air balloon gets caught up in a twister and lands him in a world
desperately in search of a wizard to save them.
Image property of Walt Disney Pictures |
The Oz of 1905 is a land divided, with
three witch sisters at war (Michelle Williams, Rachel Weisz, and Mila Kunis).
When one of the witches turns truly wicked, it’s up to Oscar (or “Oz”) and the
people of Oz to save the day.
As a prequel, the movie isn’t as clever as
the musical “Wicked,” which set the pre-Dorothy stage far more ingeniously. (A
movie adaptation of “Wicked” is currently in the works.) It can’t be denied,
though, that Oz the Great and Powerful
is quite an enjoyable movie.
Franco never quite fills the role
comfortably, unable to convey any true sincerity when it’s actually called for.
The rest of the cast, however, gives their all, from the bewitching trio of
lead actresses to Zach Braff, who voices a monkey-bellhop companion of Oz’s.
Image property of Walt Disney Pictures |
Oz
the Great and Powerful is no The Wizard of Oz, but there was never a chance of that. As an enchanting
return to a beloved world of childhood memories, though, it proves to have more
brains, heart, and courage than many sceptical moviegoers will expect.