Celebrating The Wizard of Oz at 75
Warner Brothers revisits ‘The Wizard of Oz’ once again, on the occasion of its 75th anniversary, and brings a whole new sparkle and dimension to the film for long-time fans and a new generation.
In 1939, MGM hoped to bring the classic children’s story The Wizard of Oz to the big screen, but the production was fraught with difficulties from the beginning and even before a single frame of film was shot, the studio nearly pulled the plug on the film. Through the casting process — which almost rivaled that of another 1939 production, Gone With the Wind — spiraling costs, on-set accidents, and a never-ending stream of directors (five in all!), one man knew that this film had to be made, Arthur Freed. Freed championed the film, the fourth director Victor Fleming, who got exactly what Freed envisioned and then had to go save that other 1939 classic before the end of production (George Cukor then finished the film), and its young star, Judy Garland (the studio wanted Shirley Temple), as well as her signature song “Over the Rainbow,” which was nearly cut because MGM felt it dragged the film to a stop and they wanted to get to Oz as quickly as possible.
It’s safe to say that without Arthur Freed, we would probably not have The Wizard of Oz to celebrate this year, it’s 75th anniversary, or not the film we know and love today. And on this wondrous occasion, the folks at Warner Brothers (which owns the classic MGM library) have gone back to the film once again — having restored it beautifully already for the 70th anniversary — to give it a new sparkle, luster, size and dimension to give long-time fans and a new generation a completely new experience when viewing The Wizard of Oz.
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