Charlie and the Chocolate Factory/Headscratchers: Difference between revisions
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory/Headscratchers (view source)
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**** You realize you're talking about the same man who invented a (flawed but still working) teleportation device, an elixir of youth in pill form, exploding confectionery, the everlasting gobstopper, a not-quite-perfect food-in-gum format, a food to regrow hair (also not quite perfect but still)... if Wonka wanted to set something up, Wonka could set something up.
**** What's more, he MEANT the teleporter to be flawed. Hey, hang on, what if Wonka actually had the inventions perfect but modified them to teach the kids a lesson?
**** The chocolate bar was random. The shop was
**** He could have got a stooge to plant the winning bars. Maybe even the shopkeeper was in on it. The first film even has his agent on hand to meet the winners with the Secret Test of Character; he must have known where they'd be. And the cover of a phony ticket, conveniently exposed as a fake just as Charlie found his.
**** In the Gene Wilder movie, the final ticket's discovery ''must'' have been rigged. How else could Slugworth have been in the right place at the right time to tempt Charlie ''on his way home from finding the ticket?'' The other kids were already on the news when he approached them, but not Charlie.
***** In the 1971 film, at least, Slugworth/Wilkinson was talking to Veruca within seconds of her grabbing the ticket from the factory worker.
****** Mr. Salt had bought about a million chocolate bars, so Mr. S/W was probably on the alert for Veruca already.
**** Charlie's discovery of the ticket very could have been rigged in the old
** Presumably he would have extended the tour until one of them did something wrong. Or he could have had them both/all be his apprentices and heirs (after all, a company can be run by more than one person), or just chosen one.
** Also, what would have happened if an adult had gotten one of the tickets?
*** He'd find a child to take with him. The tickets were
**** What if a childless adult found one?
***** Oh come on. Adults are worse than children when it comes to things like magic. Children accept that magic explains all the strange things going on. Most adults go out of their way to find out how card tricks work, never mind apparent "real" magic. They'd have gotten themselves into trouble long before they came close to the end of the tour.
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== Book ==
* When reading the book I got a nasty "don't have independent thought, or question things" especially when Willy Wonka says outright he chose a child for an heir over an adult because a child wouldn't change things. None of Dahl's other books have advocated this (hell ''Matilda'' celebrates the opposite). So I'm left confused, and I'm also bothered by how I've never seen this picked up on.
** I got the same sort of vibe, but later figured it's not so much independent thought as it is a life philosophy. When you become an adult, you have your own idea of how the world should work and that's very difficult to change. Many adults are actually incapable of considering doing something
** Maybe R. Dahl thought this was different because Wonka himself was very much
** Might not so much be an Aesop as that Wonka saw himself as identifying more with children than with adults, and a child would be more likely to continue doing things the way he did.
** Personally, this troper believes that Wonka meant a child wouldn't change the "atmosphere" of the factory. Think about it: Wonka is mainly [[Doing It for the Art]], something that no sane adult businessman would do. Considering how Dahl normally portrays adults in his stories, an adult would probably have turned the factory into a soulless corporation that makes sweets in the cheapest, most generic way possible.
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* What would have happened if Charlie and Grandpa Joe hadn't burped in time? Presumably, they would have been killed by the fan, which of course would have eliminated Charlie from the running, leaving Veruca and Mike. Veruca would then do her "I want it now" bit and fall down the chute, leaving just Mike. We see at the end of the film that (unlike in the book) Charlie didn't win the factory by default just by being the last one standing, so presumably Mike wouldn't either. So what would happen then? I can think of two possible scenarios:
** Wonka would continue the tour onto the Television Chocolate Room with just Mike and his mother left. Mike would then pull his television stunt and be eliminated, meaning [[Ten Little Murder Victims|no one would be left]]. Wonka would either have to choose an heir another way, or [[Here We Go Again|hold the Golden Ticket contest all over again]].
** Wonka would end the tour when there was just one child left, just like in the version we're shown. Being one of the "bad kids," Mike in all likelihood wouldn't get his lifetime supply of chocolate. (Wonka would probably use his theft of the Exploding Candy in the inventing room as the justification for denying him the prize.) Mike doesn't seem to have a conscience like Charlie, so he probably wouldn't return the Everlasting Gobstopper. He would probably go and give to to "Slugworth." But since "Slugworth" actually worked for Wonka, he wouldn't give Mike money for
{{quote|So it seems that Wonka would have been doomed to repeat history if it hadn't been for those fortunate belches. Unless there's a scenario I missed...}}
** The belching was an homage to the book. An old Oompa Loompa refuses to belch, drinks it outside, and never comes back.
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*** Neither was the dentist subplot, so that argument is invalid.
*** Actually, if anyone paid attention to Burton's repeated explanations that his movie is NOT a remake of the 1971 movie, but "redo" of the book, you would realize that the argument is valid. Why take a scene out of a movie you've already stated is not what you are trying to make? No, the dentist subplot wasn't in the book, but some sort of padding needed to be added. Let's be honest, Dahl's book doesn't have much of a plot after Charlie gets his chocolate. They needed to a conflict and made one. Burton is generally capable of making his own "freaky shit". He doesn't need to copy a non-sequitor like that (damn you [[TV Tropes]], you've made me defend a director I don't even enjoy).
** I haven't seen the film in a while, but I thought he did (and it was in the book). Not to the deranged lengths the of 1971 film (just... [[
*** I think Wonka's deranged poetry was in the book too, though.
** While there is no hell tunnel sequence, Burton's chocolate river boat shoots itself ''straight the hell down'' to get to the lower levels of the factory. Still pretty scary, if you ask me...
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