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"Even i am eatable, but that is called *cannibalism* my dear children." I probably didnt get this when i was 6 but now its the funniest thing in the whole movie for me
"Even I'm eatable, but that is called cannibalism my dear children and is in fact frowned upon in most societies." Literally my favourite line of the entire movie
Honesty is the best policy after all. People panic when you lie and they find out what's really going down. "If he didn't tell us it MUST be bad" type thing
In all fairness Wonka is just an overgrown child trapped in a chocolate entrepreneurs body, He never had the childhood he wanted and thus he could never really be an adult, However he owns a giant international chocolate company, Which is responsible but that's the only responsibility he could ever learn given that his dad never really raised him and he shut himself away from society as soon as he got older
Johnny Depp knew he couldn't be Gene Wilder's Willy Wonka, so he was an entirely different character. One was magical and fantastic, while the other had a more dark and ridiculous type of humor. Both are great in their own ways.
When I was a child, I thought Willy Wonka was funny and weird. But now that I'm older, I realized that Willy Wonka is just an introverted, misunderstood, brutally honest guy😂
He liked Charlie. Charlie obviously had a special place in his heart as he was the most kindest and respectful of the group, as well as the most unfortunate.
Maybe its because he didnt have a proper childhood so he hadnt fully grown up, then came the adulthood holding him back from being totally innocent just like a kid. All kids need friends afterall.
@@stupidhair8881 Yes! Charlie was kind and was more accepting of things despite being so poor and starving and not having many privileges and child deserves. While the other four are spoiled brats. So Charlie deserved the reward while the kids where punished and humiliated.
I don't think he hates them, just awfully awkward. Growing up with oompaloompas as the only "people" you talk to for decades can really affect your social skills
Johnny Depp is indeed a legend. Willy wonka, Edward scissorhands and Jack sparrow are unforgettable characters. And in the first 10s of this, when he said "tough crowd", I felt that man. Talking to a bunch of people who look like they are waiting for you to make a mistake is indeed terrifying.
People don’t like his acting in this movie, but he acts like he’s never spoke to a human in 10 years, which he hasn’t (and that’s also why he’s so pale)
Truly the best adaptation of Wonka from the book. He's described in the book as a candy making genius, inventive, and creative but, a bit psychotic, wonky, completely lacking any and all social cues and awareness. He says things without caring if it offends anybody. He's unstable and unpredictable. Meanwhile the 70s version is a charismatic straight man who likes some slight chaos but is completely mellow.
@@Alejandro-eq7xq Yes, old Wonka from the book was an absolute nutcase. He was incredibly psychotic but still generally saw things through the eyes of a kid. He was a child at heart similarly to Grandpa Joe. Only difference being Grandpa Joe was sweet, caring, optimistic, loving, and a family man caring about everybody. Meanwhile Wonka he cared about the wellbeing of others only to a certain extent. Ie telling Charlie the kids were going to be fine. But, that's about it. He generally makes comments at the ticket winners expense trying to get a rise out of people because he lacks social cues and etiquette after being isolated away from other people and only communicating with oompa Loompas for so long. The 70s version at times.... kind of does this? However it's more or less really surface level lip service to what Wonka's Psychotic personality is supposed to be. Because the portrayal of him in the 70s movie is WAY more mellow and toned down comparatively.