The Wizard of Oz has easily the best goodbye scene I’ve ever seen. Say what you will about the goodbyes in Gone with the Wind, Casablanca and ET but this goodbye scene gets me every time
One of the most Touching Scene in Film History that makes me cry and made my heart melt 😭😭😭... Rest in peace Judy Garland and I belive Lord has reward you because you bringed happiness and emotions in every Heart on the Planet even today in the new genations 🌏🌍🌎🙏🙏🙏♥️♥️♥️
This is one of my favourite scenes when it plays music when Glinda to good with of the north appears at emerald city to tell Dorothy how she can get home and she says good bye to her friends and then says no place like home and she gets home and wakes up and and is happy to be home to see her family and friends again and my other favourite scenes is when she arrives at munchkinvill and she meets Glenda and she gets given an award for saving the munchkins from the wicked with of the east and she gets giving the magic ruby slippers and when she meets scarecrow and tin man and lion and they all dance on the yellow brick road and sing we’re off to see the wizards I love the wizard of oz it’s one of my favourite films and it’s a boss film I miss watching the wizard of oz
This is sad she made friends with them and I think she knew that she was never going to see them again this wasn't just goodbye I will see you again this was goodbye forever ❤
I will always love this movie for the rest of my life thank you Judy garland for playing Dorothy and this is the first flim to have color me and my family love watching this movie
@@weregarurumon3202 You bet it's real in the books! And many other people than Dorothy make the journey to Oz! 🙂 There are forty books in all, published between 1900 and 1963, and L. Frank Baum wrote the first fourteen. Here's how Dorothy went home in "The Wonderful Wizard of Oz": “Your Silver Shoes will carry you over the desert,” replied Glinda. “If you had known their power you could have gone back to your Aunt Em the very first day you came to this country.” “But then I should not have had my wonderful brains!” cried the Scarecrow. “I might have passed my whole life in the farmer’s cornfield.” “And I should not have had my lovely heart,” said the Tin Woodman. “I might have stood and rusted in the forest till the end of the world.” “And I should have lived a coward forever,” declared the Lion, “and no beast in all the forest would have had a good word to say to me.” “This is all true,” said Dorothy, “and I am glad I was of use to these good friends. But now that each of them has had what he most desired, and each is happy in having a kingdom to rule besides, I think I should like to go back to Kansas.” “The Silver Shoes,” said the Good Witch, “have wonderful powers. And one of the most curious things about them is that they can carry you to any place in the world in three steps, and each step will be made in the wink of an eye. All you have to do is to knock the heels together three times and command the shoes to carry you wherever you wish to go.” “If that is so,” said the child joyfully, “I will ask them to carry me back to Kansas at once.” She threw her arms around the Lion’s neck and kissed him, patting his big head tenderly. Then she kissed the Tin Woodman, who was weeping in a way most dangerous to his joints. But she hugged the soft, stuffed body of the Scarecrow in her arms instead of kissing his painted face, and found she was crying herself at this sorrowful parting from her loving comrades. Glinda the Good stepped down from her ruby throne to give the little girl a good-bye kiss, and Dorothy thanked her for all the kindness she had shown to her friends and herself. Dorothy now took Toto up solemnly in her arms, and having said one last good-bye she clapped the heels of her shoes together three times, saying: “Take me home to Aunt Em!” Instantly she was whirling through the air, so swiftly that all she could see or feel was the wind whistling past her ears. The Silver Shoes took but three steps, and then she stopped so suddenly that she rolled over upon the grass several times before she knew where she was. At length, however, she sat up and looked about her. “Good gracious!” she cried. For she was sitting on the broad Kansas prairie, and just before her was the new farmhouse Uncle Henry built after the cyclone had carried away the old one. Uncle Henry was milking the cows in the barnyard, and Toto had jumped out of her arms and was running toward the barn, barking furiously. Dorothy stood up and found she was in her stocking-feet. For the Silver Shoes had fallen off in her flight through the air, and were lost forever in the desert. Aunt Em had just come out of the house to water the cabbages when she looked up and saw Dorothy running toward her. “My darling child!” she cried, folding the little girl in her arms and covering her face with kisses. “Where in the world did you come from?” “From the Land of Oz,” said Dorothy gravely. “And here is Toto, too. And oh, Aunt Em! I’m so glad to be at home again!”
@@weregarurumon3202 Yes, she found herself out in the field (without the silver shoes on), then saw Aunt Em and ran to her. Later, she went to Oz four more times, and on the last visit, she came to stay, and asked Princess Ozma to bring her aunt and uncle as well. The whole family has lived in the Emerald City since then. 🙂
I used to watch this as a little kid without paying attention or knowing what was happening. As I got older this scene makes me so sad. I felt like crying.
Himself, you mean, and he had lost out to MGM when the film rights were up for grabs. Mervyn LeRoy made this movie, and it's a tribute to him and his artistry, plus his ability to get the best people for the job. 🙂
You had "There's No Place Like Home" as your title, but you clipped the segment before she says it. Why?! Can it be re-posted with the entire scene to the very end?
@@Leon-zu1wp Not the original script; it was one idea submitted for the movie, but rejected almost immediately. The only vestige of it is Dorothy's farewell to the Scarecrow.
@@MaskedMan66 Not true at all. In the original script there was a scene between Hunk and Dorothy where he wants her to write to him when he goes off to Agricultural College. There are also bits and pieces like how Scarecrow seems especially devoted to saving Dorothy and then at the end where she carresses Hunks face when she wakes up.
@@Leon-zu1wp Which "original script?" There were dozens of treatments, only one of which included the romance angle, which, as I said, was rejected by Producer LeRoy. Besides, Judy was sixteen playing twelve, and Bolger was thirty-four. A bit ick that would have been.
@@marvinthemaniac7698 Now, in the books, where Oz was real, they still had responsibilities; the Scarecrow was put in charge of Oz, the Winkies chose the Tin Woodman to replace the Wicked Witch of the West as their ruler, and the Lion became the king of a forest in the South after he killed a giant spider-thing that had been eating the animals.
Before watching wicked glad Dorothy got the heels after watching it well Dorothy u ever ask elphaba if u could borrow the shoes no why would u after all it was last thing elphaba had of her sister