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8 answers

I think they had many great meanings behind that film, not just 'there's no place like home' Looking inside yourself and being grateful for what you have is a big one also.
Did you know that is my all time favorite movie. I could watch it forever and never get sick of it.
I cringe every time when the wicked witch gets Toto, I cheer every time the house falls on the old b*itchy witchy...and I cry every time Dorothy goes home....I am such a sap eh

2007-07-16 07:03:59 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

Hey wandering! It's getting hot down here! And wet! *wink* I think that the Wizard of OZ has got to be one of my all time favorite movies too!
Well, if you look at the movie, the scarecrow didn't have a brain, the lion didn't have courage and the tin man didn't have a heart. Dorothy couldn't find her way back to Kansas. They were trying to find the All powerful Wizard to get what they were searching for.
Although, they came through many obsticles, really, each of them had what they were searching for inside them all along seeing the way that they fought the Wicked Witch of the West to make it to see the wizard and to save dorothy. The Scarecrow was smart, The lion was courageous and the tin man had a heart. Dorothy also had the power within her to get back to Kansas - she just didn't know it.
Another point in that movie that makes me think is that sometimes the people that are powerful like the Wizard, are really just ordinary people just like us all.

2007-07-16 07:14:16 · answer #2 · answered by K~E~G 5 · 2 0

the wicked Witch of the East represented eastern industrialists and bankers who controlled the people (the Munchkins); the Scarecrow was the wise but naive western farmer; the Tin Woodman stood for the dehumanized industrial worker; the Cowardly Lion was William Jennings Bryan, Populist presidential candidate in 1896; the Yellow Brick Road, with all its dangers, was the gold standard; Dorothy's silver slippers (Judy Garland's were ruby red, but Baum originally made them silver) represented the Populists' solution to the nation's economic woes ("the free and unlimited coinage of silver"); Emerald City was Washington, D.C.; the Wizard, "a little bumbling old man, hiding behind a facade of paper mache and noise, . . . able to be everything to everybody," was any of the Gilded Age presidents.

2007-07-16 03:43:30 · answer #3 · answered by Darrell D 3 · 1 1

confident and no. Obama is the empty suit the DNC chosen rather of Clinton. in all probability because of the fact they'd administration him better and have the backing of the socialists press. in the event that they went with Clinton, she would be calling the photographs and that's a no-no while the DNC places you there.

2016-09-30 02:49:14 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

That "There's No Place Like Home"

Duh!!!

2007-07-16 03:41:40 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

proof of early use of hallucinogenics.

2007-07-16 03:45:26 · answer #6 · answered by whiteman 5 · 0 0

*** There's no place like home ***

2007-07-16 03:43:40 · answer #7 · answered by Diana 7 · 0 0

Don't do drugs....

2007-07-16 03:59:30 · answer #8 · answered by Junior 4 · 0 0

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