Take Two: The Wizard of Oz trivia
Can you answer these 50/50 questions about The Wizard of Oz?
True or false: The Wizard of Oz was the first movie to use Technicolor?
The Wizard of Oz is famous for the scene in which Dorothy exits her sepia-tinged life in Kansas with the vibrant world of Oz, presented in glorious Technicolor. It is one of the most famous early examples of the use of color in movies, but it's not the first. In fact, Technicolor was first experimented with in the 1917 movie The Gulf Between. The Wizard of Oz was not even the first movie to primarily use the three-strip Technicolor technology that helped give the movie its classic look. That was in 1935's Becky Sharp. Of course, black and white still remained the dominant format for years to come in Hollywood.
Over/under: three directors worked on The Wizard of Oz?
Not one, not two, not three, but five directors worked on The Wizard of Oz at some point. As detailed by the Yale Film Archive, the first was Norman Taurog, who worked during pre-production, including some early Technicolor tests. Richard Thorpe was brought in to replace Taurog, but only lasted two weeks before he was replaced with George Cukor. Cukor only oversaw things while production was shut down and didn't actually shoot any footage used in the movie, but he is credited with revising the looks for Dorothy and the Wicked Witch. Victor Fleming then came in and shot most of the movie and is the one who gets primary credit. However, he was not able to finish the movie (funnily enough called in again to replace Cukor on Gone with the Wind). King Vidor was the fifth and final director to contribute to The Wizard of Oz, shooting the Kansas scenes.
Which classic Wizard of Oz line ranks higher on AFI’s 100 greatest movie quotes: A) “There’s no place like home”; B) “Toto, I’ve a feeling we’re not in Kansas anymore.”
The American Film Institute's list of 100 Years... 100 Movie Quotes ranks the most memorable lines from American movies (up until the mid-2000s). Of The Wizard of Oz's many classic lines, Dorothy's "Toto, I've a feeling we're not in Kansas anymore" was ranked no. 4 on the entire list, 19 spots higher than "There's no place like home."
One other line from The Wizard of Oz made the final list, the Wicked Witch's "I'll get you, my pretty, and your little dog too!", which was voted to no. 99.
True or false: The Wizard of Oz is the most watched movie in history?
According to the Library of Congress, The Wizard of Oz is the most-watched movie of all time. The basis for this assertion are the TV airings of The Wizard of Oz that became major events, with the Los Angeles Times saying it drew 45 million viewers the first time it aired on TV in 1956. From the movie playing once a year as a big TV event to today where it is reaired more frequently, it's not hard to understand how The Wizard of Oz earned this title.
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Michael Balderston is a DC-based entertainment and assistant managing editor for What to Watch, who has previously written about the TV and movies with TV Technology, Awards Circuit and regional publications. Spending most of his time watching new movies at the theater or classics on TCM, some of Michael's favorite movies include Casablanca, Moulin Rouge!, Silence of the Lambs, Children of Men, One Flew Over the Cuckoos Nest and Star Wars. On the TV side he enjoys Only Murders in the Building, Yellowstone, The Boys, Game of Thrones and is always up for a Seinfeld rerun. Follow on Letterboxd.