Even though we all knew this revelation was coming up, even those who didn't know could guess it from hero's first encounters with the Wizard. During Dorothy's audience, you could very clearly hear the sounds of Wizard cranking and pushing the giant head forward before Dorothy and then hear same sound as the giant head disappeared. Similarly, during Scarecrow's audience it was very obvious that the beautiful lady did not move no part of her body, including her mouth, during the entire thing, showing that it was not real. Monster that Tin Man encountered was very obviously fake from the start as apart from "breathing" it too didn't move at all, including its mouth.
The FSX may have been intended as a clue, or they could have been to elicit a feeling of, "Just what is this Wizard?" The Lady was the Wizard in a disguise; he was just being poised.
@@miroslavtomic7038 I was talking about the book; I'd forgotten about how they did it in the show. Still, how was it any indication? Fairies are supposed to be ethereal and unearthly.
@@MaskedMan66 You are forgetting one small detail , otherwise you are right. Wizard turned out to be a fraud and he most certainly was not in capacity or condition to conjure up anything, let alone etherreal things like fairies or anything like that. He simply used whole bunch of old common magic tricks. The only reason they worked out the first time was because Dorothy and her friends were scared to death to begin with and they believed they saw something that just wasn't there at all. Sounds of cranking during Dorothy's audition are way too obvious not to be noticed in normal situation, but she was so scared that she just ignored them completely. The other were much more convincing.
You know, at 4:42, if Tin Man simply buried his axe into the doorman's skull, they'd get to see the Wizard, just like they wanted, and no one to protest. Plus, it would just be better. "I don't care how scary he looks, he's owes me a heart and I'm gonna get it." Tin Man then cleaves into the Wizard's chest and tears out his still beating heart, which he then seals into a hollow compartment within his tin shell of a body. At this point, now having a heart, he kills Dorothy, pulls out Scarecrow's stuffing and confines Lion to a cage, before proclaiming himself "The Great and Powerful Tin Ruler of Oz." Hey he wanted a heart, no one said it had to be a good heart.
What kak are you spewing? The Tin Woodman is a kind soul dedicated to treating his fellow creatures right. He is not a murderer. And as anybody knows who has read or seen any version of this story, the Tin Woodman *already has a heart,* and it is a good one.
@@wrestlingconnoisseur You did! You talked about him killing Omby Amby, the Wizard, and his rescuer and friend, Dorothy. That would be murder. Now away with all your B.S.
@@MaskedMan66 You're talking semantics. If you'll examine my post, I clearly used the word "kill." It was self-defense. Dorothy has anxiety issues from being groped by munchkins all the time. She'd resort to anything, even taking a set of special pliers and threatening to unfasten all of Tin Man's bolts. If some crazy lady threatened to pull out your rusty bolts with a special pair of pliers, you'd split her skull with a woodman's axe too, I'd warrant.
Love this show.
This show is a classic!
Even though we all knew this revelation was coming up, even those who didn't know could guess it from hero's first encounters with the Wizard.
During Dorothy's audience, you could very clearly hear the sounds of Wizard cranking and pushing the giant head forward before Dorothy and then hear same sound as the giant head disappeared.
Similarly, during Scarecrow's audience it was very obvious that the beautiful lady did not move no part of her body, including her mouth, during the entire thing, showing that it was not real.
Monster that Tin Man encountered was very obviously fake from the start as apart from "breathing" it too didn't move at all, including its mouth.
The FSX may have been intended as a clue, or they could have been to elicit a feeling of, "Just what is this Wizard?" The Lady was the Wizard in a disguise; he was just being poised.
@@MaskedMan66 Lady was not Wizard in costume. It was a tranparent statue that he shined some light into it.
@@miroslavtomic7038 I was talking about the book; I'd forgotten about how they did it in the show. Still, how was it any indication? Fairies are supposed to be ethereal and unearthly.
@@MaskedMan66 You are forgetting one small detail , otherwise you are right. Wizard turned out to be a fraud and he most certainly was not in capacity or condition to conjure up anything, let alone etherreal things like fairies or anything like that. He simply used whole bunch of old common magic tricks. The only reason they worked out the first time was because Dorothy and her friends were scared to death to begin with and they believed they saw something that just wasn't there at all. Sounds of cranking during Dorothy's audition are way too obvious not to be noticed in normal situation, but she was so scared that she just ignored them completely. The other were much more convincing.
Cool, he’s from my city!
5:42 🤣
This wizard is a phooey
Lion should have bite the wizard
I think you mean phony.
@@axellacson1931That wouldn't have solved anything
You know, at 4:42, if Tin Man simply buried his axe into the doorman's skull, they'd get to see the Wizard, just like they wanted, and no one to protest. Plus, it would just be better.
"I don't care how scary he looks, he's owes me a heart and I'm gonna get it." Tin Man then cleaves into the Wizard's chest and tears out his still beating heart, which he then seals into a hollow compartment within his tin shell of a body. At this point, now having a heart, he kills Dorothy, pulls out Scarecrow's stuffing and confines Lion to a cage, before proclaiming himself "The Great and Powerful Tin Ruler of Oz."
Hey he wanted a heart, no one said it had to be a good heart.
What kak are you spewing? The Tin Woodman is a kind soul dedicated to treating his fellow creatures right. He is not a murderer. And as anybody knows who has read or seen any version of this story, the Tin Woodman *already has a heart,* and it is a good one.
@@MaskedMan66 Who said anything about murder? It was self defense. Dorothy or Tin Man. None of that "Here we are together" bullshit.
@@wrestlingconnoisseur You did! You talked about him killing Omby Amby, the Wizard, and his rescuer and friend, Dorothy. That would be murder. Now away with all your B.S.
@@MaskedMan66 You're talking semantics. If you'll examine my post, I clearly used the word "kill." It was self-defense. Dorothy has anxiety issues from being groped by munchkins all the time. She'd resort to anything, even taking a set of special pliers and threatening to unfasten all of Tin Man's bolts.
If some crazy lady threatened to pull out your rusty bolts with a special pair of pliers, you'd split her skull with a woodman's axe too, I'd warrant.
@@wrestlingconnoisseur Okay, you're just pathetically seeking attention. I now deny it to you. Goodbye.