Oak's first watch of this classic film! What was your first-time reaction? What did we miss? Badd Medicine Arcade channel ru-vid.com/show-UCHIstVk00GtduPIXlJLdC3A Early Drops & Full Reactions on YT Memberships & Patreon: www.patreon.com/baddmedicine Backup channel Subscribe here ru-vid.com/show-UC1CLUwA27dz-94o3FR0o3xg
Would be great if you also watched the newer Tim Burton's version with Johnny Depp. It's quite a different take on the whole story but at the same time familiar.
I don’t dislike this film at all but I personally like Charlie and the chocolate factory even more the effects are better and the songs the Oompa Loompas sing are even funnier and much more creative
Although if we believe Roald Dahl spoke through his characters, he thought Lewis had one problem with his writing - there weren't any jokes. Dahl believed that all children's books should have funny bits. For those of you who don't know, this was expressed by Matilda in the book of the same name, where she says that all children's books should have funny bits because "Children are not so serious as adults and they love to laugh". She says she likes CS Lewis, but feels that is a failing in his books. Having read some of the Narnia books but not all, I can see where she's coming from. But I never really liked fantasy books unless they had plenty of realism (I think that's why Harry Potter reached such a wide demographic, because it balanced fantasy with reality cleverly - just about any child Harry's age in the first book can identify with the fears and excitement of a new school), so that wasn't my kind of thing. I mean, you're going to say "But you read all of Roald Dahl, right?" Well, no, but I did read a lot of his stuff. But so much of his books were just people talking and getting to know each other, so I was just enjoying the dialogue. There's actually a scene just as the meeting in The Witches is about to start before we know they're not the RSPCC and the way the witches talk do sound like, even though they're said to not be human, at least part of them are regular women.
My favorite thing about this movie is how subtly sarcastic and acidic Gene Wilder’s performance as Wonka is. Yeah he’s whimsical and funny, but there’s also such a clear sense that he doesn’t particularly LIKE most people, and that’s why he stays isolated in his factory, surrounded by Oompa Loompas and machines. So when he finally celebrates Charlie at the end, it feels genuinely earned and rewarding. 😊
What really sells all that is Gene Wilder's innocence and honesty. So interesting to see someone who always has those characteristics in spades using them to play a character who, though charismatic, isn't obviously trustworthy by any means.
Peter Ostrum played Charlie in this and he never acted in a movie again. He got his veterinarians degree from Cornell and he was a vet in Lowville, NY until he retired in September. He would go to schools to talk about the film. He’s a local legend in our area here and he’s lived an incredible life.
People don’t watch tv as much as they used to. Content on demand means people look up what they want to see and don’t see things in passing on tv like it used to be.
Roald Dahl, the original author, hated bubble gum and thought it was a nasty habit and especially hated when people would just spit their gum out rather than properly throw it away. This was the whole reason behind the character of Violet Beauregard.
True and the both movies made her vice self centered/ over competitive. Which also fit the character in the book, in her interview she put gum on the elevator buttons and she calls out her rival. She was a nasty little girl.
Frankly I think Dahl hated kids in general and wanted to write a horror story in the style of And Then There Were None.. but with kids instead getting bumped off one by one.
I also dislike gum, then again gum is helpful when comes to fresh breath and dentist recommendation. Although I spit out gum quickly after chewing it because it loses flavor really fast. And that is gross how people throw their gum in the streets, or stick it under tables instead of in the garbage bin. I cringe when I see gum stuck on a sidewalk, or on a table at a restaurant.😖
I keep my gum wrapper and spit it back into that when I’m done with it if I’m not near a trashcan, I’ll hang onto it and toss it out when I get to a good place to toss it out. Can’t stand people that just toss it into the sidewalk or on. The bottom of tables
The moment when Wonka hobbles out on a cane and then does the somersault was all Gene Wilder's idea and apparently was mandatory for him taking the role. As he put it, "I do that, the audience won't know what to expect from me", which is exactly how it should be from a trickster character like him.
The director didn't like the idea, so made Gene do takes without the somersault. But Gene made sure each of those games were unusable so they had to use the somersault, and I'm glad he did. It was such an efficient method of character building.
The famous final line was also written by the screenwriter last second, over the one phone that existed in the town, on vacation. They didn’t have a good one. And apparently the books ends with something like “Grandpa says wheee!” So he was called urgently and he came up with that on the spot.
Fun note, my vocal teacher was one of the oompa loompa voice actors. He was the first tenor saying " what do you think when you guzzle down sweets". Such a kind guy and he was in his 70's when he taught me in 2016. Always said this was the best experience of his career. RIP.
Too funny! I almost choked on my ravioli. To be fair, though, in the book the kids are shown leaving the factory at the end of the day. Some were changed - for example, they overstretched Mike Teavee and he ended up very thin and 10 feet tall - but all survived.
That's cool!. I heard the same thing about Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone. They didn't let the actors playing 1st years see the Great Hall until they filmed the scene of them entering it for the first time. That is their real reactions too. I like when director's do that so you can see the actual wonderment on the children's faces.
@@sunshinemerlot9790 Also happened in Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, the actress of the youngest sibling, Lucy wasn’t allowed to enter the set of the Forest, until they were to film the scene. Which, btw was on her birthday, so she could have a magical birthday. However, they also didn’t tell her Mr Tumnus would appear on the scene, meaning her reaction to seeing him and her scream were all real.
@@_Moon-Owl_ Yep! It's my favorite scene in the movie for that reason. The genuine look of wonder and delight on Georgie Henley's face gets me every single time.
This movie, I feel, has one of the best unspoken jokes in the history of cinema. It's the conman in Paraguay. They announce in the paper the final Wonka ticket was discovered in Paraguay, and show a photo of the guy claiming to have found it. It is later reported on the news that it was a fake ticket. The guy shown in the photos is Martin Bormann, the highest ranking Nazi official to evade capture, and was rumored in the early seventies (when the film was made) to be living in hiding somewhere in South America. The joke is that the winning ticket is so desirable, that even the World's Most Wanted Man would risk capture in an effort to win, and is nevertheless a hopeless scoundrel for faking the ticket. An absolutely A+ joke you either get or don't.
That is funny actually, so even the criminals would snitch on themselves just to win a chocolate contest. Then again there was that woman who would let her husband be killed by kidnappers just to keep her Wonka bars. Grandpa Joe is no better, he lied about not being able to walk when he's been walking all along, wanted Charlie to steal that bread, and had the audacity to play victim when Wonka confronted him and Charlie on what they did. I wish Charlie took his mother instead of Grandpa Joe.
@@summerrose8110 Are you saying that Grandpa Joe is no better than a Nazi and a woman who would let kidnappers kill her husband for a chance to see the inside of a factory and a lifetime supply of chocolate? It doesn't seem comparable.
I've loved this version since I was a kid because of my mom. That tunnel scene was scarier than any horror movie to me back then lol. The remake is worth checking out too. 💜
My favorite part of this movie is just how Gene Wilder was essentially pranking wveryone the whole time. The cane part at the beginning? No one had net him before and their shock was real. Same with the boat ride. The other actors had no clue what was going to happen.
There's a fun (in a heartbreaking way) fan theory (that doesn't hold up at all, but its interesting to think about) that Wonka is actually George Weasley from the Potter universe. He's a red-head, with a talent for creating wild and wacky "magical" candies (think back to Potter and the candies the Weasley Twins made), and at the end of the tour you see everything in his office is split in half...because George lost Fred, lost half of himself.
You FEEL Charlie when you watch as a child, you FEEL Willy Wonka when viewing as an adult! My FIRST exposure to Gene Wilder in a film when I saw this while in elementary school and I saw it at a drive-in theater first, before I saw it on TV. It's even a good watch now 52 years later, because I was only 3 in 1971, but probably first saw this in 1975 when I was 7.
A lot of the things that the cast encountered was kept from them, sorta like in the movie Alien, that way the reactions would be authentic. the first time they saw the chocolate room was legitimately the first time they saw the room. When Wonka came hobbling out on the cane, that was legitimately the first time they saw Wilder and they really had no idea what to expect, so the bizarre disappointment on their faces was also genuine. The horror on the boat was also genuine because none of that was explained before hand. They experienced it all alongside us as the movie panned out
The Wonkatania scene is my favorite scene in movie history. The way Gene conveys himself there is incredible. Scared me to death when I was a kid though. Also Julie Dawn Cole’s talent in the golden egg room is really something
Great reaction! Trivia: It was Gene Wilder's idea to use the can, then trip, fall, and do the somersalt. Because he felt if Wonka started off lying to them they would be on edge for the rest of the movie, not sure what to believe from him. Meanwhile, the main thing I take away each time is how fantastic Gene Wilder's performance is. From the zany humor to the physical comedy, to the surprising burst of rage at the end, to the gentle way he covers the gobstopper with his hand -- it's an incredible performance with so many different moods and layers.
I always thought that Wonka wanted Charlie to take over the factory. Charlie just so happen to find money so he could buy the last bar and the shopkeeper personally handed Charlie a candy bar from behind the counter rather than one of the bars sitting out on one of the several displays.
Yeah the whole thing is planned to some degree, as evidenced by “Slugworths” appearance at the locations of all the tickets. Yeah his presence isn’t immediate in all cases but he’s always there at least the same time as the media, in that day and age it’d be impossible for to him to have seen the news and then travelled to the tickets location.
This is a popular theory that's been around for years that The Candy Man was another agent for Wonka, he knew what kind of a honest kid Charlie was, which can be seen in the beginning, all those kids just eating the candy that was thrown to them, yet here's Charlie, staying outside, not going in because despite the Candy Man giving out the candy, he didn't feel like he should go in because he was poor. Then when he comes into the shop, he buys a candy bar for his grandfather. This shows his thoughtfulness for others.
And Tim Brooke-Taylor, another British comedy actor, was the computer guy. He was in British TV shows, like "At Last, the 1948 Show" (1967), and The Goodies (70s-early 80's). Working along side of Marty Feldman and many of the Monty Python guys.
Fun Facts: The two girl actresses were in love with the actor who played Charlie, so much so that they used to fight over him behind the scenes. The young actor who played Charlie never acted again and later became a veterinarian. Gene Wilder insisted on doing the limping cane flip roll fake out gag. So much so that if the director said "no" Gene was not going to take the role. The book is very different than the movie.
Guys I think it’s pretty obvious grandpa Joe was in severe depression following a prolonged illness or injury. Plus in the book Charlie has BOTH his parents not just mom and even with all 3 working the family is basically starving during winter. Also, as a commentary on the book; while growing up poor can humble a person that does not at all follow that every person who grows up poor will be a good humble person. Poverty like every other circumstance in life effects everyone differently.
Watching three buff dudes watch Willy Wonka with pure, unabashed enjoyment has made my day. Thank you for watching this older movie and sharing that fun with us! It's so nice to watch people react when they're not afraid to have fun and can appreciate older practical effects - thank you for just watching and enjoying this great movie on its own merits!
Gene Wilder was one of the biggest influences for GenX, the cynicism and wit and weirdness... he's in our very DNA. 😁 Y'all were EVERYTHING for me watching this. Pure joy. 🎉 Happy New Year 🎊
A little Easter egg-the photo of the fraudulent finder of the fifth ticket is of Martin Bormann, who disappeared in the last days before Berlin fell in 1945. When the movie was made, it was presumed that he had taken a ratline to South America like so many of his colleagues. Only in recent years was it proved by DNA that he died in Berlin.
So, in retrospect, whoever that was supposed to be a photo of was not only a fraudulent ticket finder, but also a fraudulent war criminal. Though I guess that’s better than being a genuine war criminal. 😄
My mother used to sing me the song Charlies mother sings to him when i was little. Shed switch out the names I do the same thing with my children now, and they ask me to sing it alot come bedtime. Such incredible memories this movie brings ❤️
The teacher is played by David Battley, a british actor, most people remember him for this movie and his role as the young wizard Ergo (I am Ergo the magnificent. Short in stature, tall in power, narrow of purpose and wide of vision.) in Krull.
The reason everything in Willy's office is cut in half was that Mel Stuart, the director, couldn't bear the thought of, after having gone through all the whimsical and creative rooms in the factory, ending the movie in an ordinary office. Everything was cut in half to make the room look more Wonka-esque.
My favorite note about the first scene with Wonka is (I'm paraphrasing here) it was Gene's idea to have Wonka limp out and then spring up after a cartwheel. His logic was if that was the audience's first encounter with Wonka then they would know from the start you couldn't actually trust anything Wonka said or did for the rest of the movie. Not that he was "evil" but that you would just never know what was the real Wonka and what was Wonka's performance. I loved it when I learned that the first time.
Jack Albertson, who played Grandpa Joe, also voiced a character in the Disney film The Fox & the Hound. It was one of his last roles and he does a really great job of it. Roy Kinnear, who played the father of Veruca Salt, was also in the Beatles film HELP. His son Rory Kinnear is also an very good actor and more recently was in the A24 surreal horror Men as several different characters.
Kinnear was also one of the two gentlemen who ask Scrooge for a contribution to a Christmas charity in the Leslie Bricusse musical SCROOGE (1970), starring Albert Finney.
One of my favorite bits in the movie is when Wonka plays the "musical combination" which is obviously from Mozart's "Marriage of Figaro" and the know-it-all mother of Mike TV says "Rachmaninoff"
The band, Veruca Salt, got their name from the character in the movie. They put out some really good songs (Seether, Volcano Girls, Laughing In The Sugar Bowl).
I distinctly remember two movies as a kid with scenes that disturbed me to the point of having nightmares. One was the flying monkeys in Wizard of Oz. The other was this movie when Violet turned into a blueberry. It wasnt until i was in my 20s that I finally broke down and watched Willy Wonka again, and as an adult i LOVE it! Thanks for the reaction!!!
The Teacher was David Battley. He was in a lot of British TV from 1964-1999. He was on Saturday Night Live in 1976 and was the Bassist for Eric Idle's band the Rutles.
13:27 He got the golden Ticket! 18:15 Willy Wonka Ladies and gentlemen! 21:45 Oompa Loompas 22:18 One down! 22:53 Classic! 25:30 Meme moment! 27:00 Blueberry! 30:22 she's a Bad egg! 32:03 Wonka Bazinga that kid!😂 33:27 Savage Willy Wonka!
Gene Wilder played this so brilliantly. He would swing from the most warm and charming guy to somebody who didn't care one bit if these kids survived. I love this film. I have always loved it since I saw it when I was probably 4 or 5. It taps into the wonder and terror of Wizard of Oz while hitting such amazing comedy. It's an all time classic.
The Chocolate Room was kept hidden from the entire cast (except Wilder) until the point they walk through the door just to get the genuine reaction on each of their faces. Unfortunately, part of that reaction was disgust from the smell created by the "chocolate" waterfall and river. The water was mixed with chocolate powder, but it eventually released a foul odor after sitting for a while, and the churning of the falls caused it to go white. The team’s solution was to add anti-shampoo powder and other chemicals. This all sat on the set for the three weeks it took to film all the scenes there and was horrendous by the time the cast moved to another set.
Pearl clutching has caused film ratings to go up and up over the years as people insist on shielding kids from every possible thing. Kids can handle darker or more serious material just fine and honestly it's good to have kids engage in those things through a safe medium like fiction before life slams them in the face with it later.
Ya the original Grimm's fairy tales were brutal and horrific at times. It wasn't too long ago children were surrounded by death, most notably the deaths of younger siblings and mothers who died in the birthing of those younger siblings. They can withstand a lot more than modern adults give them credit for. Shielding them from any and all negative emotions does them no favours.
I love when Wonka plays the musical lock and Mrs. Teevee, a teacher, smugly says “Rachmaninoff”, when the snippet was in fact Mozart. The overture to The Marriage of Figaro, to be exact.
I think the key is that Charlie was the only child who was able to resist the bad influence of his upbringing. All the other kids were the way they were because of the influence of their parents, but Charlie (eventually) resisted his grandpa's "crookedness." It's as much about him being honest and sweet as it is that he can refuse to be influenced by the adults around him.
Each kid can represent a deadly sin. Augustus was gluttony, Veruca was greed, Violet was pride, Mike was sloth. Charlie is meant to be the good kid, but you could make the argument that he exemplifies envy.
@@lornepribbeno3760 "explain how you do either of those in a kids film or book." Just go ahead and look at the SpongeBob theory ... the main cast being the 7 deadly sins ... and yes, that does include lust and wrath ... Especially wrath shouldn't be too hard to be depicted in a kids show or movie ... just make a character that is angry all the time ... there, done xD
The reason Grandpa Joe gets a hard time is because nothing is wromg with him or any of the grandparents. They are able bodied adults who sit in the bed while charlie and his mom work hard to get enough food to feed them all.
And just think, if they are all bed ridden then it’s Charlie’s mother who probably has to bathe them, clothe them, and clean out their chamber pots. Her husband I assumed died and they just watched as she struggled, no chocolate tour for her.
I'd rate it a 5 out of 5. I used to watch this and sing the songs all the time. I loved it as a kid so, so much. Gene Wilder was perfect and iconic in his role. I feel the kids, their parents and Grandpa Joe were just as perfect and iconic for the movie. It has a timeless appeal. It's got all the goodies, literally and figuratively. It has songs that have wonderous, creative and imaginative vibes. Beautiful scriptwriting and great life lessons for kids. Visually stunning sets and a ridiculously talented cast. Plus, it has every kids' dream - being able to eat everything and have a lifetime supply of chocolate. What more could you want?
One of my favorite lines is "I bet those golden tickets make the chocolate taste terrible." Possibly one of the most wholesome and heartbreaking reactions from such a mature child
Ahh, the 1970's when the studio system had collapsed and nobody was around to tell directors and writers they couldn't do exactly what the Hell they wanted so... ...you got this absolute stuff of nightmares. We loved every frame of it.
This movie is example of what good cinema is. Doesn't have to have a big budget or a complicated story. Just good family fun. And amazing acters like Gene Weilder.
This is a rainy day movie for me for sure! The new Wonka movie was actually a pleasant surprise as well! Just love this movie and gives me cozy feelings everytime!
"It's supposed to be creepy" - For sure. :D Here in Germany there's an old children's book from the 19th century called "Der Struwwelpeter" (more or less "bad hair Peter"). It features a bunch of stories, some one paged, some several pages, about bad kids and what happens to them. And it's quite gruesome: The "Soup Casper" doesn't want to eat his soup and starves to death. There's a girl, playing with matches and burning to death while her cats watch and lament. A boy who doesn't want to stop sucking his thumb gets his thumbs cut off by the local tailor. A kid who always looks at the clouds falls into a river... You know - wholesome stuff. For kids. :D I'm pretty certain that, at least from my Generation (1971) most Germans still know the Struwwelpeter unironically from their kid's library. It's outright iconic. Of course today it's not on the recommended list of books for kids any more, but it lives on. People still own and buy it - but usually not for kids, more like a humorous gift for grownups. And there's loads and loads of other kids books inspired by it too. Usually they're much less violent, but keep the main template of presenting a kid with a bad habit and showing the consequences... I BET Victorian England and other countries have similar books from back in the olden days. Well, Willy Wonka's antics clearly fall into the same kind of story - bad kids getting their comeuppance for misbehaving. And the way it's done in this movie, I find, works great for kids AND for grownups. Listen to some of the comments the other parents make, whenever a kid is in danger - Augustus in the pipe and in the background you hear something like: "You remember? You always wanted to know how a bullet gets shot out of a gun?". There's one or two really nasty comments in the movie that are clearly made for us grownups to grin about. :D
What a classic. It perfectly encapsulates why Gene Wilder was so beloved and why losing him a few years ago was so crushing. I really think Pure Imagination is one of those songs that everyone (well, almost everyone) knows all the words to without realizing it. But if you want so see just how fucked up the story can be if you really push it...watch the 2005 movie. Watching it when I was 13 was the closest I'll ever come to an acid trip.
This came out 7 or so years before I was born, but I grew up watching this so many times. We taped it off of TV and I wore the recording out watching it so much (along with Mary Poppins, another childhood favourite). There was something magical about it.
Roald Dahl, the author of the book, stood outside movie theaters on opening weekend and shouted at people not to watch this. Then he stipulated in his estate that no more movies could be made from his books until after he had died. He was not a fan of Willy Wonka being a plain old suit with a regular old office who yelled at kids because he was in a bad mood.
@@OphepheVanessaHis widow actually worked on the production of Johnny Depp's Wonka and said that she felt like her husband would have absolutely loved Tim's interpretation of his work as it stayed much more faithful to the book
@@OphepheVanessa I'm honestly torn between Gene's Wonka and Johnny's Wonka because they were both hilarious to me and also showed different interpretations of whimsical however, I will say that I love how pale Johnny actually was for Wonka since it's makes sense that he would look like that after being inside a factory for years and never leaving
Now they need to watch the Tim Burton version of this movie, and of course the prequel. I had so much fun watching these guys react to this movie-this is one of my top 3 favorite reactions from them. The others being Harry Potter & The Sixth Sense (shock Pikachu face: "he was dead the whole time!")
I love this version, 10 years old! At the former(defunct) Eastfield Mall, Springfield, MA, 1973. Christmas time! Two screens! Fabulous on the big screen! I almost barfed during the "Wondrous Boat Ride", the worm on the the lip, then Slugworth! And to top it off, Wonka's insane song/rant!
I think one of my favorite fan theories in history is that Willy Wonka is George Weasley. That after the Battle of Hogwarts, he moved from jokes to candy and thats why everythong seems so magical, becaus it is. Thats also why everything in his office is cut on half, because of Fred. Obviously the books and movies of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory came out DECADES before Harry Potter, but its still a beautiful and touching theory that melds two beloved series/movies.
46:25 I do think that the particular candy salesman in Charlie's town always knew where the golden ticket was. He was waiting for the right kid to come along. It might be the same for the other stores, too. But I doubt it. Because the ticket Veruca got was in a case that her father bought en masse. Agustus bought a ton of bars, probably all at once. We don't know enough about the other kids' places of purchase to tell for sure. But since Charlie lived in the same town as the Chocolate Factory, Willy Wonka probably sent that last ticket out recently. Or specifically to that candy salesman and told him to choose a kid he thought worthy. I absolutely love the idea that he knew he was giving Charlie the Golden Ticket because he probably saw him lurking outside the shop often. Saw him longing for the candy. It just adds something. Plus, that actor played that character very well. The way he said that last line implied all of this to those who thought about it enough.
I figured the fake Slugworth was actually accompanying the boxes with the tickets and kept tabs on which stores they ended up in. How else would he be in all those towns all over the world so quickly after someone found them?
What I heard is that the other actors didn't know that Gene was going to say his monologue in that way in the boat tunnel so the looks of shock on their faces is genuine. I love that scene so weird, trippy, and freaky, in a good way.
You guys should watch the new Studio Ghibli movie, The Boy & the Heron! Or his old movies! They're very beautiful & worth watching! Howl's Moving Castle, Spirited Away, Princess Mononoke, etc. There are TONS of famous voice actors in the English dubbed versions of his movies!
my grandmother went to the same high school gene wilder did at around the same time (washington high school in mke), they have a plaque for him and other alumni there
I STILL can't get over how quickly Charlie forgot about the rest of the Wonka bar that had the ticket in it XD Reminds me of Evil Dead Rise and the pizza.
That troubled me for a long time. It seemed like the one false note in the movie. No way a poor kid like Charlie would waste that chocolate, Golden Ticket or no Golden Ticket. But if you look carefully at how the shot is framed, you'll notice that we never see where the chocolate goes. I think it's quite possible that he allows it to fall into his sachel, rather than wasting it.
The irony of the popularity of this movie is that the author HATED the adaptation which he was asked to write but never gave a completed script just points so someone else was tasked to write the screenplay. "Dahl disowned the film and was "infuriated" by the plot deviations and considered the music to be "saccharine, sappy and sentimental". He was also disappointed because the film "placed too much emphasis on Willy Wonka and not enough on Charlie" and because Gene Wilder was cast as Wonka instead of Spike Milligan". The teacher was portrayed by the late David Battley. He passed away in 2003. He's usually a minor character player. The last thing I saw him in was Krull from 1983.
My read of Roald Dahl is that he was a curmudgeon who would have found plenty to hate in any adaptation of any of his works. But I notice he didn't hate WILLY WONKA so much that he refused credit as screenwriter, despite his not having actually written the screenplay that was used. I also notice that when he himself adapted another author's work for the screen, in CHITTY CHITTY BANG BANG (1968), based on a book by Ian Fleming, he didn't slavishly follow the original author's work. Instead, he took the basic premise, and a few of the original characters, and invented a wholly original Roald Dahl fantasy that has little or nothing to do with the style or content of Ian Fleming's book. So apparently, he only regarded his own writing as sacrosanct.
This was one of my favourite movies and books growing up. Watching Charlie support his family and be completely selfless in motivation resonated with me as kid in a low income family. He deserves everything he gets ❤
Fun fact that's probably been posted a dozen times. They actually made a chocolate river. It didn't take long for it to go sour. The smell was horrendous.
Waiting for this to come on tv as a kid...torture!😅 One of my favorite movies. Even the creepy tunnel scene. 😂 Love seeing Oak's reactions to the meme scenes!