Time and time again, I will watch a
movie I have seen so often, I can recite scenes of the film. This happened
tonight. SPOILER ALERT if you have not seen the movie. (What’s wrong with you?
Why haven’t you seen it?)
I was channel surfing, and stopped when
I saw Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory.
The original film with Gene Wilder, not the terrible Johnny Depp
version.
It was release in the summer of 1971, which
would have made me four years old. So this film was part of my childhood. Poor
little Charlie Bucket who had to eat cabbage soup every night, sell newspapers,
and share his tiny home with four grandparents who shared one bed. His big
birthday gift was a Willy Wonka bar. There is so much anticipation when Charlie
gingerly opens the wrapping. There has to be a golden ticket. Charlie deserves
a golden ticket! Sadly, no gold shines through.
As the movie progresses Charlie gets
his entrance to Willy Wonka’s factory and the adventure with the quirky
inventor of the world’s most delicious chocolates. Along the way, we are
introduced to the other four ticket holder.
When I was young, I just saw the
other four as bratty kids. As I got older, I realized they represented some of
the Deadly sins.
Gluttony: Augusta Gloop ate, and ate. He
falls into the chocolate river when he is scooping and drinking the chocolate.
Pride: Violet Beauregarde can’t go a minute
without chewing on her gum. She breaks records with her gum chewing and makes
sure people know about it, she also loves the and to be the center of attention.
She steals gum from Mr. Wonka then turns into a giant blueberry.
Greed: Veruca Salt wants all the material
things including Wonka’s geese which lay the golden eggs. She wants them to lay
100 eggs a day. We see she is really a bad egg.
Sloth: Mike Teavee sits and watches
television all day. He doesn’t eat at the dinner table so he can watch TV. He
finally gets his wish of being on television, after being jumbled in a million
little pieces.
Envy: Charlie Bucket, the good guy of the
bunch envies his friends who visit the candy store after school, have the nice warm
clothes, don’t have to work, have food other than cabbage for supper.
To round out the Deadly Sins, Lust can be represented by all the
people who searched for the golden tickets. They all wanted it, but couldn’t
have it. People bought boxes and boxes of the chocolate for something they
lusted after. As far as Anger, there
is a scene is which Mr. Wonka tests Charlie on his loyalty and starts yelling
at him, and tells him he will get no chocolate because he stole sips of the fizzy
drink which made him float, and now the area was going to have to be completely
sanitized. He really wasn’t angry with Charlie but instead acting the scene.
When seen the first time though, Mr. Wonka can seem scary.
Then comes one of my favorite scenes,
Charlie walks to Mr. Wonka and places the Everlasting Gobstopper on his desk.
Mr. Wonka says, “So shine a good deed in a weary world”. He did it Charlie
passed the test of temptation to give the candy to the competition and he wins
the factory!
It’s not just a kid’s movie. Maybe it’s
time you watch it again.