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#28328 - Mon Oct 04 1999 05:02 PM Look!I can post in Book AND Movie with it!
Linda1 Offline
Star Poster

Registered: Thu Sep 30 1999
Posts: 11250
Loc: Munchkinland
The Wizard of Oz, of course!!!

My absolutely, all-time, never-to-be-surpassed, mostest favoritest movie in the whole wide world!

Anyone want to discuss it?

I can even explain some of the most common myths about it. For instance, contrary to what most people want to believe, there really was no hanging man in the woods scene.

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Cats know what we feel. They don't care, but they know.

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#28329 - Mon Oct 04 1999 05:17 PM Re: Look!I can post in Book AND Movie with it!
Terry Offline
Head Honcho

Registered: Wed Dec 31 1969
Posts: 21448
Loc: USA
You have NO idea how many people submit that as a 'fun fact' here. I get that at least once a month, and have ignored it at least 20 times in the last few years.

Care to explain why so many people believe this to be a fact?

Terry


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#28330 - Mon Oct 04 1999 05:28 PM Re: Look!I can post in Book AND Movie with it!
Linda1 Offline
Star Poster

Registered: Thu Sep 30 1999
Posts: 11250
Loc: Munchkinland
My guess is that people kind of have a closed mind attitude about it. They simply want to believe it and don't even seem to hear anyone say something to the contrary. It frustrates me to no end. I feel like I'm talking to a brick wall when I try to explain that the rumor is, simply, not true.

This particular scene is wonderful in that they used so many different, unique animals. What most people see as the hanging man is a stork flapping his (her?!) wings. Look at the scene closely. It's actually really cool!

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Cats know what we feel. They don't care, but they know.

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#28331 - Mon Oct 04 1999 11:13 PM Re: Look!I can post in Book AND Movie with it!
Terry Offline
Head Honcho

Registered: Wed Dec 31 1969
Posts: 21448
Loc: USA
The Wizard of Oz was one of my favorite movies of all time too. Have you heard of the following? It deals with Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon being synchronized to the Wizard of Oz. I have tried it, and it is AMAZING how they seem to fit together. It's cool!

Terry

-included article-

Follow the Yellow Rock Road Floydian analysis of 'The Wizard of Oz'

By HELEN KENNEDY 5/13/97 The New York Daily News Staff Writer

Call it Dark Side of the Rainbow. Classic rockers are buzzing about the amazingly weird connections that leap off the screen when you play Pink Floyd's "Dark Side of the Moon" as the soundtrack to "The Wizard of Oz."

It sounds wacky, but there really is a bizarre synchronization there. The lyrics and music join in cosmic synch with the action, forming dozens upon dozens of startling coincidences the kind that make you go "Oh wow, man" even if you haven't been near a bong in 20 years.

Consider these examples:

Floyd sings "the lunatic is on the grass" just as the Scarecrow begins his floppy jig near a green lawn. The line "got to keep the loonies on the path" comes just before Dorothy and the Scarecrow start traipsing down the Yellow Brick Road.

When deejay George Taylor Morris at WZLX-FM in Boston first mentioned the phenom on the air six weeks ago, he touched off a frenzy.

"The phones just blew off the wall. It started on a Friday, and that first weekend you couldn't get a copy of 'The Wizard of Oz' anywhere in Boston," he said. "People were staying home to check it out." It's fun, he said, because everyone knows the movie, and the album which spent a record-busting 591 straight weeks on the Billboard charts can be found in practically every record collection.

Dave Herman at WNEW-FM in New York mentioned the buzz a few weeks ago. The response more than 2,000 letters was the biggest ever in the deejay's 25-year on-air career.

"It has been just unbelievable," said WNEW program director Mark Chernoff. "I've never seen anything like this. "

The station plans to show the movie using the album as soundtrack at a small private screening tomorrow.

Rock fans always have loved to speculate about hidden messages in their favorite albums. But seeking connections between the beloved 1939 classic kid flick and the legendary 1973 acid-rock album pushes he envelope of the music conspiracy genre.

Nobody from the publicity-shy band would comment, but Morris asked keyboardist Richard Wright about it on the air last month. He looked flummoxed and said he'd never heard of any intentional connections between the movie and the album.

But the fans aren't convinced it's just a cosmic coincidence. "I'm a musician myself and I know how hard it is just to write music, let alone music choreographed to action," said drummer Alex Harm, of Lowell, Mass., who put up one of the two Internet web pages devoted to the synchroneities. " To make it match up so well, you'd have to plan it."

Morris is convinced that ex-frontman Roger Waters planned the whole thing without letting his fellow band members in on the secret.

"It's too close. It's just too close. Look at the song titles. Look at the cover. There's something going on there," Morris said.

Here's how it works. You start the album at the exact moment when the MGM lion finishes its third and last roar. It might take a few times to get everything lined up just right. Then, just sit back and watch. It'll blow your mind, man.

During "Breathe," Dorothy teeters along a fence to the lyric: "balanced on the biggest wave." The Wicked Witch, in human form, first appears on her bike at the same moment a burst of alarm bells sounds on the album.

During "Time," Dorothy breaks into a trot to the line: "no one told you when to run."When Dorothy leaves the fortuneteller to go back to her farm, the album is playing: "home, home again."

Glinda, the cloyingly saccharine Good Witch of the North, appears in her bubble just as the band sings: "Don't give me that do goody goody bull---t."

A few minutes later, the Good Witch confronts the Wicked Witch as the band sings, "And who knows which is which" (or is that "witch is witch"?).

The song "Brain Damage" starts about the same time as the Scarecrow launches into "If I Only Had a Brain."

But it's not just the weird lyrical coincidences. Songs end when scenes switch, and even the Munchkins' dancing is perfectly choreographed to the song "Us and Them."

The phenomenon is at its most startling during the tornado scene, when the wordless singing in "The Great Gig in the Sky" swells and recedes in strikingly perfect time with the movie.

When Dorothy opens the door into Oz, the movie switches to rich color and at that exact moment the album starts in with the tinkling cash register sound effects from "Money."

Anyone who has ever nursed a hangover watchin MTV with the sound off and the radio on can tell you how quick the brain is to turn music into a soundtrack for pictures. But this is uncanny.

The real fanatics will point out that side one of the vinyl album is the exact length of the black-and-white portion of the movie. And then there's that iconic album cover, with its prism and rainbow echoing the movie's famous black-and-white-into-color switch not to mention Judy Garland's classic first song.

The real clincher, though, the moment where even the most skeptical of cynics has to utter a small "whoa!," comes at the end of the album, which trails off with the insistent sound of a beating heart. What's happening on screen? Yep, you guessed it: Dorothy's got her ear to the Tin Man's chest, listening for a heartbeat.

Maybe it's just a string of coincidences. Maybe the mind is just playing some really cool tricks. Maybe some people just have waaaay too much time on their hands. Or maybe, as Pink Floyd sings to close out the album, everything under the sun really is in tune.


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#28332 - Mon Oct 04 1999 11:56 PM Re: Look!I can post in Book AND Movie with it!
Linda1 Offline
Star Poster

Registered: Thu Sep 30 1999
Posts: 11250
Loc: Munchkinland
I've heard that the music and movie do go together quite well. I keep saying that, one of these days, I'm going to try it out and see for myself. But then, I get out the movie and just can't bear to do anything to change it - I end up just watching it normally. I don't have the music, so I'd have to borrow it from someone who does.

I'd also have to put my cat, Toto, in the other room. He wouldn't appreciate my doing anything to his favorite movie! (You know, he really does come over and listen whenever I play "Over the Rainbow." He seems to know that song!)

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Cats know what we feel. They don't care, but they know.

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#28333 - Thu Oct 21 1999 06:55 PM Re: Look!I can post in Book AND Movie with it!
minime Offline
Enthusiast

Registered: Thu Sep 30 1999
Posts: 210
Loc: brisbane, aust.
I have the video I now need the "Dark side of the Moon" sounds coooool
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