How many oompa loompas are in charlie and the chocolate factory




















Other names for the dot are tilak, tika, pottue, sindoor, tilakam, and kumkum. The palace is also in the shape of the Taj Mahal, a tomb for the emperor's favorite wife in India that was once covered with camouflage in World War II out of fear of Japanese bombing.

In the films, however, each child brings only one parent, for a total of two mothers, two fathers, and one grandfather. This was also a similarly that the films share with the Broadway musical. In the television room scene, the movie into which the chocolate bar is teleported is implied to be A Space Odyssey The ape's behavior towards the chocolate bar is a remake of the first scene of the movie, and the movie's theme music was also used in that scene.

The UPC on the giant chocolate bar which was sent by television was , which is the UPC for seven ounce Deep Roy is a self-proclaimed terrible singer and dancer. He learned how to dance for this movie, but he did not do his own singing. Johnny Depp used game show hosts as well as children's television hosts, such as Fred Rogers, as his inspiration for his performance as Willy Wonka. He also said in interviews that Willy Wonka would be "part Howard Hughes-reclusive, part 's glamorous rock star.

Johnny Depp does not like the taste of "good" chocolate. He prefers the cheap, Easter-bunny type. As mentioned earlier, the country where the Chocolate Factory is located is an ambiguous cross between the U.

This is even carried through to the money. The ten "dollar" bill that Charlie uses to purchase the winning bar is a fairly obvious cross between a British pound note and a U. It is also noted that when Charlie finds the last Golden Ticket, he is offered five hundred dollars for it.

Sir Peter Ustinov was offered the role of Grandpa Joe, but he passed away before he could give the producers his answer. When Willy Wonka opens his factory for the first time, he cuts a ribbon with scissors. He then turns around and opens his arms, looking like one hand is made of scissors. Upon this movie's release, Violet Beauregarde's blueberry transformation sequence became so popular that it earned its own on-line fan community. When Mike Teavee is teleported into the television, the scene from Psycho in which Norman Bates attacks Marion Crane is re-enacted.

Violet's scene where she blows up into a blueberry was shot by digitally creating the inflated body, then adding in a live-action shot of AnnaSophia Robb on a tilting machine. Director Tim Burton avoided using too many digital effects because he wanted the younger actors and actresses to feel as if they were working in a realistic environment, as a result, forced perspective techniques, oversized props, and scale models were used to avoid computer graphics imagery.

Unlike the chocolate river, Tim Burton wanted this river to be thick, like real chocolate. AnnaSophia Robb wore prosthetics in the blueberry transformation scene, causing her face to appear to swell up to twice its normal size.

As a consequence of British Equity rules, which state that children can only work four and a half hours a day, filming took six months, ending in December The producers sought out new actors and actresses for the roles of the four "brats". This was the first screen credit for three of them, and the second for AnnaSophia Robb.

The filmmakers used fascist architecture for Wonka's factory exterior and designed most of the sets on three hundred sixty degree soundstages similar to cycloramas. A camera lens was not properly secured when trying to get a shot of a vat of chocolate.

As a result, the lens fell into the vat, which destroyed it. The gates of the factory were offered to the Roald Dahl Museum in Great Missenden, Buckinghamshire after filming wrapped. However, due to their sheer size, the museum had to turn this offer down.

Warner Bros. In the last scene, where Willy talks to a shrink, the doctor's nametag on the desk is "Dr. Sarrosy", an homage to famed cinematographer Paul Sarossy. Burton thought the paternal character would help explain Willy Wonka, and that otherwise, he would be "just a weird guy". The element of an estranged father-son relationship previously appeared in Big Fish When Wonka first introduces himself he says "Good Morning Starshine" which is a nod to the musical Hair with a song being called that.

In the novel, Mr. Wonka tells Charlie he's won the factory while they're flying in the Great Glass Elevator, and in order to ensure that the boy's other grandparents won't have to get out of their bed - which won't fit through the shack's door but will fit in the elevator - to move there, he crashes it into the shack to pick the family up. In this adaptation, Mr.

Wonka doesn't break the news that Charlie's won the factory to anyone until after he's crashed the elevator into the shack, and to make matters worse he doesn't intend to take anyone but Charlie back to the factory. The children at the tour: Augustus Gloop is phlegmatic a glutton who doesn't care much for anything not related to candy , Veruca Salt is choleric a hot-tempered brat determined to get everything she wants , Violet Beauregarde and Charlie Bucket are both sanguine the former prideful and open to challenges, the latter polite and kind to everyone he meets , and Mike Teavee is melancholic a critical introvert who doesn't care much for anything non-technology.

After receiving enthusiastic approval from the Dahl Estate, Warner Bros. There were 10 of us in all. The director Mel Stuart sometimes got very frustrated telling us what to do in English and then trying to explain to the Maltese, German and Turkish actors what he wanted as well. When we first arrived in Munich the choreographer Howard Jeffrey showed us these amazing dance routines, but he had to change them to suit our short legs.

The Oompa Loompas went on to do various other TV, film and stage shows, but there are now only three of us alive. Some of the Oompa Loompas were very old — one was in his 70s back then. Register Don't have an account? Oompa Loompas. View source. History Talk 0. Deep Roy had to take Pilates and dance classes for this role which involves numerous songs and dances. Also, he was dressed as some female Oompa-Loompas that worked in the administration offices.

But those songs often have lessons, too:. So please, oh please, we beg, we pray, Go throw your TV set away, And in its place you can install A lovely bookshelf on the wall. These Oompa-Loompas are wiser than they seem. They know Mike Teavee wouldn't have been shrunk if he had just turned off the TV every once in a while and read a book instead. So while the Oompa-Loompas are mischievous, and are small like children, they also know when to behave.

So we can't help but agree when they tell their audience that it "serves [Mike Teavee] right" to have been shrunk by the television. Most importantly, they're hard workers. Willy Wonka's chocolate factory just wouldn't be what it is today without the help of the Oompa-Loompas. And therefore our story, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory wouldn't be the awesome story that it is without them, either. Parents Home Homeschool College Resources.

Study Guide. By Roald Dahl. Previous Next.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000