Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory is a 1971 American musical fantasy film directed by Mel Stuart from a screenplay by Roald Dahl, based on his 1964 novel Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. It stars Gene Wilder as candymaker Willy Wonka. The film tells the story of a poor child named Charlie Bucket (Peter Ostrum) who, upon finding a Golden Ticket in a chocolate bar, wins the chance to visit Willy Wonka's chocolate factory along with four other children from around the world.

Charlie Bucket is a poor paperboy who often looks inside a candy shop but cannot afford to buy sweets. Going home one evening, he passes confectioner Willy Wonka's chocolate factory, where a tinker tells him that no one ever enters or leaves the building. Charlie's bedridden Grandpa Joe explains that Wonka had shut down the factory because rival confectioners sent spies to steal his recipes. Production resumed three years later, but the gates remained locked, and to prevent more sabotage, the original workers were not rehired, leaving their replacements a mystery.


Willy Wonka And The Chocolate Factory (1971 Full Movie Download)


Download 🔥 https://tiurll.com/2y3L2F 🔥



Wonka announces that he has hidden five Golden Tickets in chocolate Wonka Bars. Finders of the tickets will receive a factory tour and a lifetime supply of chocolate. The first four tickets are found by Augustus Gloop, a gluttonous German boy; Veruca Salt, the spoiled daughter of a wealthy English father; and two Americans: Violet Beauregarde, who chews gum constantly, and Mike Teevee, who is obsessed with television. As each winner is announced on television, a sinister-looking man appears and whispers to them. Charlie also takes advantage of his birthday, and a gift from Grandpa Joe, to open two Wonka bars, hoping to find a ticket, but he doesn't find one in either of them.

Arriving home with the Golden Ticket, Charlie chooses Grandpa Joe as his chaperone. Overjoyed, Grandpa Joe miraculously springs out of bed for the first time in twenty years. The next day, Wonka greets the ticket winners at the front gates of the factory and leads them inside. Each signs a discipline contract before the tour, which begins in the Chocolate Room, a whimsical indoor park with plants and flowers made of candy and a river of chocolate. The visitors meet Wonka's workforce: little people known as Oompa-Loompas.

At the end of the tour, Wonka assures Charlie and Grandpa Joe that the other children will be fine before he hastily retreats to his office without awarding them the promised lifetime supply of chocolate. He informs them that they had violated the contract when they stole the Fizzy Lifting Drinks, thereby forfeiting their prize. Ashamed, Charlie returns the Everlasting Gobstopper to Wonka instead of giving it to Slugworth. Seeing that Charlie did not resort to revenge, Wonka joyously declares Charlie the winner, reinstates his prize, and reveals that Slugworth is his employee, Mr. Wilkinson. The offer to buy the Gobstopper was a morality test, and only Charlie has passed. The trio enters the Wonkavator, a multi-directional glass elevator that flies out of the factory. During their flight, Wonka tells Charlie that he created the contest to find someone worthy enough to inherit his factory, so he will give it to Charlie and his family upon retiring, allowing them to move in as their new home.

Principal photography commenced on August 31, 1970, and ended on November 19, 1970.[32][33] After location scouting in Europe, including the Guinness brewery in Ireland and a real-life chocolate factory in Spain, production designer Harper Goff decided to house the factory sets and the massive Chocolate Room at Bavaria Studios.[34] It was also significantly cheaper than filming in the United States, and the primary shooting locations in Munich, Bavaria, West Germany, made the setting conducive to Wonka's factory. Stuart also liked the ambiguity and unfamiliarity of the location.[35][36]

In the scene at Mr. Salt's peanut factory, where thousands of Wonka bars were being unwrapped to find a Golden Ticket, the bars were actually made of wood, which was a cheaper solution than rewrapping thousands of bars of real chocolate.[44]

Delving deeper, If we take the idea of Wonka being torn in half over the decision into mind, wouldn't it make more sense to NOT create the whole scenario with the tickets? Well, I also believe that in the movie, the fate and actions of the children who get the tickets DECIDE Wonka's decision. If all children fail Wonka's expectation of taking over the factory, his decision to continue his everyday life as a chocolate maker is made. If the one child shows that they can take on the legacy of Wonka, his decision is made. However, if there was a last remaining child, who may have done something bad in the factory, but still have survived the events in the factory, the Gobstopper would be the deciding factor in the decision Wonka would make. If they had it, Wonka would give the factory to the child, but if the opposite happened, Wonka would continue as normal.

The story, like all good fantasies, is about a picaresque journey. Willy Wonka is the world's greatest chocolate manufacturer, and he distributes five golden passes good for a trip through his factory and a lifetime supply of chocolate. Each pass goes to a kid, who may bring an adult along, and our hero Charlie (a poor but honest newsboy who supports four grandparents and his mother) wins the last one.

The other four kids are hateful in one way or another, and come to dreadful ends. One falls into the chocolate lake and is whisked into the bowels of the factory. He shouldn't have been a pig. Another is vain enough to try Wonka's new teleportation invention, and winds up six inches tall -- but the taffy-pulling machine will soon have him back to size, right? If these fates seem a little gruesome to you, reflect that all great children's tales are a little gruesome, from the Brothers Grimm to Alice in Wonderland to Snow White, and certainly not excluding Mother Goose. Kids are not sugar and spice, not very often, and they appreciate the poetic justice when a bad kid gets what's coming to him.

I forgot that the first third of this movie is sketch comedy about the whole world being obsessed with going to a chocolate factory. It's very winning. Feels like something they would cut if they made it today in order to make more room for John Oliver to riff in his role as "Charlie's teacher." The teacher they have in there now is really special. As a kid I always just assumed he was a famous English comedian who I had somehow missed. I was partially right (David Bartley was in Krull!) but I stand by my eight year old self's opinion that this guy deserved a bigger career than he got.

In the case of Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory, I caught it while channel-surfing. The film had already began, but I had not missed much. I watched the scenes where the general public are desperately seeking the Golden Ticket. I had not even seen the titular chocolate factory or the eponymous hero, and yet I was already delighted by the mischievous comedy and bizarre storyline.

Nonetheless Charlie has dreams, mostly based around chocolate. He tells his teacher that he does not much care for chocolate, but this is obviously untrue. He stares forlornly through the shop window while the other children buy sweets. He gazes in fascination at a chocolate factory in his town run by the eccentric and reclusive Willy Wonka.

It is this factory that offers Charlie the hope of escaping the drudgery of his daily existence, if only for a few hours. Willy Wonka announces that he has hidden five Golden Tickets in his Wonka Bars, and that the finders of these tickets will be given a tour of his chocolate factory and a lifetime supply of chocolate.

The chocolate factory is an amazing place in which the chocolate is prepared by the Oompa Loompas, a race of squat, orange-skinned, green-haired dwarfs. These little men and women have a penchant for singing ironic and heartless songs, pointing out the moral in the fates of the various children.

The set design in Willy Wonka & The Chocolate Factory is some of the best I have ever seen. Not only does it look like a real candy play land, but each area is different from the next, with its own treats and gadgets to dazzle the eye. The first chocolate river world is vibrant and full of color, with some new confection waiting around each corner, or in each patch as the case may be, to be discovered. The craft that went into creating the factory world must have been great and I can only imagine the amount of care, intricate planning and designing that went into such a world.

The world is astounded when Willy Wonka, for years a recluse in his factory, announces that five lucky people will be given a tour of the factory, shown all the secrets of his amazing candy, and one will win a lifetime supply of Wonka chocolate. Nobody wants the prize more than young Charlie, but as his family is so poor that buying even one bar of chocolate is a treat, buying enough bars to find one of the five golden tickets is unlikely in the extreme. But in movieland, magic can happen. Charlie, along with four somewhat odious other children, get the chance of a lifetime and a tour of the factory. Along the way, mild disasters befall each of the odious children, but can Charlie beat the odds and grab the brass ring?

This film was full of color & magically transported you into a land of pure fantasy. My mouth watered watching Charlie gingerly open those golden wrapped Wonka Bars & I screamed with excitement when he found the golden ticket! I longed for a life lasting gobstopper & a sip from the chocolate river surrounded by the tiny (but slightly scarey) Oompa Loompa people. I wished Wonka chocolate bars were available in Melbourne! This film has been re-made a couple of times since 1971, but the original remains my favourite. Was it yours?

I remember going to the old movie theatre in Chelsea Victoria to see the 1971 Willy Wonka movie with my cousin older Jessie and her young daughter Janette. I was absolutely captivated the entire show!.. The colours, songs & that delicious chocolate river had me mesmerized and I did not want the film to end! I so wanted a Wonka Bar after that movie but you could not buy them in Australia unfortunately. There have been several re-makes of this movie since then, but the original still remains my favourite. 2351a5e196

air attack full version free download

90 aa 909 kimindir

green energy powerpoint template free download

locus maps karten download

selfie pulla song download