Is the new Wizard of Oz reboot doomed to fail like all the others?

Numerous film-makers have attempted to recapture the magic of the 1939 musical starring Judy Garland – can Watchmen director Nicole Kassell pull it off?

News comes this week that Nicole Kassell, award-winning director of the dazzling Watchmen TV show, is to oversee a remake of The Wizard of Oz, the classic 1939 musical starring Judy Garland, for New Line Cinema. Well, good luck with that.

Myriad film-makers have attempted to recapture the magic of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer’s pioneering movie, but none has really been successful. Sam Raimi is perhaps the most notable recent director to take on the challenge, with Disney’s Oz the Great and Powerful, in 2013. Raimi is an accomplished director of brutally silly cult fantasy films, but his attempt to present a prequel featuring James Franco as the titular wizard lacked sparkle. The 1978 musical The Wiz was intended to capitalise on the popularity of Blaxploitation movies and featured a high-profile, all-black cast including Michael Jackson, Diana Ross and Richard Pryor, with music by Luther Vandross and Quincy Jones. Yet it was a critical and commercial bomb, eventually helping to signal the downfall of the very subgenre it had hoped to propel to greater heights.

Studios love to remake classic movies because they come with built-in audience awareness. The original Wizard of Oz is imprinted on our cultural hive memory: the scene in which Judy Garland’s Dorothy emerges from the bland sepia of Kansas into the splendid Technicolor of the magical land of Oz is perhaps equalled only by the one in which Margaret Hamilton’s swivel-eyed, green-skinned Wicked Witch of the West finds herself hideously melting away into nothing. The songs are splendid, and Garland holds the stage as if she really has cast a spell on us. And yet, in 2021, the story feels like a pretty drab, common-or-garden American children’s fantasy.

L Frank Baum, who first imagined Oz in his hugely popular 1900 novel, wanted to create a wholesome magic world drained of the spikier elements of European fairy tales and therefore more suitable for conservative US audiences. As he wrote in his original introduction: “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz was written solely to pleasure children today. It aspires to being a modernised fairytale, in which the wonderment and joy are retained and the heart-aches and nightmares are left out.”

It’s hard to blame a nation that had barely put the tumultuous “wild west” era to bed for wanting to protect its children from the harsh realities of life, even if the end result was a bloodless, one-dimensional tale. Yet the popularity of modern family films over the past few decades has been based on their appeal to all ages, in many cases because they are a lot more frightening – contain more moments of genuine, terrifying threat – than a good number of R-rated horror flicks. Is there anything scarier in cinema than the scene in Toy Story 3 in which our heroes brace themselves for a fiery demise in the Sunnyside Daycare incinerator? Have we ever been more horrified than when watching Nemo’s mum get eaten by a barracuda as we’ve barely had time to digest the opening credits of Finding Nemo?

The problem with Wizard of Oz is that it is all much too hokey to appeal in the modern day. Dorothy’s final realisation that there is “no place like home” is a cheap eulogisation of simple, cosy, country life on a Kansas farm, written by an author who once suggested that his fellow white man would only be safe once all Native Americans were wiped from the face of the Earth.

Cultured … Kassell at the premiere of Watchmen in October 2019.
Cultured … Kassell at the premiere of Watchmen in October 2019. Photograph: Monica Almeida/Reuters

Kassell has a history of working in far icier territory. She made her name with the 2004 thriller The Woodsman, starring Kevin Bacon as a convicted child molester who finds himself tempted back into a life of abuse. It’s an unflinchingly dark and excruciating viewing. Watchmen imagines a bewildering, multilayered alternative future in which the events of the original, seminal Alan Moore graphic novel have unravelled in spectacularly unexpected ways that cleverly mirror the real America’s culture wars. It’s another mature and cultured piece, about as far away from pantomime munchkins and the blimmin’ yellow brick road as one can imagine.

Perhaps Kassell is planning an all-growns-up take on the original story, though it’s hard to imagine quite how this would be of any interest. As Raimi discovered to his cost, Oz simply doesn’t boast the sense of looming, gothic horror that permeates earlier, European fantasy tales such as Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Sleeping Beauty or Beauty and the Beast. For all its pointy-chinned, green-skinned witches and menacing flying monkeys, the story lacks the sense of impending threat that the Grimm Brothers had in spades. Asking Kassell to oversee a fresh remake is a bit like appointing Noam Chomsky to analyse the syntactic brilliance of Mother Goose.

In MGM’s classic film adaptation, it is eventually revealed that the titular wonderful wizard is a conman illusionist from Dorothy’s own Kansas. Perhaps it’s time to finally accept that the supposed brilliance of Baum’s original novel is also a simple trick of smoke and mirrors.

Contributor

Ben Child

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Star Trek’s next big-screen adventure should downsize, not reboot
If industry reports are to be believed, the next instalment may boldly go small-scale and intimate – but then lower budgets and bigger ideas are what the fans want

Ben Child

16, Jul, 2021 @8:29 AM

Article image
Doomed revival: Star Trek, Captain Kirk and the resurrection that never was
Sci-fi fans will have their credulity stretched pretty far – but one proposed storyline revealed this week would have tested viewers’ to the limit

Ben Child

21, Oct, 2022 @12:39 PM

Article image
The problem with Flash Gordon is racism – and animation won't fix it
Born in an era of ‘yellow peril’ paranoia, the dagger at the heart of this story is hard to get past – a challenge Taika Waititi must overcome in the space hero’s next project

Ben Child

27, Jun, 2019 @12:21 PM

Article image
Bye bye box office: has Disney really given up on Star Wars movies?
The studio says it’s taking a break from making Star Wars films to focus on TV spin-offs, after the success of The Mandalorian

Ben Child

05, Feb, 2020 @12:12 PM

Article image
The Mandalorian's second season has come to an end ... but what's coming next?
There remains ample room in the galaxy for new adventures outside the traditional timeline

Ben Child

24, Dec, 2020 @6:14 AM

Article image
The Book of Boba Fett: has it ruined the character’s Star Wars legacy?
There has been much to enjoy in the Mandalorian spinoff, very little of it anything to do with the title character. He should have kept the helmet on and remained a mystery

Ben Child

04, Feb, 2022 @11:15 AM

Article image
Warp speed ahead: is the Star Trek saga set to eclipse Star Wars?
With a fourth film in the rebooted series on the horizon, the USS Enterprise’s big-screen adventures may just be beginning

Ben Child

18, Feb, 2022 @11:00 AM

Article image
Will Quentin Tarantino really make Star Trek his final frontier?
The motormouth director has been dropping hints about what his ‘gangster’ version might resemble if he does make it his 10th and final film

Ben Child

25, Jul, 2019 @2:30 PM

Article image
Why axing Chris Pine would be a very bad idea for the Star Trek films
Risking the cast’s chemistry by hiring a new Captain Kirk may be boldly going way too far

Ben Child

15, Aug, 2018 @4:38 PM

Article image
The new ThunderCats film must revive TV show's psychedelic magic
As Hollywood rediscovers the power of animation, a reboot of the sci-fi classic has come at the perfect time

Ben Child

02, Apr, 2021 @8:00 AM