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  • 8
    Mar
    2013
    8:40am, EST

    Review: 'Oz the Great and Powerful' could use more heart

    By Gael Fashingbauer Cooper, NBC News

    REVIEW: You've got to have courage to take on a film that's as beloved as "The Wizard of Oz," but a heart and a brain help, too. Prequel "Oz the Great and Powerful" could use a little more of both.

    Walt Disney

    James Franco plays the young Wizard of Oz in the prequel to the classic film.

    That's not to say it's terrible. If you're off to see the Wizard, you won't feel that the 1939 original has been dissed here. And some of the new creations, especially China Town, a marvelous town made of china dishes and dolls, are as memorable as the poppy fields of old.


    Follow @ NBCNewsEnt

    The story poses an intriguing question: How did the cranky braying Wizard get to be the faker behind the curtain? James Franco plays Oscar "Oz" Diggs, a dashing young Kansas carnival magician who breaks hearts and fakes out audiences with his illusions. The early scenes are played in black-and-white just as Dorothy's Kansas scenes were, and the people Oz mixes with will return once he gets to the Land of Oz, just as her farmhands do. That's a nice throwback, and there are others.

    But once Oz gets to Oz and the world turns into sparkling color, things get too complicated and go on for way too long. The three witches (Mila Kunis, Rachel Weisz and Michelle Williams) don't really stand out, except to note that costuming Kunis in skintight leather pants, trotting around Oz's wilderness in spike-heeled boots was a decision made for much crasser reasoning than Oz tradition or logic.

    Walt Disney

    In "Oz the Great and Powerful," at least one flying monkey is friendly.

    Instead of the Scarecrow, Tin Man and Cowardly Lion, the future Wizard pals up with Finley a flying monkey, sweet little China Girl, and to a lesser extent, two forgettable characters dubbed the Master Tinker and Knuck. Finley is a cute idea -- take those flying monkeys that traumatized us as kids and make them likable -- especially since the majority of the flying monkeys in this film have been given a horror-movie twist and are creepy baboons. But to play off another throwback to a Kansas friend, he's voiced by Zach Braff, whose whiny tone never fits cuddly looking Finley's role.

    Say this about the original "Oz," the plot was simple. Follow the Yellow Brick Road to ask the Wizard for home, a brain, a heart, and courage. This one's all over the place, with the witches conniving against each other, China Girl's hometown destroyed and never avenged, and extraordinarily complicated battle-prep scenes. The movie is a groaningly long two hours plus, and one youngster in my screening fell asleep.

    The film's in 3-D, apparently so things can fly at the screen randomly, but it rarely lives up to the jacked-up ticket price. Kids under 7 are going to face some scary scenes, including the more-terrifying monkeys, a weirdly frightening googly-eyed flower, and a creepy scene where the good witch Glinda is tortured.

    In the original film, the Wizard was a big faker, hiding behind a grander image because he knew he wasn't what he pretended to be. "Oz the Great and Powerful" can't live up to a grander image either, but there's enough magic to make it enjoyable for what it is.

    More from movies:

    • Flying monkeys! 5 ways 'Oz' traumatized us
    • Critics list 113 problems with 'Twilight'
    • Terrence Howard: 'Iron Man' killed my career
    • Mila Kunis soothes, praises rookie interviewer
    Show more
    Explore related topics: movies, featured, james-franco, wizard-of-oz, mila-kunis, oz-the-great-and-powerful
  • 29
    Nov
    2012
    8:06am, EST

    James Franco directs R.E.M. video, stars as 'Grease' character Danny Zuko

    By Rolling Stone

    Earlier this month, the first of two videos James Franco directed for the R.E.M. film project "Collapse Into Now" surfaced, and now the second of those clips has arrived.

    Watch on YouTube

    Though he took a dour turn with his treatment of "Blue," Franco turns the tables on "That Someone Is You," channeling "Grease" and becoming bad-boy Danny Zuko.

    Sandy gets a surprising makeover, too, but Franco knows she's still the one that he wants.

    More from Rolling Stone:

    • James Franco Is the Wonderful Wizard in New 'Oz' Trailer
    • R.E.M., James Franco Trudge Through 'Blue' L.A.
    • Fricke's Picks: R.E.M. Guitarist Peter Buck Makes His Solo Debut on Vinyl
    Show more
    Explore related topics: music, featured, rem, james-franco, grease
  • 6
    Sep
    2012
    7:52am, EDT

    James Franco sued by ex-NYU professor, compared to Clint Eastwood's chair

    Gabriel Bouys / AFP - Getty Images

    James Franco.

    By Natalie Finn, E! Online

    This probably isn't the sort of Barack Obama comparison that James Franco would want. "Whoever was in Clint Eastwood's chair at the Republican National Convention was more present than Mr. Franco was in my classes," former New York University professor Jose Angel Santana told the New York Post in reference to his famous pupil, whom he's now suing for defamation.

    Santana previously filed a wrongful-termination lawsuit against NYU that claimed he was fired for giving Franco a D over a shoddy attendance record.

    James Franco's next film: "dirty," but not "hard-core"

    Franco's rep couldn't immediately be reached for comment on this new development.

    Calling the Oscar-nominated actor a "bully," Santana blasted Franco for making "disparaging and inaccurate public statements about him" after receiving the poor grade.

    Check out celebs enjoying the benefits of higher education


    Follow @ TODAY_ent

    Per the Post, Franco had told reporters, "I didn't feel like I needed to waste my time with a bad teacher.... No teacher will ever be fired from NYU for giving a student a D. He wasn't fired, he was asked not to come back after three years because they didn't think he was a good teacher."

    Kal Penn and his #sexyface respond to Clint Eastwood

    "I was outraged that someone with his attendance record at NYU had the audacity to make those statements," Santana told the Post.

    He insisted that he had "overwhelmingly positive student evaluations" -- and Franco knew that when he trashed him to the media.

    Santana is asking for unspecified damages. 

    More in TODAY Entertainment

    • David Copperfield buys rare MLK audio tape
    • Kate Bosworth is engaged
    • Vanity Fair writer defends Tom Cruise article
    • Eva Longoria opening steakhouse for women

     

    Show more
    Explore related topics: movies, featured, james-franco

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Gael Fashingbauer Cooper, NBC News

Gael Cooper is the movies editor for TODAY.com and a pop-culture junkie. She is the co-author of "Whatever Happened to Pudding Pops?" and "The Totally Sweet '90s."

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