Totenkindly
@.~*virinaĉo*~.@
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Well, the musical's dangers usually involve the monkeys, who are doing acrobatics moves throughout the show... but considering it's a less permanent stage-set that has to be dissembled quickly, it's all basic stuff that looks cool, not nearly as dangerous for trained performers.That was cool. So this was this big elaborate thing in the musical, like the chandelier in Phantom of the Opera? And apparently they didn't always do it?
The tunnel in the film (in the Library) actually has revolving ladders and other obstacles in the tunnel that people are ducking in and out of, sliding around the outer wall on, etc. someone could actually get badly hurt if they slipped while doing a move, or something was slightly mistimed, or the contraption broke down. They nailed it when it was shot, but the director was kind of anxious about the whole thing and the studio was kinda edgy about it all.
Ah okay.Oh, I should clarify. I've read the original Wizard of Oz, by Frank L. Baum, not the novel Wicked, by Gregory Maguire . There are so many different versions of the story in play here. I don't know about water in the Wicked novel, but at the beginning of the film, we see a puddle of her water with Elphaba's hat on top. I'm assuming she becomes vulnerable to water at some particular point.
Welp, all I'll say is that the musical deconstructs (like the novel did) the events from Baum's novel and the familiar 1939 film. So .... you'll have to wait and see.
Yeah, I really like the take on the Wizard. It makes total sense. Even if you saw the inferior "Oz the Great and Powerful" film from what 10-15 years back, I really like how in that film the Wizard had no magic but used subterfuge to win. Welp, that's what is going on here -- and I thought it was brilliant about how Elphaba is brought to him under the guise of him maybe helping her (and granting her a wish) in a magical way, where really it was all about her helping him.Thoughts about the wizard:
I also like what they did with the Wizard. In the original movie, this character is deceiving and frightening people the whole time, but insists he is "a good man" when unmasked, even though he was willing to send a teenage girl to what could have been her death. There are rather sinister implications to this character that Wicked explores more fully. I thought that was rather brilliant.
Because he has no magic and is entirely reliant on Madame Morrible, and she's very specialized in her magic, she seems really great with weather -- which will help when a tornado needs to bring Dorothy to Oz -- but not as much else. Elphaba is like another whole rank of power. I love how she casts the spell, and THEN she realizes -- "you have no power. That is why you needed me." And runs off with his book. She holds the magic cards, but unfortunately he holds the society and controls what they think because he's cultivating a kindly old magician image for himself. And Morrible takes on Galinda as a student but only as "second best" , a consolation prize, because Elphaba has rebelled.
And he really is about maintaining that image and his control, in part by slandering/villainizing the talking animals. So much of this kind of thing is what is happening today, powers that be using misdirection and villainizing innocent minorities in our culture to hide what they are doing being the scenes to maintain power as the common folk / munchkins react just as expected.
And he really is about maintaining that image and his control, in part by slandering/villainizing the talking animals. So much of this kind of thing is what is happening today, powers that be using misdirection and villainizing innocent minorities in our culture to hide what they are doing being the scenes to maintain power as the common folk / munchkins react just as expected.