*AUDIO HAD TO BE ALTERED THROUGH THE REACTION FOR COPYRIGHT. HAD TO DO 14 REUPLOADS. BUT FINALLY ENJOY!! FULL LENGTH REACTION, EARLY ACCESS TO FUTURE VIDS AT* www.patreon.com/TimotheeReacts Check out my WILLY WONKA reaction: ruclips.net/video/7_4ETv8m-Zw/видео.html Check out my Animated Playlist: ruclips.net/p/PLr-YTHdnHmauAVREyHqVMDNyH44RFu_z8 Check out Malbread's Socials: instagram.com/malbread/ www.tiktok.com/@malbread_ www.twitch.tv/malbread
Fun fact when Johnny Deep said “Good morning star-shine the earth says hello” they had to film multiple takes because Tim Burton wouldn’t stop laughing his butt off behind the scenes
It amazes me how many people don't know where that line comes from. It's from a song called Good Morning Starshine, which is featured in the musical Hair. When I watched it in theatres, I was literally waiting for someone else to say "You twinkle above us, we twinkle below." My parents had the soundtrack on a CD before this movie came out, but the only songs I really learned were this one, Aquarius and partially Manchester England.
Johnny depp's performance is bad imo. Maybe it was written that way? Either way, very sad rendition. Reminds me of the big $$$ roles he plays like pirates of the caribbean, where he just acts like a fool to collect that check. Just add it to the list of roles where they just shoehorn him in, like corpse bride, pirates, ect..
@@kennymendoza1581 I mean the character of Willy Wonka is odd and slightly off putting in the book so in the sense of accuracy Johnny did well, but if we are to compare Wonkas then I'm sorry I'm going with Gene Wilder every time.
It’s crazy how this and Corpse Bride are both Tim Burton movies that both came out the same year and both star Johnny Depp and Helena Bonham Carter. In their words “We were acting by day, voice acting at night.”
Helena Bonham-Carter also had the Wallace and Gromit movie at that time. That movie also had Liz Smith, who was Grandma Georgina here, and Mrs. Mulch there.
I personally cannot believe it’s almost been 20 years since Charlie and the Chocolate Factory was released. I was eight at that time, and watching this makes me both feel nostalgic and crave a candy bar.
Props to Tim and his team for just how much of everything you see is practical and actually there. From the set pieces, to the trained squirrels, miniatures, ets.
This movie is why I will be careful with chocolate rivers, avoid blueberry-turning chewing gum, stay away from squirrels, never mess with tv, and enjoy a flying glass elevator
This whole scene with Wonka and his father is based off when Tim Burton visited his dying mom and found out she made a scrapbook of all his movie posters. And now I'm wondering if that in any way influenced his work on Big Fish
My favorite movie! It's way better than Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory. It's more accurate to the original 1964 book by Roald Dahl. This film is actually *NOT* a remake of Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, it's just another adaptation of the book. I hate when people call it a remake.
@@ashhabimran239the most likely reason people think the 70’s movie is better is because it’s a “classic” which automatically means that it’s better in some people’s eyes. They’re also most likely just looking at it through Nostalgia Goggles. 😂
Christopher Lee is always a win! May he rest in peace. The most iconic actor of his time. Playing multiple legendary villains such as Dracula, Count Dooku and Saruman.
Some facts I wanted to share on this film: 1, The chocolate room was 90% practically with a faux chocolate river, 2, Deep Roy who was the tiny man with the racing snail in The Neverending Story and Napoleon Bonesapart in Corpse Bride played all of the Oompa Loompas and I don’t mean they shot him once and copied with a computer no no no no! He did it all and did dance and singing practice for everything and the design is actually accurate unlike the green hair and orange faces from the 70’s film and like I said before all of the Oompa Loompa songs come from the book and actually change to different eras with a 50’s mambo, 60’s disco, 70’s hippy song, and an 80’s rock ballad, 3, the squirrels were real squirrels and were trained from birth to do that scene, 4, the design of the Bucket’s home was inspired by a shack Roald Dahl would use to work on books, 5, not really a fact, but the updates are actually good like giving a back story to wonka which was something new and not anything before which Dahl’s family approved of since he died in 1990 so they oversaw all adaptations of his work, -making Mike Teevee obsessed with video games and violent media is clever and the character that has the biggest update is Violet who actually has a character unlike in the previous film and even the book by making her this competition obsessed kid and an overbearing mother to boot, -actually giving a reason for Wonka going to Oompaloompa land as “looking for new exotic flavors for candy”, -another good update is with the tv room by having Wonka want to teleport chocolate through television for people to grab instead of just wanting to teleport because, 6, The kid who plays Mike is the same boy who voiced Lewis in Meet the Robinsons, 7, people complain saying Charlie is out of character and he isn’t like real kids, but that’s not true there is kids who think like him and care for their family and others often before their own needs also I love the fact 8, when Augustus says “Don’t you want to know our names?“ and Wonka replies “Can’t see how it would make a difference” it’s a double negative he’s toying with them and throughout the tour playing dumb even though he planned everything out, 9, something else I wanted to bring up is how people complain that Depp’s version isn’t like Gene Wilder’s and that’s the point he is like how he is in the book plus the fact he not only cut himself off from the world surrounding himself with chocolate obsessed little people and has pale skin from no sun exposure, no real sense of how to talk or deal with people (reading off cue cards and jumping back when hugged) also bring in his backstory it’s no wonder he would come out less like a James Bond villain (Wilder) and more like a nut who isolated himself from society, 10, the kid who played Augustus not only did not speak English, but didn’t know how to swim, 11. One detail I never noticed until I watched the full lengtj with you guys is when Wonka is putting the tickets on the Chocolate he quickly puts the first four down immediately, but the fifth Charlie's he gives an extra little pat to, 12. The brand of the toothpaste in the factory the dad works in is named Smilex which is the same brand of toothpaste that was in the 1989 Tim Burton film Batman, For more details and information I didn’t even get into I recommend watching these two part videos of Everything Great About Charlie and the Chocolate Factory: ruclips.net/video/PWk6oKvEOA4/видео.html (Part 1), ruclips.net/video/sZDbfiqR-kg/видео.html (Part 2), They are not by the same person who does CinemaWins, but still good,
Oh yes, I heard the fact about the toothpath's mark and I think it's because Tim Burton often makes reference to his own movies in some (like the scissors for the opening of the chocolate factory)
The song lyrics (except for Wonka's Welcome Song) were actual poems in the book Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. The only poem from the book that made it into Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory was the creepy song in the tunnel.
Veruca & Augustus had the least form of punishment. All they have to do is take a bath constantly. Mike & Violet, on the other hand, we'll never be the same again. It's a miracle they all survived.
Well Augustus was suffocated for ages and burnt from the extremely hot melted chocolate Remember he would have had no oxygen in that pipe and the extreme hot chocolate would have stuck to his skin continuously burning him for a long time Veruca got the least worse punishment, Augustus also didn't have so much of a bad time as violet and Mike but it certainly was a very bad situation that definitely could have killed him I dunno what's worse, being shrunken and physically pulled to normal size, or blowing up to the point you'd have to be physically squeezed I'd argue violet had the worst one, atleast with Mike it was an active decision that he knew would happen. Violet had no idea she was gonna blow up (For all this I'm speaking for both the 1971 and 2005 film)
I love how Willy Wonka laugh. It's sarcastic yet seems genuine😆 Johnny Depp really unrecognizable in this one. He made this character his own. Will always watch with whoever put this movie on👏
As someone who studied different cultures, I was waiting for the reaction to the “most societies” comment for cannibalism. There are certain cultures where it is viewed fondly when done in certain ways, namely as the equivalent to a funeral. It symbolically makes the person who died a part of you forever. Weird to us in general cultures I know but when you look at the actual reasons behind that groups practices, it’s fascinating
Johnny Depp was the best choice for Willy Wanka. He has this amazing way of playing crazy characters in both funny and serious ways. Tim Burton and Johnny Depp are the best director and actor relationship I've ever seen. Thanks again for the amazing compilation Timothee.
Sad to see how despite how crushing it is to hear Charlie say they should give up the ticket for money, you can see they're already accepting it as the truth. They're so close to starving, and literally can't afford to think they can survive on chocolate alone.
One thing I absolutely love about that scene, is you can see how upset everyone is when Charlie suggests this. You could read into Grandpa Joe being sad because he doesn't get to go to the factory, but if you look at it on a deeper level, they're more sad at the loss of Charlie's innocence. The fact that at such an age, he's so aware of his family's financial situation and wants to contribute, where really no child should be thinking of such things, and you can see it breaks their hearts
Willy Wonka was basically an hour and a half long commercial for the Quaker company, who was selling Wonka branded chocolate at the time and actually was a co-producer of the movie. The original book author was involved but only to have his name credited in the opening movie credits; nearly all his decisions and requests were overturned and shot down, and the book was completely twisted from its original vision and he was made to watch them do it. He never let another company or film studio touch his books again. After he died, his family decided to do justice by making this movie, which is basically the book zapped to the television by Wonka's teleporter. None of the people who worked on Charlie even watched Willy Wonka, because they wanted ZERO influence from that movie. The only major change that was made from the book was adding Wonka's backstory, which was actually beneficial to the movie and made it even better. The family says Roald would be proud of this movie.
Cinematography note here: the further they get inside the factory, the colors drain away. Do with that what you will. It's not just Wonka that's getting washed out, the factory is too. He just made a huge technological invention, and there's no joy in it other than for advertising candy.
Ohhhhh that's interesting now that you pointed it out. I didn't notice before lol. What do you suppose it could mean? I've watched this movie dozens of times and I still notice smth new with every re-watch
I honestly feel like Violet got one of the more fortunate outcomes, sure she’s blue but she’s now super flexible, pros out weigh the cons in my opinion.
The fact that Wonka is so adamant that cannibalism is only frowned upon in *most* countries implies either A) The Oompa Loompas indulge in cannibalism Or B) He found something that does indulge in cannibalism and decided that, for the first time ever, it was *too far even for HIM.*
Willy wonkas dad had a lot of articles ab his sons work and factory and this was inspired by Tim Burton himself. When he visited his mother she had a lot of his movies and work at the walls as well
52:01 - as I understand it that actress (her name escapes me at the moment, God rest her soul) was a legitimate Johnny Depp fan; he knew it and he improvised the 'I like it' line. So when she squeals and hugs him there as we see, it's real/her letting the fan girl come out.
We talk about Macaulay Culkin and Daniel Radcliffe but I think Freddie Highmore is criminally underrated and also has a charming presence. Fun Fact: He played a version of Norman Bates opposite Rihanna.
Think everyone should watch "Justin and the Knights of Valour", which he stars in. Underrated animated movie(though not any famous company like Disney or Dreamworks).
Fun Fact: Originally all of the brats’ songs were going to be Bollywood style like Augustus’. Elfman finished the song for Veruca, but afterwards he was suggested to give each song a different genre
I personally love this version more. While my choice does have somewhat to do with my childhood and which I grew up on, this movie is more accurate to the book than the other one. Also, Tim Burton ft. Johnny Depp wins me over every time.
Agreed. I actually love how they gave Willy Wonka a deeper backstory here to explain his attachment to candy and his child-like spirit. Charlie is the protagonist, but Wonka was always the centerpiece of it all, and Depp's portrayal of Wonka (crazy, weird, eccentric and mischievous) is a lot closer to the book than Gene Wilder's version (no offense or disrespect to Wilder, bc he got talent). Not to mention the musical numbers and set pieces are incredible here, it really sells the idea of a Dr. Seuss-type world ruled by Wonka inside the factory.
I’ve seen this movie so many times, no matter how altered the voice is, i know exactly to sound and pitch each characters is. I’m so happy you both got to see this awesome remake.
At the end, Augustus DID change. It somehow made him part chocolate. Which is why him and his mother have the lines: "'Augustus, PLEASE stop eating your fingers!' But I taste SO good!" (Edit) And as it's shown, with Augustus' eating habits......well, let's just say he probably won't last long around himself.
@@stephanniemorin Yep, it's CRAZY that Wonka isn't charged with some sort of illegal genetic tampering/war crime. One of the kids literally can't help eating themself, one became rubber, and the last became a living sheet of paper. There's no way those ANY of those things are ending well.
As I said before, I like This one a little more than the other adaptation, mostly because of its atmosphere, I know some people get mad over that, but at the end of the day, we all have different opinions
@@popsiclecheese4256 if you like the original more, I respect your opinion, but I didn’t like Tim Burton’s adaptation because of “Nostalgia”, I literally gave a small and simple reason why I liked it a little more than the first adaptation
I met the actor who played the Oompa Loompas at comic con. He was a cool dude. He was also the one inside of the Yoda Costume in shots where it wasn’t puppet work. When we took a photo, the guy who was in the Admiral Ackbar costume photo-bombed us. It's a win-win, I got 2 actors in one photo for the price of one!!
I first watched this movie 17 years ago in a movie cinema, with my mother. What I could remember: the Oompa-Loompas, the chocolate river, the squirrels, the bubblegum and the glass elevator. But what I didn't know was that Willy-Wonka was looking for a worthy successor (which made the tour an impulse test). And Charlie has earned that offer through patience and fastidiousness. 👏
Nice touches added by Burton made this version better IMO, like Grandpa Joe using to work at Wonka Factory, Willy Wonka's past with his father and Mike Teavee being more antagonistic.
The Narrator was not Christopher Lee but Actor/Dancer Geoffrey Holder. Holder is best known for playing Baron Samedi in the James Bond Movie "Live and Let Die". He also did a number of commercials for 7up. He started his career as a Principal Dance for Metropolitan Opera Ballet.
Nearly every aspect of this movie is closer to the book than the original movie. Even the Oompa Loompa songs. Such a great adaptation, as someone who grew up with the original even I agree the Johnny depp one is much better.
The Gobstoppers are there to show that Wonka does actually have compassion, he just shows it the only way he knows how. Through his candy. And you also know this is made with compassion in mind, because it doesn't make any business sense.
Just wanted to say. if you can be careful with the comments, you can comment 3-5 times or something on a video. just now i feel like its a bit exaggerated 20+ comments. so if you can please, don't wanna delete any but maybe condense them a bit
I absolutely love this movie and it always makes me want to eat a whole ton of chocolate like the one I saw in your thumbnail! Really enjoyed the reaction Timothee!
Got to love how they show the realistic collateral damage something like a golden ticket hunt would cause on people like Charlie's dad. And what happens at the end is even more commentary on automation. Yes, it means some jobs disappear, but it also means a need for new ones, like keeping the machines going. Edit: okay, am I the only one seeing a parallel for what happened with Wonka, regarding this?
Here's the biggest fact of the two movies. Dahl hated the first movie. Because not only did they keep him out of the filming, he is literally on record as saying that Gene Wilder is not that kind of Willy Wonka. It was so bad, after that movie, he made sure no more adpations happened from the book. Now, when this film was proposed, Dahl's holder of the book rights at the time, I think his daughter, was hesitant to give the chance. But Tim Burton, once he made Charlie's family shack, and showed it to her, she knew it was in the right hands. They even consulted with her and the estate from time to time to make sure they get things right or updated. So really, this film is the correct version according to the book and not the old one. Also, to those that say the first movie had better music. I want you to take another look at the lyrics of that first one, compare to the 2005 one, and tell me if it's any good compared to these and actually relate to what's happening. And not just a repeat of lines over and over again.
The original novel mentions many other candy not shown here: Marshmallow Pillows, Toffee Trees for your Garden, Cows that give chocolate milk, Wriggle sweets that wiggle in your tummy after you eat them, stick jaw for talkative parents, invisible candy bars for eating in class, candy-coated pencils for sucking, butterscotch and buttergin, cavity-filling caramels, magic hand fudge, etc.
With Tim Burton turning a whimsical story about a boy winning chance to met a candymaker and putting his own dark twist into the mix made this movie absolutely perfect. But also for Johnny Deep bringing an absolutely mad performance to Wonka made this movie even better and watching this at a young age made me want to watch it again, with awesome reaction and of course the chocolate. 🍫
This movie is superior to the 1971 movie in almost every single aspect, in book accuracy, not butchering the story and ruining characters, better cinematography and effects (expected for a movie made 30 years later, but still), keeping the Oompa Loompas original songs, and not almost sending the entire studio into bankruptcy. Although i did like Pure Imagination and Gene Wilder’s style.
41:09 That's how he eats his birthday chocolate - tiny bites. He knows he won't get another one until his next birthday, so he makes it last for as long as he can. I think a bit of him is still hesitant to believe that for the first time in his life something great is happening to him, like getting to see this factory and getting to take home a lifetime supply of chocolate - imagine that after a lifetime of bread and watery cabbage soup.
I know people think of this as a remake of an older movie, but it's not. It's just a newer adaptation of the same book, with this version being much closer. In fact, much of the film crew was kept from watching the first film until this one was complete so they wouldn't copy it; all the similarities are either straight from the book or just coincidental.
How odd people call it a more faithful adaptation when it adds a pointless backstory that wasn't in the books I get maybe overall the film might be more faithful, but there's definitely alot of things not faithful that lovers of this film are ignoring to try and make it seem better than it is. And even if it was true that it was most definitely a more faithful adaptation that no one could deny, so what? Doesn't make it a better film than the original, it just means its more faithful
Imagine a modern take on Hansel & Gretel, and the witch had decidedly built a factory the size of a couple of football fields, but at the same time, looked like a house composed entirely of candy. Inside, the magic(candy-making) happens, but as equally important is her intent to bait the brother-sister duo into taking every step over to the establishment, POSSIBLY keeping them from escaping!!!! That....NEVER happens here- primarily because this is Willy Wonka, proud owner of a massive chocolate factory, who dislikes gum(even though it's made there) and resents his dentist father (who's against his dream of being a chocolatier and candy-maker).
One more thing; i completely forgot to mention during your Willy Wonka video was; the Oompa Loompa songs were so iconic, a video game called The Bard's Tail featured their take on the song. Multiple times throughout the game; 3 elf-likw characters called drow, would come out to sing Oh, It's Bad Luck to Be You. Each time, changing the lyrics to suit what's going on during the game. You should look out up; it's a lot of fun
I grew up with the books and this is far more accurate to its litterary source than the 1971 version. And yes even the backgroundstory with the oompa loompies is from the book, the only mayor thing that Tim Burton added was the backgroundstory of Willy Wonka.
Fun fact: a little bit of snow on the bed is freezing. A ton of snow on top of blankets is actually cozy because snow is a good insulator despite its surface temperature.
i love this movie....also fun fact Johnny depp and the child who played Charlie did a film together a year before this called 'Finding Neverland' which is an amazing movie....good reaction we appreciate all your hard work Tim, you bring smiles to so many peoples faces so thank you for that x
Truly, no matter what adaptation it is, Willy Wonka is truly The Cat in the Hat-esc signature story and character of Roald Daul! 4:57 With the magic and whimsy of The Cat in the Hat!
Some people don't like this version because they think Willy Wonka is creepy. And some people feel like Charlie is a bit too nice and perfect in this, but I'm pretty sure that's just kinda the Roald Dahl protagonist way. Charlie doing some stuff wrong (influenced by his grandpa of all people) in the old movie was made-up for that adaptation. And this is clearly meant to be like a modern fairytale in a way: pretty much everyone and everything is exaggerated. And yeah, the "oh no violent video games" thing is definitely outdated, but the way they also portray the kid as kind of really apathetic, rude and not giving a crap about witnessing something like a once in a life-time thing happening around him feels much more relevant. The chewing on gum thing is something that was considered much more rude in the past, so here it's emphasized that Violet is overly competitive as well (and it's implied that her mom made her that way and tries to live through her accomplishments.)
Honestly, having grown up with the first one, I still couldn't pick a favorite. They are both awesome in their own way. We used to watch the old one in school on movie days and I loved it. I watch this one and I love it. I know a lot of people really dislike this one, but I think it's good. It entertained me and I loved Depp, as usual. I think whichever one you like most, you can't go wrong. 🐾🐾🍻
Timothée, you’re a genius for the choice of snacks. I would have bubble gum on the side to honour the High Priestess of Main Character Energy, Miss Violet.
Fun fact the company’s name of the tooth paste factory Charlie’s dad worked at is the same name as the poison gas that joker wanted to release in Tim Burton’s batman
I think that's funny that Helena Bonham Carter the actress for Charlie's mother played a psychopathic murderer in Sweeney Todd & the Harry Potter movies & the 2010 Alice In Wonderland but in this movie she played a kind & caring mother oh yeah & i absolutely love that they got Christopher Lee the actor for Count Dooku/Saruman to be in this movie may he rest in peace
I don’t care what anyone says, Johnny Depp was awesome in this movie (and I’m not just saying that because of recent events). He acts exactly the way he was written in the book combined with how a human would act having had so little contact with the outside world. I don’t get why so many people hate his performance.
Though I grew up with Willy Wonka and still adore it, I love both versions equally. I was REALLY excited for this back in 2005! It was Tim Burton, Johnny Depp and Willy Wonka. It was an awesome combo! Even with the changes of Willy Wonka's father, which wasn't in the book, I didn't mind it at all. Really most of what was included in this version was in the book, probably more than the 1970s version.
Safety tips that you can learn from this story. 1. Use self restraint and caution to avoid reckless decisions. 2. Listen to people who know what they're talking about. 3. Follow safety rules. 4. Don't consume something without knowing if it's safe. 5. No horseplay in factories. Willy Wonka told the kids to follow him and that they can't do or eat anything without permission. Augustus wasn't supposed to stick his hands in the chocolate river. It was supposed to be a mixing mechanism. Mr. Wonka said the gum wasn't right. He knew it wasn't safe to chew, but Violet didn't stop to listen. Nobody was allowed in the squirrel pen, and Willy Wonka said he hadn't tested Wonkavision on a person and he already showed them that it would shrink what it sends.
I remember having this movie on DVD, and really liked watching. Yeah, sorry guys. Instead of growing up the original Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory from 1971, I actually grew up with the Tim Burton version. I’m such a millennial. 😅
The in-the-mouth scene at the dentist was done with a giant mouth prop, and Christopher Lee holding giant dental tools. Never do CG if you can do it practical!
*AUDIO HAD TO BE ALTERED THROUGH THE REACTION FOR COPYRIGHT. HAD TO DO 14 REUPLOADS. BUT FINALLY ENJOY!! FULL LENGTH REACTION, EARLY ACCESS TO FUTURE VIDS AT* www.patreon.com/TimotheeReacts
Check out my WILLY WONKA reaction: ruclips.net/video/7_4ETv8m-Zw/видео.html
Check out my Animated Playlist: ruclips.net/p/PLr-YTHdnHmauAVREyHqVMDNyH44RFu_z8
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14 REUPLOADS?????
I was about to ask why was the their voice was so low at first but now I know why.
What's up with the creepy voice filter?
@@jorgecabezas1966 copyrights.
THIS MOVIE HITS DIFFERTENT!!! Loved rewatching this childhood classic with you, Tim!!! Can't wait for more collabs🥳🥳
Fun fact when Johnny Deep said “Good morning star-shine the earth says hello” they had to film multiple takes because Tim Burton wouldn’t stop laughing his butt off behind the scenes
It amazes me how many people don't know where that line comes from. It's from a song called Good Morning Starshine, which is featured in the musical Hair. When I watched it in theatres, I was literally waiting for someone else to say "You twinkle above us, we twinkle below." My parents had the soundtrack on a CD before this movie came out, but the only songs I really learned were this one, Aquarius and partially Manchester England.
@@strawberrysoulforever8336 Ooh, nice to know of where it comes from! :o
It's actually Johnny Depp what are you 5yrs old
@@hu-long444 Woah, calm down, it's just a typo.
@@hu-long444 acting as if autocorrect isn't a thing and (especially on mobile) can make changes unnoticed.
No matter if this is superior or inferior,
Tim Burton, Johnny Depp, and Danny Elfman are no doubt, one of the best movie combos you can ask for
Great combo!
You know that’s right.
Johnny depp's performance is bad imo.
Maybe it was written that way?
Either way, very sad rendition. Reminds me of the big $$$ roles he plays like pirates of the caribbean, where he just acts like a fool to collect that check.
Just add it to the list of roles where they just shoehorn him in, like corpse bride, pirates, ect..
@@kennymendoza1581 bro what are you even talking about
@@kennymendoza1581 I mean the character of Willy Wonka is odd and slightly off putting in the book so in the sense of accuracy Johnny did well, but if we are to compare Wonkas then I'm sorry I'm going with Gene Wilder every time.
It’s crazy how this and Corpse Bride are both Tim Burton movies that both came out the same year and both star Johnny Depp and Helena Bonham Carter. In their words “We were acting by day, voice acting at night.”
And Christopher Lee, who was Wonka’s dad in this and a Priest in the Corpse’s Bride
Helena Bonham-Carter also had the Wallace and Gromit movie at that time. That movie also had Liz Smith, who was Grandma Georgina here, and Mrs. Mulch there.
Same with Deep Roy playing Napoleon Bonesaparte in The Corpse Bride and the Oompa Loompas.
And Christopher Lee!
I personally cannot believe it’s almost been 20 years since Charlie and the Chocolate Factory was released. I was eight at that time, and watching this makes me both feel nostalgic and crave a candy bar.
TWENTY YEARS? NO. IT'S UNREAL.
17 years not 20 LOL but yeah how fast it is XD
100 like.
@@asian123205 that comment said almost 20
I was in my mom's stomach when this was made since i was born a year later it was made
Props to Tim and his team for just how much of everything you see is practical and actually there. From the set pieces, to the trained squirrels, miniatures, ets.
This movie is why I will be careful with chocolate rivers, avoid blueberry-turning chewing gum, stay away from squirrels, never mess with tv, and enjoy a flying glass elevator
This whole scene with Wonka and his father is based off when Tim Burton visited his dying mom and found out she made a scrapbook of all his movie posters.
And now I'm wondering if that in any way influenced his work on Big Fish
Wait, that’s heartbreaking…😢
My favorite movie! It's way better than Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory. It's more accurate to the original 1964 book by Roald Dahl. This film is actually *NOT* a remake of Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, it's just another adaptation of the book. I hate when people call it a remake.
OMG YES!!! I hate when people call it a remake too! And when people call the first movie an original when the original was a book!
Even if we don't look at how accurate it is to the book, anyone who says the original is the better movie is either lying or delusional
@@ashhabimran239 for sure
@@ashhabimran239the most likely reason people think the 70’s movie is better is because it’s a “classic” which automatically means that it’s better in some people’s eyes. They’re also most likely just looking at it through Nostalgia Goggles. 😂
I think this version handled Grandpa Joe’s character a bit better than the 70’s one, w/ his rise out of bed feeling more earned.
Christopher Lee is always a win! May he rest in peace. The most iconic actor of his time. Playing multiple legendary villains such as Dracula, Count Dooku and Saruman.
Some facts I wanted to share on this film:
1, The chocolate room was 90% practically with a faux chocolate river,
2, Deep Roy who was the tiny man with the racing snail in The Neverending Story and Napoleon Bonesapart in Corpse Bride played all of the Oompa Loompas and I don’t mean they shot him once and copied with a computer no no no no! He did it all and did dance and singing practice for everything and the design is actually accurate unlike the green hair and orange faces from the 70’s film and like I said before all of the Oompa Loompa songs come from the book and actually change to different eras with a 50’s mambo, 60’s disco, 70’s hippy song, and an 80’s rock ballad,
3, the squirrels were real squirrels and were trained from birth to do that scene,
4, the design of the Bucket’s home was inspired by a shack Roald Dahl would use to work on books,
5, not really a fact, but the updates are actually good like giving a back story to wonka which was something new and not anything before which Dahl’s family approved of since he died in 1990 so they oversaw all adaptations of his work,
-making Mike Teevee obsessed with video games and violent media is clever and the character that has the biggest update is Violet who actually has a character unlike in the previous film and even the book by making her this competition obsessed kid and an overbearing mother to boot,
-actually giving a reason for Wonka going to Oompaloompa land as “looking for new exotic flavors for candy”,
-another good update is with the tv room by having Wonka want to teleport chocolate through television for people to grab instead of just wanting to teleport because,
6, The kid who plays Mike is the same boy who voiced Lewis in Meet the Robinsons,
7, people complain saying Charlie is out of character and he isn’t like real kids, but that’s not true there is kids who think like him and care for their family and others often before their own needs also I love the fact
8, when Augustus says “Don’t you want to know our names?“ and Wonka replies “Can’t see how it would make a difference” it’s a double negative he’s toying with them and throughout the tour playing dumb even though he planned everything out,
9, something else I wanted to bring up is how people complain that Depp’s version isn’t like Gene Wilder’s and that’s the point he is like how he is in the book plus the fact he not only cut himself off from the world surrounding himself with chocolate obsessed little people and has pale skin from no sun exposure, no real sense of how to talk or deal with people (reading off cue cards and jumping back when hugged) also bring in his backstory it’s no wonder he would come out less like a James Bond villain (Wilder) and more like a nut who isolated himself from society,
10, the kid who played Augustus not only did not speak English, but didn’t know how to swim,
11. One detail I never noticed until I watched the full lengtj with you guys is when Wonka is putting the tickets on the Chocolate he quickly puts the first four down immediately, but the fifth Charlie's he gives an extra little pat to,
12. The brand of the toothpaste in the factory the dad works in is named Smilex which is the same brand of toothpaste that was in the 1989 Tim Burton film Batman,
For more details and information I didn’t even get into I recommend watching these two part videos of Everything Great About Charlie and the Chocolate Factory:
ruclips.net/video/PWk6oKvEOA4/видео.html (Part 1),
ruclips.net/video/sZDbfiqR-kg/видео.html (Part 2), They are not by the same person who does CinemaWins, but still good,
Oh yes, I heard the fact about the toothpath's mark and I think it's because Tim Burton often makes reference to his own movies in some (like the scissors for the opening of the chocolate factory)
I enjoyed reading this and i didn’t even know half of this. Thanks for this 🙏🏾🙏🏾
@@GhostKyng You're welcome
Ok that's a loooottt of words I can't read that😭
There is so many fun facts in this movie which I loved.
The song lyrics (except for Wonka's Welcome Song) were actual poems in the book Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. The only poem from the book that made it into Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory was the creepy song in the tunnel.
Veruca & Augustus had the least form of punishment. All they have to do is take a bath constantly. Mike & Violet, on the other hand, we'll never be the same again. It's a miracle they all survived.
Well Augustus was suffocated for ages and burnt from the extremely hot melted chocolate
Remember he would have had no oxygen in that pipe and the extreme hot chocolate would have stuck to his skin continuously burning him for a long time
Veruca got the least worse punishment, Augustus also didn't have so much of a bad time as violet and Mike but it certainly was a very bad situation that definitely could have killed him
I dunno what's worse, being shrunken and physically pulled to normal size, or blowing up to the point you'd have to be physically squeezed
I'd argue violet had the worst one, atleast with Mike it was an active decision that he knew would happen. Violet had no idea she was gonna blow up
(For all this I'm speaking for both the 1971 and 2005 film)
I love how Willy Wonka laugh. It's sarcastic yet seems genuine😆 Johnny Depp really unrecognizable in this one. He made this character his own. Will always watch with whoever put this movie on👏
Probably my favourite Johnny Depp film. I absolutely love it.
Me too.
I think the first 3 Pirates movies were better, but this is pretty good too
@@Gen-ZChristian to be fair, I’ve never seen Pirates Of The Caribbean 😂
@@jamiedavy_ you should definitely watch the 1st 3. After that they get boring
Edit: I mean 4 & 5 get boring, in case that wasn’t clear
“Are you a dummy?” never fails to make me laugh 😂
As someone who studied different cultures, I was waiting for the reaction to the “most societies” comment for cannibalism. There are certain cultures where it is viewed fondly when done in certain ways, namely as the equivalent to a funeral. It symbolically makes the person who died a part of you forever. Weird to us in general cultures I know but when you look at the actual reasons behind that groups practices, it’s fascinating
I agree. From what I have heard, some tribes do it as a ritual. I could be wrong.
When Veruca says "You could put her in a country fair" as in to win as a big blueberry not to complete against pigs.
Johnny Depp was the best choice for Willy Wanka. He has this amazing way of playing crazy characters in both funny and serious ways. Tim Burton and Johnny Depp are the best director and actor relationship I've ever seen. Thanks again for the amazing compilation Timothee.
*Wonka
Sad to see how despite how crushing it is to hear Charlie say they should give up the ticket for money, you can see they're already accepting it as the truth. They're so close to starving, and literally can't afford to think they can survive on chocolate alone.
One thing I absolutely love about that scene, is you can see how upset everyone is when Charlie suggests this. You could read into Grandpa Joe being sad because he doesn't get to go to the factory, but if you look at it on a deeper level, they're more sad at the loss of Charlie's innocence. The fact that at such an age, he's so aware of his family's financial situation and wants to contribute, where really no child should be thinking of such things, and you can see it breaks their hearts
Willy Wonka was basically an hour and a half long commercial for the Quaker company, who was selling Wonka branded chocolate at the time and actually was a co-producer of the movie. The original book author was involved but only to have his name credited in the opening movie credits; nearly all his decisions and requests were overturned and shot down, and the book was completely twisted from its original vision and he was made to watch them do it. He never let another company or film studio touch his books again.
After he died, his family decided to do justice by making this movie, which is basically the book zapped to the television by Wonka's teleporter. None of the people who worked on Charlie even watched Willy Wonka, because they wanted ZERO influence from that movie. The only major change that was made from the book was adding Wonka's backstory, which was actually beneficial to the movie and made it even better. The family says Roald would be proud of this movie.
Cinematography note here: the further they get inside the factory, the colors drain away. Do with that what you will. It's not just Wonka that's getting washed out, the factory is too.
He just made a huge technological invention, and there's no joy in it other than for advertising candy.
Ohhhhh that's interesting now that you pointed it out. I didn't notice before lol. What do you suppose it could mean? I've watched this movie dozens of times and I still notice smth new with every re-watch
It’s amazing that all of the Oompa Loompas are played by one person
I honestly feel like Violet got one of the more fortunate outcomes, sure she’s blue but she’s now super flexible, pros out weigh the cons in my opinion.
Maybe she'll join the circus.
The toothpaste is called Smilex. It's a direct reference to Tim Burton's Batman, which is what Joker called his brand of poison.
The fact that Wonka is so adamant that cannibalism is only frowned upon in *most* countries implies either
A) The Oompa Loompas indulge in cannibalism
Or
B) He found something that does indulge in cannibalism and decided that, for the first time ever, it was *too far even for HIM.*
Willy wonkas dad had a lot of articles ab his sons work and factory and this was inspired by Tim Burton himself. When he visited his mother she had a lot of his movies and work at the walls as well
That's cute
52:01 - as I understand it that actress (her name escapes me at the moment, God rest her soul) was a legitimate Johnny Depp fan; he knew it and he improvised the 'I like it' line. So when she squeals and hugs him there as we see, it's real/her letting the fan girl come out.
Awwwwww! 🥹
We talk about Macaulay Culkin and Daniel Radcliffe but I think Freddie Highmore is criminally underrated and also has a charming presence.
Fun Fact: He played a version of Norman Bates opposite Rihanna.
Definitely agree
Hes always been a favourite of mine growing up. I always saw a bit of myself in him and his characters 😆
Think everyone should watch "Justin and the Knights of Valour", which he stars in. Underrated animated movie(though not any famous company like Disney or Dreamworks).
Fun Fact: Originally all of the brats’ songs were going to be Bollywood style like Augustus’. Elfman finished the song for Veruca, but afterwards he was suggested to give each song a different genre
Augustus' song in the final movie is actually a 50s style mambo.
@Sodaroni_Enthusiast I believe it isn't exclusively '50's mumbo but a combo of mumbo and jazz
I personally love this version more. While my choice does have somewhat to do with my childhood and which I grew up on, this movie is more accurate to the book than the other one. Also, Tim Burton ft. Johnny Depp wins me over every time.
Agreed. I actually love how they gave Willy Wonka a deeper backstory here to explain his attachment to candy and his child-like spirit. Charlie is the protagonist, but Wonka was always the centerpiece of it all, and Depp's portrayal of Wonka (crazy, weird, eccentric and mischievous) is a lot closer to the book than Gene Wilder's version (no offense or disrespect to Wilder, bc he got talent). Not to mention the musical numbers and set pieces are incredible here, it really sells the idea of a Dr. Seuss-type world ruled by Wonka inside the factory.
@@mrreyes5004 To add to what you said about the music, the lyrics come directly from the book too. Another reason why I prefer this movie.
Favorite Moments
14:26 YIPPEE
18:38 BFFs IRL
27:27 A Wild Ride
43:04 Favorite Part of the song 🎵
Yas😂
18:38 They are?
@@annafowdyYeah
My favorite joke in this movie is when the dad moves the entire house just to prove a point.
I’ve seen this movie so many times, no matter how altered the voice is, i know exactly to sound and pitch each characters is. I’m so happy you both got to see this awesome remake.
At the end, Augustus DID change.
It somehow made him part chocolate. Which is why him and his mother have the lines: "'Augustus, PLEASE stop eating your fingers!' But I taste SO good!"
(Edit) And as it's shown, with Augustus' eating habits......well, let's just say he probably won't last long around himself.
That's a scary takeaway...
@@stephanniemorin Yep, it's CRAZY that Wonka isn't charged with some sort of illegal genetic tampering/war crime. One of the kids literally can't help eating themself, one became rubber, and the last became a living sheet of paper.
There's no way those ANY of those things are ending well.
@@getshwifty3101 and one kid fell in the trash
@@themightyempire3511 Ah, yes. The worst mutation of all. One you can wash away within a bath. Justice IS equal 🤣🤣
Wait, WHAT?!… O_O;
I never knew that!! 😰
As I said before, I like This one a little more than the other adaptation, mostly because of its atmosphere, I know some people get mad over that, but at the end of the day, we all have different opinions
You only say that cause of nostalgia
@@popsiclecheese4256 if you like the original more, I respect your opinion, but I didn’t like Tim Burton’s adaptation because of “Nostalgia”, I literally gave a small and simple reason why I liked it a little more than the first adaptation
@@popsiclecheese4256 stop hating
@@popsiclecheese4256 Says the person who's doing the same exact thing
Omg I can't believe this is 20 years old. Love Johnny and his work especially when him and Tim Burton team up.
That's why they're my favorite
@@a.g.demada5263 then u add Danny Elfman for the score and its perfection.
The one thing I really love about this movie, is seeing all of the different types of candy.
I met the actor who played the Oompa Loompas at comic con. He was a cool dude. He was also the one inside of the Yoda Costume in shots where it wasn’t puppet work. When we took a photo, the guy who was in the Admiral Ackbar costume photo-bombed us. It's a win-win, I got 2 actors in one photo for the price of one!!
Woah, that’s awesome! 😯
I first watched this movie 17 years ago in a movie cinema, with my mother.
What I could remember: the Oompa-Loompas, the chocolate river, the squirrels, the bubblegum and the glass elevator.
But what I didn't know was that Willy-Wonka was looking for a worthy successor (which made the tour an impulse test). And Charlie has earned that offer through patience and fastidiousness. 👏
Grandma Georgina is the MVP of this movie. She’s an icon, a legend and she is the moment.
Nice touches added by Burton made this version better IMO, like Grandpa Joe using to work at Wonka Factory, Willy Wonka's past with his father and Mike Teavee being more antagonistic.
The Narrator was not Christopher Lee but Actor/Dancer Geoffrey Holder. Holder is best known for playing Baron Samedi in the James Bond Movie "Live and Let Die". He also did a number of commercials for 7up. He started his career as a Principal Dance for Metropolitan Opera Ballet.
Nearly every aspect of this movie is closer to the book than the original movie. Even the Oompa Loompa songs. Such a great adaptation, as someone who grew up with the original even I agree the Johnny depp one is much better.
The Gobstoppers are there to show that Wonka does actually have compassion, he just shows it the only way he knows how. Through his candy.
And you also know this is made with compassion in mind, because it doesn't make any business sense.
Just wanted to say. if you can be careful with the comments, you can comment 3-5 times or something on a video. just now i feel like its a bit exaggerated 20+ comments. so if you can please, don't wanna delete any but maybe condense them a bit
I absolutely love this movie and it always makes me want to eat a whole ton of chocolate like the one I saw in your thumbnail!
Really enjoyed the reaction Timothee!
Me too.
Got to love how they show the realistic collateral damage something like a golden ticket hunt would cause on people like Charlie's dad.
And what happens at the end is even more commentary on automation. Yes, it means some jobs disappear, but it also means a need for new ones, like keeping the machines going.
Edit: okay, am I the only one seeing a parallel for what happened with Wonka, regarding this?
…I still don’t see it 😟
Here's the biggest fact of the two movies. Dahl hated the first movie. Because not only did they keep him out of the filming, he is literally on record as saying that Gene Wilder is not that kind of Willy Wonka. It was so bad, after that movie, he made sure no more adpations happened from the book. Now, when this film was proposed, Dahl's holder of the book rights at the time, I think his daughter, was hesitant to give the chance. But Tim Burton, once he made Charlie's family shack, and showed it to her, she knew it was in the right hands. They even consulted with her and the estate from time to time to make sure they get things right or updated. So really, this film is the correct version according to the book and not the old one.
Also, to those that say the first movie had better music. I want you to take another look at the lyrics of that first one, compare to the 2005 one, and tell me if it's any good compared to these and actually relate to what's happening. And not just a repeat of lines over and over again.
None of us can ever deny Jhonny Depp nailed that role
The moral of this film is so simple but the wisest and never gets old
My maternal grandfather is exactly like Charlie’s grandfather who was an Ex-Employee and accompanies him to the factory.
Gosh Tim just slowly raising up the chocolate during Malbread’s intro is amazing😂💀
it cracked me up 😂😂
The original novel mentions many other candy not shown here:
Marshmallow Pillows, Toffee Trees for your Garden, Cows that give chocolate milk, Wriggle sweets that wiggle in your tummy after you eat them, stick jaw for talkative parents, invisible candy bars for eating in class, candy-coated pencils for sucking, butterscotch and buttergin, cavity-filling caramels, magic hand fudge, etc.
With Tim Burton turning a whimsical story about a boy winning chance to met a candymaker and putting his own dark twist into the mix made this movie absolutely perfect. But also for Johnny Deep bringing an absolutely mad performance to Wonka made this movie even better and watching this at a young age made me want to watch it again, with awesome reaction and of course the chocolate. 🍫
This movie is superior to the 1971 movie in almost every single aspect, in book accuracy, not butchering the story and ruining characters, better cinematography and effects (expected for a movie made 30 years later, but still), keeping the Oompa Loompas original songs, and not almost sending the entire studio into bankruptcy. Although i did like Pure Imagination and Gene Wilder’s style.
For Violet’s name, there’s a reference to her turning Violet but also an irony because of the association with Shrinking Violet.
41:09 That's how he eats his birthday chocolate - tiny bites. He knows he won't get another one until his next birthday, so he makes it last for as long as he can. I think a bit of him is still hesitant to believe that for the first time in his life something great is happening to him, like getting to see this factory and getting to take home a lifetime supply of chocolate - imagine that after a lifetime of bread and watery cabbage soup.
I know people think of this as a remake of an older movie, but it's not. It's just a newer adaptation of the same book, with this version being much closer. In fact, much of the film crew was kept from watching the first film until this one was complete so they wouldn't copy it; all the similarities are either straight from the book or just coincidental.
How odd people call it a more faithful adaptation when it adds a pointless backstory that wasn't in the books
I get maybe overall the film might be more faithful, but there's definitely alot of things not faithful that lovers of this film are ignoring to try and make it seem better than it is.
And even if it was true that it was most definitely a more faithful adaptation that no one could deny, so what? Doesn't make it a better film than the original, it just means its more faithful
I loved this movie, all the many rooms within that factory are amazing.
22:36 Augustus is gonna fall in that river.
Imagine a modern take on Hansel & Gretel, and the witch had decidedly built a factory the size of a couple of football fields, but at the same time, looked like a house composed entirely of candy. Inside, the magic(candy-making) happens, but as equally important is her intent to bait the brother-sister duo into taking every step over to the establishment, POSSIBLY keeping them from escaping!!!!
That....NEVER happens here- primarily because this is Willy Wonka, proud owner of a massive chocolate factory, who dislikes gum(even though it's made there) and resents his dentist father
(who's against his dream of being a chocolatier and candy-maker).
I saw this version in the theater TWICE; the power went out the 1st time 😂🤷🏾♂️🍫 Still love the original but Tim Burton’s adaptation is my favorite!
One more thing; i completely forgot to mention during your Willy Wonka video was; the Oompa Loompa songs were so iconic, a video game called The Bard's Tail featured their take on the song. Multiple times throughout the game; 3 elf-likw characters called drow, would come out to sing Oh, It's Bad Luck to Be You. Each time, changing the lyrics to suit what's going on during the game. You should look out up; it's a lot of fun
I grew up with the books and this is far more accurate to its litterary source than the 1971 version. And yes even the backgroundstory with the oompa loompies is from the book, the only mayor thing that Tim Burton added was the backgroundstory of Willy Wonka.
This and the 1971 version has been on TV for the past month straight lol I kept finding myself watching it.
Timothée calling out the slavery in the first few minutes. Instant classic.
Man I love how Tim was like"oh God not her!"🤣
Fun fact: a little bit of snow on the bed is freezing. A ton of snow on top of blankets is actually cozy because snow is a good insulator despite its surface temperature.
i love this movie....also fun fact Johnny depp and the child who played Charlie did a film together a year before this called 'Finding Neverland' which is an amazing movie....good reaction we appreciate all your hard work Tim, you bring smiles to so many peoples faces so thank you for that x
Its Norman bates and the good doctor too lol
Each of those kids, except Charlie, are like the 7 Deadly Sins: Gluttony, Pride, Greed, and Wrath.
mmmmm yummy detail thank you
I grew up with the Gene Wilder version and while it does have a place in my heart, I love this version as well as it's closer to the book.
My favourite thing about this movie is that the Main Character has the least amount of Main Character Energy.
I like this one a lot because Tim Burton's imaginative direction brought the true spirit of Roald Dahl's creation.
I like that this version is more faithful to source material
Truly, no matter what adaptation it is, Willy Wonka is truly The Cat in the Hat-esc signature story and character of Roald Daul!
4:57 With the magic and whimsy of The Cat in the Hat!
I didn't think it was possible to make this movie more trippy until I heard it with altered audio🤨🤣
The fact that the movie is low pitch adds more to the movie considering how dark is it 😳
Yah unfortunately had to do for the copyright
@@TimotheeReacts 24:22 the
"We'll boil him for a minute more..." 😬
Some people don't like this version because they think Willy Wonka is creepy.
And some people feel like Charlie is a bit too nice and perfect in this, but I'm pretty sure that's just kinda the Roald Dahl protagonist way. Charlie doing some stuff wrong (influenced by his grandpa of all people) in the old movie was made-up for that adaptation.
And this is clearly meant to be like a modern fairytale in a way: pretty much everyone and everything is exaggerated.
And yeah, the "oh no violent video games" thing is definitely outdated, but the way they also portray the kid as kind of really apathetic, rude and not giving a crap about witnessing something like a once in a life-time thing happening around him feels much more relevant.
The chewing on gum thing is something that was considered much more rude in the past, so here it's emphasized that Violet is overly competitive as well (and it's implied that her mom made her that way and tries to live through her accomplishments.)
I love this one!!! One of my fav Tim Burton's movies!!! It's great, I love it!!
Honestly, having grown up with the first one, I still couldn't pick a favorite. They are both awesome in their own way. We used to watch the old one in school on movie days and I loved it. I watch this one and I love it. I know a lot of people really dislike this one, but I think it's good. It entertained me and I loved Depp, as usual. I think whichever one you like most, you can't go wrong. 🐾🐾🍻
Timothée, you’re a genius for the choice of snacks. I would have bubble gum on the side to honour the High Priestess of Main Character Energy, Miss Violet.
“TWICE THE LOLLIPOP, DOUBLE THE CAVITY.” - Wilbur Wonka
Tim burton is genious when it comes to direct a movie
I remember when I found out that the squirrels they used were actually real, and they had to be trained to do what they did in the movie
Fun fact the company’s name of the tooth paste factory Charlie’s dad worked at is the same name as the poison gas that joker wanted to release in Tim Burton’s batman
I’ll be honest, when I was younger and first watched this movie, I had a huge crush on Violet, I don’t know why. Childhood crushes are a trip man. 😂
I think that's funny that Helena Bonham Carter the actress for Charlie's mother played a psychopathic murderer in Sweeney Todd & the Harry Potter movies & the 2010 Alice In Wonderland but in this movie she played a kind & caring mother oh yeah & i absolutely love that they got Christopher Lee the actor for Count Dooku/Saruman to be in this movie may he rest in peace
You have read my mind. I wanted a reaction to this wonderful film and it has already been lying there for 3 minutes :)
You have admit it, Charlie’s diorama of Wonka and the Factory was impressive!
I don’t care what anyone says, Johnny Depp was awesome in this movie (and I’m not just saying that because of recent events). He acts exactly the way he was written in the book combined with how a human would act having had so little contact with the outside world. I don’t get why so many people hate his performance.
Though I grew up with Willy Wonka and still adore it, I love both versions equally. I was REALLY excited for this back in 2005! It was Tim Burton, Johnny Depp and Willy Wonka. It was an awesome combo! Even with the changes of Willy Wonka's father, which wasn't in the book, I didn't mind it at all. Really most of what was included in this version was in the book, probably more than the 1970s version.
This Version & The Original Are The Best 💯, Great Reactions Everyone 😊
Safety tips that you can learn from this story.
1. Use self restraint and caution to avoid reckless decisions.
2. Listen to people who know what they're talking about.
3. Follow safety rules.
4. Don't consume something without knowing if it's safe.
5. No horseplay in factories.
Willy Wonka told the kids to follow him and that they can't do or eat anything without permission. Augustus wasn't supposed to stick his hands in the chocolate river. It was supposed to be a mixing mechanism. Mr. Wonka said the gum wasn't right. He knew it wasn't safe to chew, but Violet didn't stop to listen. Nobody was allowed in the squirrel pen, and Willy Wonka said he hadn't tested Wonkavision on a person and he already showed them that it would shrink what it sends.
The fact they never filed lawsuits against Wonka for child endangerment on those rotten kids is astonishing
Blink and you'll miss it: you can see them pass by Oompa Loompa houses in the elevator, designed to look like the houses they had in LoompaLand.
I remember having this movie on DVD, and really liked watching. Yeah, sorry guys. Instead of growing up the original Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory from 1971, I actually grew up with the Tim Burton version. I’m such a millennial. 😅
the creator of the book prefers this version. well, his wife said so since he already passed before watching this one :(
I grew up with it too 😁
2005 version> wonka 2023> 1971
greatest remake of greatest of films. diff interpretations of great film. both great. 1st time this has happened
The in-the-mouth scene at the dentist was done with a giant mouth prop, and Christopher Lee holding giant dental tools.
Never do CG if you can do it practical!
I love the way you lowered the narrator's voice. I know it was for copyright, but it was pretty hilarious to hear