In the land of Oz, ostracized and misunderstood green-skinned Elphaba is forced to share a room with the popular aristocrat Glinda at Shiz University, and the two’s unlikely friendship is tested as they begin to fulfill their respective destinies as Glinda the Good and the Wicked Witch of the West.
Credits: TheMovieDb.
In the land of Oz, ostracized and misunderstood green-skinned Elphaba is forced to share a room with the popular aristocrat Glinda at Shiz University, and the two’s unlikely friendship is tested as they begin to fulfill their respective destinies as Glinda the Good and the Wicked Witch of the West.
Cast:
- Elphaba: Cynthia Erivo
- Galinda / Glinda: Ariana Grande
- Fiyero: Jonathan Bailey
- Madame Morrible: Michelle Yeoh
- The Wonderful Wizard of Oz: Jeff Goldblum
- Nessarose: Marissa Bode
- Boq: Ethan Slater
- Pfannee: Bowen Yang
- ShenShen: Bronwyn James
- Dr. Dillamond (voice): Peter Dinklage
- Miss Coddle: Keala Settle
- Avaric: Aaron Teoh
- Professor Nikidik: Colin Michael Carmichael
- Glinda’s Father: Adam James
- Glinda’s Mother: Alice Fearn
- Governor Thropp: Andy Nyman
- Mrs. Thropp: Courtney-Mae Briggs
- Dulcibear (voice): Sharon D. Clarke
- Wolf Doctor: Jenna Boyd
- Young Elphaba Thropp: Karis Musongole
- Munchkin: Ricardo Ludgero Souza
- Girls Brigade: Poppy Townsend White
- Dancer: Matthew Koon
- Teacher: Alfredo Tavares
- Teacher: Jason Lines
- Dancer: Misa Koide
- …: Skylar Blu Copeland
- Dancer: Hannah Veerapen
- Green Army Chorus: Aisha Jawando
- Dancer: Lukus Alexander
- Mean Kid: Isaac Bishop
- Munchkin: Jonathan Sparrow
- Munchkin Dignitary: Terence Hughes
- Munchkin (uncredited): Marvin Montoute
- …: James Dryden
- Wiz-O-Mania Super Star #1: Idina Menzel
- Wiz-O-Mania Super Star #2: Kristin Chenoweth
- Emerald City Guard: Stephen Schwartz
- …: Kerry Ellis
- …: Luke Bayer
- …: Georgina Onuorah
- …: Dianne Pilkington
- …: Winnie Holzman
- Skeptical Munchkin: Kristy Ann Shaw
- Unnamed Munchkin: Elijah Chatwell
Crew:
- Producer: Marc Platt
- Costume Design: Paul Tazewell
- Art Direction: Artie Contreras
- Art Direction: Kevin Gilbert
- Art Direction: Nathan Krochmal
- Casting Associate: Ryan Bernard Tymensky
- Location Manager: Lisa Latter
- Art Direction: Sally Ledger
- Screenplay: Winnie Holzman
- Production Design: Nathan Crowley
- Producer: David Stone
- Novel: Gregory Maguire
- Musical: Stephen Schwartz
- Director of Photography: Alice Brooks
- Editor: Myron Kerstein
- Stunts: Sarah Lochlan
- Executive Producer: Jared LeBoff
- Visual Effects Supervisor: Pablo Helman
- Production Sound Mixer: Simon Hayes
- Executive Producer: David Nicksay
- Executive Visual Effects Producer: Kacy McDonald
- Visual Effects Supervisor: Anthony Smith
- Executive Visual Effects Producer: Jill Brooks
- Visual Effects Supervisor: Robert Weaver
- Animation Supervisor: David Shirk
- Visual Effects Producer: Sandra Beerenbrock
- Visual Effects Producer: Marissa Gomes
- Supervising Art Director: David Lazan
- Choreographer: Christopher Scott
- Animation: Heriyanto Tio
- Assistant Editor: Tiago Barros
- Casting Assistant: Dana Gaier
- Casting: Tamsyn Manson
- Key Grip: Guy Micheletti
- Music Director: Stephen Oremus
- ADR Voice Casting: Terri Douglas
- Music Supervisor: Maggie Rodford
- Animation: Karim El Hannouti
- Assistant Script: Holly Mackinlay
- Still Photographer: Giles Keyte
- Post Production Coordinator: Benjamin Seward
- Script Supervisor: Lisa Vick
- ADR Mixer: Chris Whiteside
- Senior Animator: Sravan Kumar Nunna
- Music Producer: Greg Wells
- Assistant Script: Charlotte Serena Cooper
- Conceptual Design: Dean Sherriff
- Music Director: John Powell
- Orchestrator: Jeff Atmajian
- Stunts: Ailís Smith
- Stunt Double: Christina Petrou
- Stunts: Erol Ismail
- Stunt Coordinator: Jo McLaren
- Stunts: Dave Boyle
- Costume Illustrator: Darrell Warner
- Stunts: Alexander Bracq
- Stunts: James Offield
- Stunts: Oliver Gough
- Stunts: Christina Low
- Additional Writing: Craig Mazin
- Director: Jon M. Chu
- Visual Effects Supervisor: Jonathan Fawkner
- Animation: Sandra Leydier
- Casting: Tiffany Little Canfield
- Casting: Bernard Telsey
- Aerial Director of Photography: Jeremy Braben
- Still Photographer: Lara Cornell
- Sound Designer: Nancy Nugent
- Sound Re-Recording Mixer: John Marquis
- Sound Re-Recording Mixer: Andy Nelson
- Special Effects Supervisor: Paul Corbould
- Vocals: Holly Sedillos
- ADR Mixer: Mark DeSimone
- Sound Designer: Tim Walston
- ADR Recordist: Maya Toffler
- Dialogue Editor: John C. Stuver
- Drone Pilot: Peter Ayriss
- Drone Pilot: Luke Bannister
- Drone Pilot: Henry Bridges
- Orchestrator: Henri Wilkinson
- Vocal Coach: Eric Vetro
- Musician: Laurence Ungless
- Orchestrator: Jamie Thierman
- Musician: Jamie Talbot
- Additional Music: Markus Siegel
- Orchestrator: Jacob Shrum
- Additional Music: Batu Sener
- Vocals: Anna Schubert
- Orchestrator: Steven Rader
- Musician: Tom Pigott-Smith
- Vocals: Sara Mann
- Musician: Steve Mair
- Musician: Roger Linley
- Musician: Diego Incertis
- Vocals: Kelci Hahn
- Stand In: Chelsea Li
- Production Assistant: Abigail Perry
- Travel Coordinator: Carly Schoepflin
- “B” Camera Operator: Simon Finney
- Screenplay: Dana Fox
- Novel: L. Frank Baum
- Vocals: Troy Iwata
- Vocals: Wendi Bergamini
- Vocals: Ashley Brown
- Vocals: Larkin Bogan
- Vocals: Alyssa Fox
- Vocals: Julie Garnye
- Vocals: Caitlyn Gallogly
- Vocals: Jesse J.P. Johnson
- Vocals: Kristoffer Cusick
- Vocals: Kara Lindsay
- Vocals: Desi Oakley
- Vocals: Shayna Steele
- Songs: Ariana Grande
- Songs: Cynthia Erivo
- Songs: Jonathan Bailey
- Songs: Michelle Yeoh
- Art Direction: Laura Ng
- Set Decoration: Lee Sandales
Catogories:
This is one glamorous component.
Everyone deserves the chance to fly.
Language:
English
Production:
United States of America
Company:
Universal Pictures,Marc Platt Productions
Popularity:
964.864
Date:
2024-11-20
Year:
2024
- Chris Sawin: The film adaptation of Wicked is based on the Broadway musical, which is a loose adaptation of the 1995 novel Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West by Gregory Maguire. Both Maguire’s novel and the musical are expansions of L. Frank Baum’s original The Wizard of Oz novel was published in 1900 and its film adaptation in 1939. The musical is one of the longest-running and financially successful Broadway musicals of all time.
With a screenplay by Winnie Holzman (writer of the book of the Wicked musical) and Dana Fox (Cruella) and directed by Jon M. Chu (Now You See Me 2, Crazy Rich Asians), Wicked begins around the time The Wizard of Oz ends. The Wicked Witch of the West has died and Glinda the Good Witch is breaking the news to Munchkinland. As the munchkins celebrate and burn a giant, Wicker Man-style witch in celebration of the witch’s death, Glinda is asked by one of the munchkins if she knew the witch.
What follows is nearly three hours of how a green-skinned, outcast girl named Elphaba (Cynthia Erivo) whose emotions spark wondrous fits of unbelievable magic interacts with the spoiled, entitled, and pink-infatuated Galinda (Ariana Grande) as they enroll in a magic school known as Shiz University.
Visually, Wicked is jaw-dropping and beautiful. All of the talking animals look extraordinary and every sequence with the flying monkeys is a visual highlight. Peter Dinklage voices a goat teacher named Dr. Dillamond and he has one of the most emotional arcs in the film. The bear nurse and dog doctor in the opening moments of the film look so good for what little amount of screen time they have.
Given how many VFX teams are credited in the film, it’s no wonder the CGI looks intricately gorgeous. The three VFX teams with the most credits in Wicked include OPSIS (The Fall Guy, Rescue Rangers), Framestore (Gladiator II, Beetlejuice Beetlejuice), and ILM (Venom: The Last Dance, Alien: Romulus). Then there’s various work from about a dozen different other VFX teams/houses, but the most intriguing one is one called FoyProAI.
FoyProAI doesn’t have an accessible official website, but some digging around on an executive producer’s LinkedIn page gives some background. Foy stands for Fountains of Youth and FoyProAI specializes in de-aging, up-aging, and beauty work in film. They’ve worked on Smile 2, John Woo’s The Killer for Peacock, and 400 shots on Wicked.
There are moments of greatness in Wicked that mostly stem from the chemistry between Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande. Grande’s comedic roots, specifically her time and experience on SNL, really come into play here. Grande is essentially the comedic relief as Galinda as her outgoing personality carries most sequences while Erivo has more of a straightforward performance that has more of a dry delivery.
But the generic musical formula is infuriating. Story beats pause and go out of their way to cater to multiple songs at times and it logically hurts your brain. Yes, it’s a musical and yes people are going to sing. But when the main characters are trying to get away on a flying broom as guards are pounding at the door and they spend another ten minutes dancing, crying, and bellowing about their broken friendship it becomes a nuisance. Get on the damn broom and sing on the way to your destination. It doesn’t seem that hard.
Some sequences are thrown in solely because they’ll make a big song more appealing (the whole rotating library straight out of Inception thing) or side stories that don’t go anywhere because two characters need to seem closer than they are (Elphaba and Fiyero’s awkward ten-minute excursion into the forest to free a lion cub). These are both roundabout executions that take the long way to showcase that Fiyero thinks reading is dumb and that he’s actually in love with Elphaba over Galinda.
The film adaptation seems like it’s quite faithful to its source material, but the Hollywood concept of transforming nasty and recognizable villains into sad, relatable characters that the audience roots for is a dumpster fire of a concept. Pure asshole villains can be fantastic too and often make protagonists more interesting if done right.
But the musical fantasy film treats Elphaba like dirt for the first hour and a half. Everyone looks down on her because of the color of her skin. Then when she finally becomes friends with Galinda, she develops a soft spot for mistreated animals. It’s the main reason she turns against The Wizard of Oz (Jeff Goldblum) apart from being one of the only characters who can read magic spells.
Wicked is Mean Girls at Hogwarts as everybody sucks and is superficial apart from a character that is supposed to be evil. Elphaba mostly accepts the role of wicked witch because her beliefs don’t match anyone else’s and she’s unwilling to adapt to their ways solely to keep the peace.
Wicked features some unreal VFX and even touches on some incredible ideas from time to time, but the ideas that work seem to stem from capitalizing on a fantasy world that was established over a century ago. As a film, Wicked conjures song after song and drags on and on solely because it’s a bloated musical that wants you to die a rhythmic, sometimes undecipherable, high-pitched death.
- Almando: *THIS REVIEW CONTAINS SPOILERS*
I’ve been a Wicked fan since 2010. My expectations for this film were extremely high! And I was blown away by how Jon M. Chu was able to bring this story a new life. Everyone involved did an excellent job! The choice to sing live paid off! Not one note was out of tune! Bowen Yang & Bronwyn James were absolutely hilarious as Phannee & Shen Shen. Marissa Bode was fantastic as Nessarose. Can’t wait to see her story continue in Part 2. I hope they include “Wicked Witch of the East” in the Part 2 Soundtrack. Ethan Slater was great as Boq. I’m excited to see how he becomes the Tin Man in Part 2 because that’s not shown on stage. He transforms behind the cabinet but I hope we actually see it in Part 2. Michelle Yeoh was great in every scene as Madam Morrible. She was very Wicked! Jeff Goldblum was amazing as The Wizard! I loved the new version of The Grimmerie! The way it opened was very cool! Jonathan Bailey was incredibly charming as Fiyero! Dancing Through Life was very well choreographed and his singing was great! Loved the way he met Elphaba in this version. I’m very intrigued to see him become The Scarecrow in Part 2. Ariana Grande was absolutely phenomenal as Glinda! She embodied everything about Glinda! Loved her homages to past Glindas in Popular. Her voice was very Angelic. You can tell that she studied a lot for this role. Can’t wait to hear her “I’m Not That Girl (Reprise)”. Cynthia Erivo stole the show as Elphaba Thropp. She poured her heart into this character! I’m so excited to hear “No Good Deed” in Part 2! She was incredible! As for the Cameos in One Short Day, Loved seeing Stephen Schwartz as The Guard & Winnie Holtzman as an Emerald City Resident. Love the expansion of the Wizomania show to include Kristin & Idina telling the story of The Grimmerie. Loved that Idina did her Elphie Battle Cry. It didn’t take away from Cynthia’s at the End. The Film was meant to happen in 2024. Had it come out in 2016 or 2019, I don’t think it would’ve been as well done as it was! I can’t wait to see Part 2 and how much of The Wizard of Oz they include. I hope we get to see Dorothy’s Face. 10/10 No Notes.
- CinemaSerf: OK, so I’m going to be swimming against the tide a bit with this, but I didn’t love it. We start where the “Wizard of Oz” story finishes off, only without the catchy “Ding Dong the Witch is…”. Instead we get an ensemble dance number that is energetically performed, colourful and expertly choreographed but instantly forgettable. Then we meet “Galinda” (Ariana Grande) who arrives in her pink bubble to confirm the news and enjoy the celebrations. Turns out, though, that she and the erstwhile “Wicked Witch of the West” were once friends and so back in time we go to the birth of a little green baby who may (or may not) have been conceived within the bounds of happily married wedlock. Scoot on many years more and we discover that said green person – “Elphaba” (Cynthia Erivo) is accompanying her wheelchair bound sister “Nessarose” (Marissa Bode) to the “Ozian” equivalent of “Hogwarts” where she encounters the snobbish “Galinda” and a fairly comprehensive degree of hostility. Luckily for her, the legendary sorceress “Madame Morrible” (Michelle Yeoh) spots some hidden talent in this young woman and soon she is sharing rooms with her new nemesis and finding herself the butt of school jokes. Then enter the mischievous prince “Fiyero” (Jonathan Bailey) who tends to treat everyone the same and who’s been kicked out of more schools that he can shake a sceptre at. He does, however, manage to create an environment in which everyone can get along and that’s when things begin to change for an “Elphaba” who is to be made likeable by her now pally roomie. When a letter arrives from the all-powerful Wizard (Jeff Goldblum) summoning her to the “Emerald City”, then they set off hoping to find answers to all of their questions, only to find that nothing there is as it seems… I have to admit that JB has been a friend of mine for many years, so I ain’t going to be saying anything bad about the man who might just be the next “007”, and both Erivo and Grande do well enough with the set piece musical numbers – especially the lively and cleverly written “Populer/lar”, but the rest of this just struck me as “Harry Potter” goes to the musicals where it meets “Mean Girls”. Goldblum makes his presence felt, but in the same slightly affected fashion that he aways does, and though the visual effects are all fantastic, somehow they are all just so much more sterile to watch than when you see them within the confines of a theatrical stage – where this works so much better, and without the need for the commercially exploitative part 1 and part 2 released months apart. To be fair, everyone looks like they are enjoying themselves, there’s a fun number from Idina Menzel and Kristin Chenoweth and Bailey brings some much needed charm to the proceedings but I’d probably just prefer a director’s cut that offered us the whole story in one three hour chunk so we can get that mediocre “Defying Gravity” power ballad out of the way (repeatedly) in one fell swoop. It’s a very polished production, and maybe the hype has just got to me, but I can’t pretend I wasn’t disappointed by this. Wilted more than wicked, sorry.
- Brent Marchant: It’s quite a rare occurrence these days when a much-anticipated film actually lives up to all of its pre-release hype, but this screen adaptation of the hit Broadway musical truly does so in every regard. Director Jon M. Chu has brilliantly brought to life the back story behind the lives and relationship of the two witches from the original L. Frank Baum novel The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1900) and its 1939 classic screen adaptation, as well as Gregory Maguire’s 1995 prequel novel, Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West. In this stunningly beautiful and delightful big-screen production, viewers learn how the supposedly evil Elphaba (Cynthia Erivo) came to know the purportedly Glinda the Good (Ariana Grande-Butera), sorcery students and college roommates whose relationship initially went through a series of changes from unabashed contempt to solid friendship. However, as high-level political intrigue unfolds in their homeland of the magical land of Oz – efforts clandestinely spearheaded by the supposedly all-powerful Wizard (Jeff Goldblum) and university headmistress Mme. Morrible (Michelle Yeoh) – Elphaba and Glinda become unwittingly caught up in the high-stakes subterfuge playing out around them, a development that jeopardizes the future of their friendship and the stability of Oz itself. The filmmaker thus subtly but effectively presents audiences with a fable on the nature of good and evil, particularly in terms of what actually constitutes wickedness, especially when it’s skillfully veiled. The result is a thoughtful and thoroughly entertaining tale replete with stunning musical numbers, excellent choreography, ample humor, gorgeous cinematography, an inspired production design and superb performances by the four principals, all of whom are certain to be strong awards season candidates (quite a recommendation coming from someone who unapologetically makes no claim to being a fan of musicals). More than that, though, “Wicked” is an insightful treatise on the quest for power and learning how to make judicious use of it, both in personal dealings and in matters of wider consequence, a fitting cautionary tale for our times (or any time, for that matter). If I had any complaint here, it would be my concern that this is yet another example of a story that’s been divided up into two installments, a growing trend that I don’t believe will ultimately serve the movie industry well. According to the director, this was seen as a necessary step to do justice to the source material, given that it would have been nearly impossible to cram everything into one picture without doing major damage to the content. And, to give the filmmaker the benefit of the doubt, perhaps that will ultimately prove true with the release of part 2 in 2025 (but I’ll reserve judgment on that for the time being). In the meantime, though, this first part comes through as promised, and, in this day and age, that’s a cinematic miracle in itself.
- r96sk: Very good! I enjoyed ‘Wicked’.
Always impressive when a long run time flashes by – no doubt a sign of a sturdy movie. 2hr 40mins is how long this one lasts, I thought I might have felt that whilst watching but, honestly, I didn’t. Since sharing my reviews online I have appreciated musicals much more, to the point that when I learn a film is from this genre it barely registers.
I have never seen the stage musical, in fact the only detail I knew for certain was that it was from the world of ‘The Wizard of Oz’ – which, in turn, I only know from the 1939 and 2013 movies, as well as one or two other flicks. As such, I wasn’t actually sure where they were heading with the Wicked Witch of the West – but I approve.
Cynthia Erivo impresses as the aforementioned. I have to say, mind, that Ariana Grande is the person onscreen that stood out most. She does an excellent job at making her character’s self-centered quirks so convincing, while also producing a few amusing moments too. Jonathan Bailey and Peter Dinklage are good, while Jeff Goldblum certainly fits his role.
The ending, whilst perfectly fine and pleasing, is possibly a bit rushed/abrupt, though that’s to be expected given it’s only part one. The same can be said for most films that are split into multiple productions, to be fair. I am intrigued to see where part two goes, bring on this time next year.
The music is, as one would expect, also a positive. Granted I don’t think I’ll be adding any of the tracks to my playlist, but I still had a pleasant time hearing all the songs come and go – not one sticks out like a sore thumb, so that’s good. Elsewhere, visually and plot-wise I have no real complaints.
- good.film: https://good.film/guide/haters-will-tell-you-wicked-sucks-heres-why-theyre-wrong
Broadway hits rely on a suspension of disbelief. With the right ingredients, even the oddest of ideas can take flight on stage… but in the delicate translation to screen, they crash-land. Take Cats: something about that core premise of humans playing felines – which theatre audiences lapped up (sorry) for decades – just didn’t work at the movies.
From the outside, it’s easy to paint Wicked with the same brush. Isn’t it all a bit… silly? There’s a blonde Godiva who floats in a bubble. A green woman who was raised by a bear (and whose father may or may not be a wizard). And when they meet at a Hogwarts-style university, we find out their professor, Dr. Dillamond, is a talking goat. These aren’t exactly the trappings of a thoughtful, award-winning piece of drama. But peel back the colours of any GOOD fantasy and you’ll usually find the allegories are rich and meaningful. With its themes of parental guilt, absent fatherhood, disability, discrimination and class supremacy, Wicked is no exception.
Look, we’re not saying Wicked’s perfect. At 2 hours 40 minutes, it’s knocking HARD on the “too long, wrap it up!” door. And there’s characters that either overdo it a bit (Governor Thropp) or arguably, don’t add much at all (oh Pfannee, do you even go to this school?).
But that’s a bit like complaining about a scratch on a speedboat. A sleek, wondrous craft that can whiz you somewhere thrilling, and change you along the way. We didn’t have crazy high expectations – hey, the everyday moviegoer isn’t a hardcore Broadway fan – but honestly? You don’t need to be. Wicked is a movie for anyone. And maybe that’s why it feels so GOOD.
- Manuel São Bento: FULL SPOILER-FREE REVIEW @ https://movieswetextedabout.com/wicked-review-cynthia-erivo-and-ariana-grande-butera-shine-in-a-riveting-musical-experience/
“Despite a few technical and narrative missteps, Wicked shines brightly with its compelling story, outstanding performances, and astonishing musical sequences.
Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande-Butera deliver truly remarkable, award-worthy performances, grounding the film with unparalleled chemistry and elevating their characters to incredible heights, all while demonstrating phenomenal vocal talent. Jon M. Chu crafts an ambitious, visually stunning adaptation that captivates both long-time fans of the musical and newcomers alike.
With timeless messages conveyed through poignant themes and well-crafted character arcs, Wicked not only lives up to its initial hype but leaves audiences eagerly awaiting the next chapter of this magical story.”
Rating: A-