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  1. Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory

    Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory

    G1971 · Children · 1h 40m

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  1. Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory: Directed by Mel Stuart. With Gene Wilder, Jack Albertson, Peter Ostrum, Roy Kinnear. A poor but hopeful boy seeks one of the five coveted golden tickets that will send him on a tour of Willy Wonka's mysterious chocolate factory.

    • (230K)
    • Adventure, Comedy, Family
    • Mel Stuart
    • 1971-06-30
  2. Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory is a 1971 American musical fantasy film directed by Mel Stuart from a screenplay by Roald Dahl, based on his 1964 novel Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. It stars Gene Wilder as chocolatier Willy Wonka.

  3. 1 day ago · The 1971 movie Willy Wonka & The Chocolate Factory is arguably the best interpretation of the Roald Dahl classic story, and it's free to stream now. Timothée Chalamet's got nothing on Gene Wilder.

    • Overview
    • Plot Synopsis
    • Music

    is a 1971 musical film adaptation of the 1964 novel Charlie and the Chocolate Factory by Roald Dahl directed by Mel Stuart, and starring Gene Wilder as Willy Wonka. The film tells the story of Charlie Bucket (Peter Ostrum, in his only younger film appearance) as he receives a golden ticket and visits Willy Wonka's chocolate factory with four other children from around the world.

    Filming took place in Munich in 1970, and the film was released on June 30, 1971. It received positive reviews, but it was a box office disappointment. However, it developed into a cult film due to its repeated television airings and home video sales. In 1972, the film received an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Score.

    Once upon a time, we see kids right here. After school, they go to a local candy shop, where the owner Bill serves chocolate to the kids. Charlie Bucket, saddened that he has no money, stares through the window as the owner sings about candy. The newsagent Mr. Jopeck, for whom Charlie works after school, gives him his weekly pay, which Charlie uses to buy a loaf of bread. O n his way, he passes Wonka's chocolate factory. A mysterious tinker tells him (referring to the factory) "nobody ever goes in ... and nobody ever comes out!" He brings the bread back to his widowed mother, Grandpa Joe and his other three bedridden grandparents. That night, he tells Grandpa about the tinker and what he said, and Grandpa Joe tells him about Wonka and how spies were trying to steal his life's work. Wonka closed the factory, but three years later he started selling candy again and is still unseen to this day.

    One day, the family, along with the rest of the world, learns that Wonka has hidden five Golden Tickets amongst his Wonka Bars. The finders of these special tickets will be given a full tour of his factory, as well as a lifetime supply of chocolate to the "winner". Charlie wants to take part in the search, but cannot afford to buy vast quantities of chocolate bars like other participants. Four of the tickets are found by: Augustus Gloop, a gluttonous German boy; Veruca Salt, a spoiled girl; Violet Beauregarde, a gum-chomping girl; and Mike Teavee, a television-obsessed boy. As they find their tickets, a sinister-looking man is observed whispering in their ears, to whom they listen attentively despite their preoccupations with their particular obsessions. Charlie's hopes are dashed when news breaks that the final ticket had been found by a Paraguayan millionaire.

    The next morning, as the Golden Ticket craze ends, Charlie finds some money in a gutter and uses it to buy a Wonka Scrumpdiddlyumptious Bar. Since he still has some change left after eating the chocolate, he uses it to buy a second bar, a regular one which he intends bringing home. On leaving the candy store, he learns from people talking that the ticket found by the millionaire was a forgery and that one ticket is still about somewhere. When Charlie opens the bar, he finds the real golden ticket and races home to tell his family, but is confronted by the same man who had been seen whispering to the other four winners. The man introduces himself as Arthur Slugworth, a rival confectioner who offers to pay Charlie a large sum of money for a sample of Wonka's latest creation, the Everlasting Gobstopper.

    Grandpa Joe practically leaps out of bed to serve as Charlie's tour chaperone and Charlie tells him about his meeting with Slugworth. The next day, Wonka greets the children and their guardians at the factory gates and leads them inside, requiring each to sign a contract before the tour can begin. Inside is a psychedelic wonderland full of chocolate rivers, giant edible mushrooms, lickable wallpaper and other ingenious inventions and candies, as well as Wonka's workers, the small, orange-skinned, green-haired Oompa-Loompas. While in Wonka's Inventing Room, the remaining children are each given a sample of Wonka's Everlasting Gobstoppers.

    As the tour progresses, each of the first four children ignore Wonka's warnings, resulting in serious consequences: Augustus is sucked through a chocolate extraction pipe system and sent to the Fudge Room, having fallen into a chocolate river from which he was trying to drink; Violet transforms into a giant blueberry after trying an experimental piece of Three-Course-Dinner Gum; Veruca is rejected as a "bad egg" and falls down a garbage chute in the Chocolate Golden Egg Sorting Room; and Mike is shrunk to only a few inches in height after being transmitted by "Wonkavision", a broadcasting technology that can send objects through television instead of pictures. The Oompa-Loompas sing a song after each incident, describing that particular child's poor behavior.

    During the tour, Charlie also succumbs to temptation along with Grandpa Joe, as they stay behind in the Bubble Room and secretly sample Fizzy Lifting Drinks. They begin floating skyward and are nearly sucked into a ceiling-mounted exhaust fan. To avoid this grisly fate, they burp repeatedly until they return to the ground. Wonka initially seems unaware of this incident. When Charlie becomes the last remaining child on the tour, Wonka dismisses him and Grandpa Joe and leaves for his office. Grandpa Joe returns to ask about Charlie's lifetime supply of chocolate, Wonka angrily reveals that Charlie had violated the signed contract before the tour began by sampling the Fizzy Lifting Drinks and thus forfeited his prize, and Wonka furiously dismisses them. Grandpa Joe rather than calming down loses his temper and gets back at Wonka until Wonka furiously dismisses them again. Grandpa Joe seeks revenge on Wonka by giving the gobstopper to Slugworth. Charlie, however, before leaving places the gobstopper on Wonka's desk.

    The Academy Award-nominated original score and songs were composed by Leslie Bricusse and Anthony Newley, and musical direction was by Walter Scharf. The soundtrack was first released by Paramount Records in 1971. On October 8, 1996, Hip-O Records (in conjunction with MCA Records, which by then owned the Paramount catalog), released the soundtrack on CD as a "25th Anniversary Edition". In 2016, UMe and Geffen Records released a 45th Anniversary Edition LP.

    The music and songs, in order of appearance, are as follows:

    •"Main Title" – Instrumental medley of "(I've Got A) Golden Ticket" and "Pure Imagination"

    •"The Candy Man" – Aubrey Woods

    •"Cheer Up, Charlie" – Diana Lee (dubbing over Diana Sowle)

    •"(I've Got A) Golden Ticket" – Jack Albertson and Peter Ostrum

  4. He and his grandpa then get a tour of the strangest chocolate factory in the world. The owner leads five young winners on a thrilling and often dangerous tour of his factory. In Theaters...

    • (61)
    • Mel Stuart
    • G
    • Gene Wilder
    • Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory1
    • Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory2
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    • Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory5
  5. Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory. Charlie Bucket, a boy with no money and a good heart, dreams of being able to buy the candy that other children enjoy. Charlie enters into a world when he wins one of five Golden Tickets to visit the chocolate factory owned by Willy Wonka.

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  7. Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory. 1971 · 1 hr 40 min. G. Kids & Family · Comedy · Fantasy · Musicals. A penniless boy and his grandfather win a chance to tour the chocolate factory of an eccentric candy maker in this whimsical children's classic. Subtitles: English.

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