The one with no heart starts crying. The one with no brain gives him wise advice. And the one with no courage goes in front. It really is a brilliant movie.
@@MaskedMan66 Yeah, and in the book, the Lion, despite his lack of confidence, actually faces down the Guards at one point and scares them away with his roar. It was awesome.
+CurtTheGamer Exactly. Of course in the book, the Winkies are small, timid people even more afraid of the Lion than he is of them, but it's still a triumph for him.
I can't believe this movie was made in the 30's. It honestly looks more like an 80's/90's film. When something is well made, it really does last forever.
When I was in the Army, I was marching my platoon from somewhere to somewhere else, and instead of calling the usual left-right-left, cadence, I had them sing this. It was great! That was in West Germany in 1982.
@@kishascape in life were all soilders for a March to a better tommorow and good on all men and women who March through today for there to be a tommorow.
At 0:56, my ABSOLUTE FAVORITE LINES of this movie: Cowardly Lion: "All right, I'll go in there for Dorothy -- wicked witch or no wicked witch -- guards or no guards, I'LL TEAR 'EM APART! RUFF! I may not come out alive, but I'm going in there! There's only one thing I want you fellas to do -- Scarecrow and Tin Man (together): WHAT'S THAT?? Cowardly Lion: Talk me out of it! ROTFLMAO! :^)
sure - I'm 87 and was at the premiere - (around 5 years old) I too was afraid of the march of the soldiers. Still now it impesses me - I too wanted to know what they were singing. Finally I found the libretto of the film - there it appears just letters 00-ee-aa-o-ah--
This is my favorite scene in the whole movie. The fact that the Scarecrow, Tin-Man, and Lion beat the shit out of three guards and then put on their uniforms to sneak in is amazing. It shows that what Oz gave them at the end, were qualities they already had
Fucas101 I know right?! And all this time scarecrow was claiming that he didn't have a brain yet he came up with numerous ideas on how to break into the witch's castle without being noticed, using tinman's axe to drop the chandelier on the guards as a destraction to escape. Although, they still ended up getting trapped. Yup, old scarecrow had a brain all along, it was just in the one place he forgot to look. His straw covered head. 😉
I'm just imagining after the witch is defeated the rest of the guards are like, "Hey, have you seen three of our guys? They were outside patrolling the area."
@@MaskedMan66Bert was So Funny in This Movie One of My Favorite Quotes is “What If She Kills Us First”? and “I’d Turn Back If I Were You”😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆
Feel the same way about this song and the way they sang it. The whole castle and witch scene used to terrify my siblings and me when we were little. But we were so impressed that Dorothy's friends, as terrified as they were, went in to save her anyway. That really struck a chord with us. Still does.
+Mary Smith That's what the Cowardly Lion is all about. Even in later books, after he'd lost the "courage" the Wizard gave him, he still did whatever needed doing no matter how scared he was.
in my opinion, this is the scene where Dorothy's friends discover that they already have what they each wanted from the Wizard, although they don't yet know it. 1. The Tin Man almost sheds a tear for Dorothy, proving his heart. 2. The Scarecrow comes up with the plan to rescue her, Proving he CAN think. 3. The Lion, although he has to be talked into it, finds the courage to lead the way into the castle.
Nick Chopper cried a lot earlier in the picture, when Dorothy, Toto, and the Lion were all asleep in the Deadly Poppy Field, and the Scarecrow worked out how to goad the Fighting Trees into chucking their apples at him so Dorothy could gather them up. Frankly, apart from this scene, the Lion really doesn't get to prove his courage a lot in this movie.
@@MaskedMan66 Yeah. The whole part in the beginning when he climbs up to the rise and waves to the Scarecrow and Tin Man to come up reminds me of a military squad leader on the battlefield scouting ahead and then signaling his troops to follow.
Upload the Simpsons Episode Rosebud with the Guards In Charlie's Mansion where They started to Sing a Parody of this unit Waylon Tells Them to not be Loud and They sing Quietly
Like Andrew Levin said, that's the point. The whole point of the movie is that they each want what they already have. The lion already has courage, the tinman already has a heart, and the scarecrow already has a brain. But they each doubt themselves so much they don't even realize it. But at the end, when they realize the wizard is a fraud, they realize that they already had what they wanted. They just needed to believe that they had the courage, the compassion, and the intelligence.
"I- I I gotta get her outa there, Alright I'll go in there for Dorothy Wicked Witch or no Wicked Witch Guards or No Guards I'll tear 'em apart, I may not come out alive but I'm going in there, there's only one thing I want you fellas to do." "TALK ME OUT OF IT" That's my personal favorite part.
Actually there's one part that he that this person really screwed up on that line I'm going to get her out of there may not come out alive but I'm going in there wicked with you or no wicked witch God to know God I'll tear them apart I may not come out alive but I'm going in there there's only one thing I want you to do what's that talk me out of it and that's when he turns around oh no
I love all these characters, and I love this movie. As a kid, I always loved this part of the movie, and the lion was my favorite of the trio because even though he would always either run away, faint (particularly when he first meets the wizard, that part always and still cracks me up) he found the small spark of courage in himself to rescue Dorothy and help her and his friends save the day in the end. So, in short, I found that moment in the film to be a good life lesson that I think anyone can relate to in some way in our day-to-day lives that there may end up being a situation where even if the situation isn't a life-or-death moment, but just even the smallest moments where you maybe called to do something courageous for yourself or someone else, (even when you don't want to or someone or yourself ends up "talking you out of it"), but I think Gandalf put it best when all you needed was a "little nudge out of the door".
" I may not come out ALIVE! but l'm goin in there!" Classic lines with ambiguous meanings. Each actor Fit their roles to the tea right down to Toto. Excellent choice of actors for this role. The sheer performances are so unique and special affects especially to be made in the 1930s is Amazing. It was way ahead of it's time. No remake of this film will Ever Top this classic. It will NEVER be Topped.
More dramatic than the book? In which the Scarecrow and Tin Woodman are destroyed, the Lion is locked in a cage, and Dorothy has to face the WWW all on her own?
1:52 The Lion’s reaction to seeing the guards, totally unable to get the words out to warn the others … IMO, Bert Lahr’s funniest moment in the entire film. ROFL!
Two random things I love about this scene. The creaking sound of the drawbridge combined with the music adds to the dramatics. Also think Toto trailing behind with them is really cute.
The sound designers on this movie have never received their proper due. Did you know that all of the clinking and clanking that the Tin Woodman does were added in post production? The costume was made of buckram and leather, so it made no noise to speak of.
Reminds me of Star Wars. Although this movie WAS out WAY before Star Wars was out, but how this reminds me of Star Wars is that The Scarecrow, The Tin Man, and The Cowardly Lion are all dressed up as the guards to rescue Dorothy while Toto has nothing on cause he's a dog, and Star Wars is that Luke and Han are dressed as stormtroopers to rescue Leia and Chewie has nothing on cause he's a Wookie. Lol
Something similar to this happens in Dreamwork's "Monsters vs. Aliens". B.O.B, The Missing Link, and Dr. Cockroach dress up as aliens clones to rescue Susan/Ginormica. And just like in this movie, B.O.B, a character stated to not have a brain at all is the one who comes up with the idea.
Of course, this gambit wouldn't have worked in the book. The Scarecrow would be the only one who could have managed it, since he's made of Munchkin clothes and Winkies and Munchkins are the same size. Also, the Lion was four-legged and the size of a small horse.
@@PabloRuizMega Margaret Hamilton played Elmira Gulch/The Wicked Witch of the West in the 1939 movie. She was not given a name like Glinda (the name 'Elphaba' was given to her later in the reimagined WOO books 'Wicked' et al.)
As a kid born in the late 50's, The Wizard of Oz used to come on annually usually on a Sunday evening. Yeh...no instant media back then. The march of the witches guard during this part of the soundtrack was always what I waited for. It is down right funky and if I fell asleep before this scene, I was always bummed out. Did i say this is downright funky? As a kid i was convinced!
The ceremony with the guards was 1:06 always one my favorite scenes. They look and sound scary as hell. It's actually what always inspired me during drill and ceremony in the Army
They didn't need "improvements"; they already had what they needed. And they did a LOT more than this in the book. How about the Tin Woodman beheading forty wolves sent to destroy them?
@@trikkinikki970 Yep. In the book, the Witch only sent the flying monkeys as a last resort. First she sent a pack of wolves, and the Tin Man killed them all. Then, she sent a bunch of crows, and the Scarecrow took them out. Next were a swarm of bees, and again the Tin Man stepped up (They briefly took apart Scarecrow and covered Dorothy and the Lion with his straw so the bees would only see and attack Tin Man, their stingers broke off on his tin body, and thus they all died). Then, she sent an army of her Winky guards after them, and this time it was the Lion's turn to step up, as he scared them all away with one roar. When all those failed, she sent the flying monkeys.
Spihk heart bust!? Can you use Bozeman Hotmail Recipient's Roomies Ghnavel Feces to explain to the biblical vessels that even though Bozeman Hotmail Recipient's dad Seen Bozeman Hotmail Recipient's new Amsterdam liquor why would Bozeman Hotmail Recipient's dad ask Bozeman Hotmail Recipient about going to thrive, the answer will be no!!
The drill sequence for the winkie guards and how they file into the castle was interesting, as are their Halberds. I wonder if military experts choreographed it? Though I must say, probably the most interesting guard change I've ever seen. Six guys at parade rest out front, as the relieving guards march single file up the center. The shift change then switch places with the guards being relieved, who then march into the castle. Smooth.
And so the Cowardly Lion, Scarecrow, and Tin Man covertly and discreetly sneak into the Wicked Witch of the West’s castle disguised as winkies! How clever.
This scene always terrified me as a kid in the 90s! The structure of the witch's castle looks so dark, expressionless, uninviting, and stone-cold; like a big prison. So creepy!
I know the script says they're just chanting vowels but I like the theory that they're chanting " oh we loathe the old one" giving the twist that they actually dislike the witch
call me a sucker, but I've always loved the tin man! the way he shows such concern for Dorothy "Oh I'd hate to think of her in there! We've got to get her out!" when he's on the verge of tears, he always just get me in the feels!
The one with no heart starts crying. The one with no brain leads them with a plan to get into the castle. And the one with no courage leads the off camera fight with the three armed guards who ambushed them from behind, (as you can see his tail and hear his roar during that fight). This scene combined with the scene at the end when the Wizard gives them a Diploma, A Testimonial, and a Medal turn this into one of the most inspirational movies ever.
@@SillyCreatureSally Yes, in fact they had an abundance of the things that they sought. But more importantly, as opposed to what others sought from the Wizard, The Scarecrow, The Tin Man the Tin Man and The Lion considered Brains, a Heart and Courage in high regard, which is also, why, when he was leaving, the Wizard selected those three to be the leaders, and replace him as the Wizards of Oz. Very inspirational.
@@JakeMcClake2 Not as Wizards, just as Rulers. In the book, the Tin Woodman went back to the West, as the Winkies had asked him to succeed the Wicked Witch as their ruler. The Lion killed a giant spider that had been eating the animals in a forest in the Quadling Country, and so became their King. In the second book, the Scarecrow lost the throne to a revolutionary called General Jinjur, but she was soon ousted by the rightful heir, Princess Ozma, who has ruled Oz ever since. 🙂The Scarecrow happily returned to country life, building a mansion in the shape of an enormous ear of corn. Now and then, he rules the Munchkin Country in lieu of its king and queen.
I love the matte work in this movie so much. The shots of the Emerald City and the witch's castle don't look quite real, but I don't really want them to. They look like places out of a dream and they're perfect.
I remember when they spoofed this scene on Duck Dodgers in the episode, The Fudd. Daffy, Porky and Marvin even used the same strategy as The Scarecrow, Tin Man and Lion.
When my sisters and I were toddlers my dad used to hoist us on his shoulders/back and do the Winkie Chant. It wasn’t until I was around 4 years of age that I watched this film for the first time I discovered this was where my dad got this inspiration from.
The axe isn't as useful as you might think. The Tin Man was once a normal woodsman until the witch cursed his axe so that he could only use that axe and that he'd keep accidentally hitting himself with it. Whenever he lost a limb, he went to a blacksmith and had him make a prosthetic out of tin. Eventually this came to include everything else on his body, including his head. I think it's funny how the guards ditched their weapons AND abandoned the high ground to get the literal drop on them, and they still lost.
I think the witch wanted to capture them alive: otherwise those flying monkeys would have done more damage than they did: well at least to lion and tinman.
1:53 I like how the guard just found them, and started fighting and after this they won. I JUST LOVE THIS PART!!!! (P.s I mean Scarecrow, Tin man and cowardly lion just won... I LOVE IT!!!!)
You'll notice that each of them acts in accordance with the character traits they're seeking from The Wizard. Implying that perhaps they had them all the time. Much like Dorothy's ability to return home.
IZtheDoomMovie I just stumbled upon your epic Irken remixes scrolling through invader Zim remixes and now i find this comment made by the same creator xD what a coincidence!
The scarecrow obviously says he has no brain but he's obviously coming up with some really really smart idea plans on how to break into the witch's castle to free Dorothy.
1:06 Lion: I may not come out alive, but I’m going in there! There’s just one thing I want you fellas to do. Tin mans and scarecrow: What’s that?? 1:13 Lion: *TALK ME OUT OF IT!!!* LOL
Love this part.It's my favorite.Love the uniforms and the chant.And that the guards actually feared and hated the Witch.Lion,Scarecrow and Tin Man going in there to rescue Dorothy.What's not to love?
When I was a kid this film use to scare the hell out of me. When that witch came and took Dorothys dog stuff fell apart literally. even the house fell on the witch I knew things were going to happen badly.now at sixty it's a pretty remarkable film considering that it was written in the 30,s wow.it was very complexed and unique. Absolutely a film every child should see to learn about good and evil.
Probably my favorite part would be the fight with the guards and the trio. It looked as though the trio was done for but when you see them coming out with the clothes, makes you think "What did they do to win that fight?"
Old habits reappear Fighting the fear of fear Growing conspiracy Everyone’s after me Frayed ends of sanity Hear them calling Hear them calling MEEE!!!!!!
I watched this movie every year until I was 19. This was one of my favorite parts. My favorite one was when they went to see the wizard the first time.
From 0:43-0:44, I love how Scarecrow said that he has a plan to get inside the witches castle when he thought he has no brain and he even told Dorothy that he won't try to manage things because he can't think but he was very good at thinking his plan and he came up with that great idea on how to tease those apple trees just to get apples. All this shows that Scarecrow, Tinman, and Lion had everything they were wanting (brain, heart, and courage) but, they just didn't know they have it. Plus at the end of the movie in the Emerald City, Scarecrow was very smart to solve that math equation where he thought he didn't have a brain.
@@MaskedMan66 I know but, it's also nice to comment all these things for the movie where you can't comment about it on the book unless the book was being read on UA-cam showing page by page as someone is reading word for word with a voiceover in the background.
What are the guards singing in the Wizard of Oz?Audiences have claimed to hear various lyrics to the "Winkie Chant" performed by the Wicked Witch of the West's guards. They include "All we own, we owe her"; "Oh we love the old one"; and "Oh we loathe the old one." The screenplay shows that the correct lyrics are "O-Ee-Yah! Eoh-Ah!."
Best bit of the scene: Scarecrow: I've got a plan to how to get in there. Lion: He's got a plan. Scarecrow: And you're gonna lead us. Lion: Yeah. (stammers a bit, then looks at Scarecrow) Me? Scarecrow: Yes, you. Lion: I-I gotta get her outta there? Tin Man: That's right. Lion: (looks back and forth at both of them) Alright....I'll go in there for Dorothy. Wicked Witch or no Wicked Witch. Guards or no guards, I'll tear em apart. (bark-like roar) I may not come out alive, BUT I'm goin' in there. There's only one thing I want you fellas to do. Scarecrow and Tin Man: What's that? Lion: Talk me out of it. (Scarecrow and Tin Man look at him judgingly)
Great stuff, eh? Just one nit-picky little detail: after the Scarecrow says, "I've got a plan how to get in there," the Lion says, "Oh, fine! He's got a plan."
I love the TinMan! I have two versions of the TinMan tattooed on my arms, this version and '78 Wiz version. When I was a kid when I saw the TinMan cry in this I always felt the need to cry as well. The TinMan was my childhood hero and still is to this day!
I used to say that too! but they are actually saying "Oh we know the old one" Like the old elphaba ( if you've seen wicked) but I still laugh and say that too!
I first saw this movie when I was a little kid. I was always scared of the witch, but I loved the guards and the flying monkeys! I really liked their designs and I thought their outfits looked really cool and pretty. Plus, the chant that the guards do is really cool and catchy!😄❤️
My daughter got me the Special Edition of the Wizard of Oz & in the documentary they discuss what the soldiers are actually chanting... Of course, it's voice actors/singers of which they slowed down to sound deeper-voiced & stuff...I forget off the top of my head what it is - next time I watch that I'll let you know...
The one with no heart starts crying. The one with no brain gives him wise advice. And the one with no courage goes in front. It really is a brilliant movie.
It was a BOOK first. Thirty-nine years earlier. And the whole point of the tale is that they never lacked those things.
Ignatz Mouse I'll say
@@MaskedMan66 Yeah, and in the book, the Lion, despite his lack of confidence, actually faces down the Guards at one point and scares them away with his roar. It was awesome.
+CurtTheGamer Exactly. Of course in the book, the Winkies are small, timid people even more afraid of the Lion than he is of them, but it's still a triumph for him.
The lion maybe the worst in terms of feeling afraid. Worse than timid people that is. The lion was so intensely afraid of the Wizard!!! 🦁
I can't believe this movie was made in the 30's. It honestly looks more like an 80's/90's film.
When something is well made, it really does last forever.
this looks like it was made in the 70s. When I saw young Frankenstein it really looked like 30s movie
***** It could pass for early 80's, in my view. But I get your point.
John NoNameGibbon Clash of the Titans looks like it was from the 60s when it's 1981
***** That happened a lot during the early eighties, I noticed.
I swear, I see your comments on every other video I visit.
When I was in the Army, I was marching my platoon from somewhere to somewhere else, and instead of calling the usual left-right-left, cadence, I had them sing this. It was great! That was in West Germany in 1982.
damn thats awsome
if i saw a whole platoon of soldiers marching towards me, chanting that, i would have ordered a fking massive-ass retreat xD
love to hear creedence;s ( ccr)i heard it through the grapevine done in close order marches,and the sarge calling it
We weren't allowed to sing under threat of gulag but we were marching along with you guys on the other side of the wall.
@@kishascape in life were all soilders for a March to a better tommorow and good on all men and women who March through today for there to be a tommorow.
The sentence "I was marching my platoon from somewhere to somewhere else" really is a summation of military life hahaha
At 0:56, my ABSOLUTE FAVORITE LINES of this movie:
Cowardly Lion: "All right, I'll go in there for Dorothy -- wicked witch or no wicked witch -- guards or no guards, I'LL TEAR 'EM APART! RUFF! I may not come out alive, but I'm going in there! There's only one thing I want you fellas to do --
Scarecrow and Tin Man (together): WHAT'S THAT??
Cowardly Lion: Talk me out of it!
ROTFLMAO!
:^)
Hilarious!! Love it
ricsanta1 it kinda reminds me of the Three stooges just the comedy of those lines
yeah It's absolutely brilliant!
Ikr? And the funny part is they actually do talk him out of it.
Bert Lahr was a comedic genius 🦁
I’ve always loved how awesome the guards sounded as they marched and chanted as well as their outfits
You know, there’s a great range of opinions about what they’re singing. Consensus is that they are just syllables and not real words.
sure - I'm 87 and was at the premiere - (around 5 years old) I too was afraid of the march of the soldiers. Still now it impesses me - I too wanted to know what they were singing. Finally I found the libretto of the film - there it appears just letters 00-ee-aa-o-ah--
Why... why do I feel that the Tin Man looks cute in that uniform? I mean I already have a crush on him but y'know...
I always heard them saying “Oreo” in a weird way when I was a kid
the soldiers gave me ptsd
Never hunger, never prosper, I have fallen prey to failure
Fuck yeah Frayed ends of Sanity
Falling deep into dementia
Fabio Cáceres old habits reappear
OH YEAH BABY
Tha the reason I’m here lmao
This is my favorite scene in the whole movie. The fact that the Scarecrow, Tin-Man, and Lion beat the shit out of three guards and then put on their uniforms to sneak in is amazing. It shows that what Oz gave them at the end, were qualities they already had
Fucas101 I know right?! And all this time scarecrow was claiming that he didn't have a brain yet he came up with numerous ideas on how to break into the witch's castle without being noticed, using tinman's axe to drop the chandelier on the guards as a destraction to escape. Although, they still ended up getting trapped. Yup, old scarecrow had a brain all along, it was just in the one place he forgot to look. His straw covered head. 😉
Fucas101 ikr
Fucas101 When I was younger I thought the guards simply got them to take their places.
I'm just imagining after the witch is defeated the rest of the guards are like, "Hey, have you seen three of our guys? They were outside patrolling the area."
They probably didn't care about that, since they were free from the Witch. They probably did find those guys later on if they did keep track.
“There’s just one things I want you fellas to do”
“What’s that?”
“Talk me out of it”
After 80 bloody years, it still holds up!
Bert Lahr was a comic genius!
That’s true
@@MaskedMan66Bert was So Funny in This Movie One of My Favorite Quotes is “What If She Kills Us First”? and “I’d Turn Back If I Were You”😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆
I remember as a kid i would always rewind the video just to get to the guards marching again, used to think it was so epic
+Bullet-Tooth Tony it was and always will me
+mrpentium true
Feel the same way about this song and the way they sang it. The whole castle and witch scene used to terrify my siblings and me when we were little. But we were so impressed that Dorothy's friends, as terrified as they were, went in to save her anyway. That really struck a chord with us. Still does.
+Mary Smith That's what the Cowardly Lion is all about. Even in later books, after he'd lost the "courage" the Wizard gave him, he still did whatever needed doing no matter how scared he was.
You weren't wrong
When I first saw this as a kid I was not expecting how deep that chant was. It's like a requirement for being a guard is a bass voice.
The men who sang the chant sang it at a faster speed, then their voices were slowed down to sound monstrous. :-)
...and I've never seen anyone pick up on the fact that Metallica pinched it for their 'The Frayed Ends of Sanity' track back in 1988!.
@@AlMarconiOfficialjust what I was looking for..I was sooo sure I heard that before but couldn't remember where haha thank you very much.
Am I the only one who found the guards somewhat terrifying?
The flying monkeys scared the crap out of me as a kid.
GaelicCelt1990 i liked them as a kid and even today the boys of my school used to chant that when we where single file in the halls
You aren't alone! I am a nuclear age kid who spent much of my youth frightened by the communist horde!! I am now 67 years old.
I always thought that they look like their warring dresses.
The whole movie was terrifying..
in my opinion, this is the scene where Dorothy's friends discover that they already have what they each wanted from the Wizard, although they don't yet know it. 1. The Tin Man almost sheds a tear for Dorothy, proving his heart. 2. The Scarecrow comes up with the plan to rescue her, Proving he CAN think. 3. The Lion, although he has to be talked into it, finds the courage to lead the way into the castle.
lead the way? um...the lion was the last one in out of the three
Jesse Cartledge I know, but I DID say they had to talk him into it.
+Jesse Cartledge But he led them TO the castle.
Nick Chopper cried a lot earlier in the picture, when Dorothy, Toto, and the Lion were all asleep in the Deadly Poppy Field, and the Scarecrow worked out how to goad the Fighting Trees into chucking their apples at him so Dorothy could gather them up. Frankly, apart from this scene, the Lion really doesn't get to prove his courage a lot in this movie.
@@MaskedMan66 Yeah.
The whole part in the beginning when he climbs up to the rise and waves to the Scarecrow and Tin Man to come up reminds me of a military squad leader on the battlefield scouting ahead and then signaling his troops to follow.
O-re-o, Oree-o!
that isnt what they're really saying...
Denver Satterwhite I know; but they parody it in Wreck-It Ralph by saying that. I was making a reference.
Oh ok i figured hahahaha
+Denver Satterwhite they're saying "we loathe the old one" the old one refering to the witch
I know
For not having a brain Scarecrow sure comes up with alot of ideas
That's kind of the point
Upload the Simpsons Episode Rosebud with the Guards In Charlie's Mansion where They started to Sing a Parody of this unit Waylon Tells Them to not be Loud and They sing Quietly
Like Andrew Levin said, that's the point. The whole point of the movie is that they each want what they already have. The lion already has courage, the tinman already has a heart, and the scarecrow already has a brain. But they each doubt themselves so much they don't even realize it. But at the end, when they realize the wizard is a fraud, they realize that they already had what they wanted. They just needed to believe that they had the courage, the compassion, and the intelligence.
+Stroyed Actually, it's the Wizard who has to tell them they already have what they want, but they still demand some outward sign of it.
How could the tin man cry without a heart?
"I- I I gotta get her outa there, Alright I'll go in there for Dorothy Wicked Witch or no Wicked Witch Guards or No Guards I'll tear 'em apart, I may not come out alive but I'm going in there, there's only one thing I want you fellas to do." "TALK ME OUT OF IT"
That's my personal favorite part.
LOL!
Bert Lahr's delivery of that line made it even funnier!
I did same thing as kid about go on Jurassic Park Ride.
I loved that “talk me out of it” line
Actually there's one part that he that this person really screwed up on that line I'm going to get her out of there may not come out alive but I'm going in there wicked with you or no wicked witch God to know God I'll tear them apart I may not come out alive but I'm going in there there's only one thing I want you to do what's that talk me out of it and that's when he turns around oh no
I love all these characters, and I love this movie. As a kid, I always loved this part of the movie, and the lion was my favorite of the trio because even though he would always either run away, faint (particularly when he first meets the wizard, that part always and still cracks me up) he found the small spark of courage in himself to rescue Dorothy and help her and his friends save the day in the end. So, in short, I found that moment in the film to be a good life lesson that I think anyone can relate to in some way in our day-to-day lives that there may end up being a situation where even if the situation isn't a life-or-death moment, but just even the smallest moments where you maybe called to do something courageous for yourself or someone else, (even when you don't want to or someone or yourself ends up "talking you out of it"), but I think Gandalf put it best when all you needed was a "little nudge out of the door".
My Mom's favorite movie. This was always my favorite part as a kid. The marching formation, the cadence, and the uniforms were so damn cool.
" I may not come out ALIVE! but l'm goin in there!" Classic lines with ambiguous meanings. Each actor Fit their roles to the tea right down to Toto. Excellent choice of actors for this role. The sheer performances are so unique and special affects especially to be made in the 1930s is Amazing. It was way ahead of it's time. No remake of this film will Ever Top this classic. It will NEVER be Topped.
And you'd never guess that Jack Haley was an eleventh-hour replacement, would you? :-)
Yes.
@@MaskedMan66 I certainly wouldn't have guessed that! He was amazing.
In my opinion this scene made the Wizard of Oz more dramatic.
True
They don't even Sing this in LEGO Dimensions
I agree. This while scene in the witches castle is still my fave part of the film.
More dramatic than the book? In which the Scarecrow and Tin Woodman are destroyed, the Lion is locked in a cage, and Dorothy has to face the WWW all on her own?
This scene reminds me of how the Axis soldiers marched in World War II
Frayed ends of sanity
Hear them calling
Hear them calling me!
DeadSpace178 Cossacks, dude. Cossacks.
1:52 The Lion’s reaction to seeing the guards, totally unable to get the words out to warn the others … IMO, Bert Lahr’s funniest moment in the entire film. ROFL!
He smelled them first!
Two random things I love about this scene. The creaking sound of the drawbridge combined with the music adds to the dramatics. Also think Toto trailing behind with them is really cute.
The sound designers on this movie have never received their proper due. Did you know that all of the clinking and clanking that the Tin Woodman does were added in post production? The costume was made of buckram and leather, so it made no noise to speak of.
"Growing conspiracy
Everyone’s after me
Frayed ends of sanity
Hear them calling
Hear them calling me"
Josh Houston hahahah
84 years later and this film is still a late 1930s classic in color cinema.
No pun intended
When i was kid this part used to spook me out
james bondero Ikr meeeee too 😹
This movie was WAY Ahead of its time 100% Masterpiece
Definitely, when I was younger I thought it was made in the 60’s or 70’s. The quality of this movie is really amazing.
2:17
Toto has a red scarf too. LOL
Reminds me of Star Wars. Although this movie WAS out WAY before Star Wars was out, but how this reminds me of Star Wars is that The Scarecrow, The Tin Man, and The Cowardly Lion are all dressed up as the guards to rescue Dorothy while Toto has nothing on cause he's a dog, and Star Wars is that Luke and Han are dressed as stormtroopers to rescue Leia and Chewie has nothing on cause he's a Wookie. Lol
I though this reminded me of The Lord of the Rings when Frodo, Sam, and Smeagul try to find a way past the guards into Mordor.
That too!
Something similar to this happens in Dreamwork's "Monsters vs. Aliens". B.O.B, The Missing Link, and Dr. Cockroach dress up as aliens clones to rescue Susan/Ginormica. And just like in this movie, B.O.B, a character stated to not have a brain at all is the one who comes up with the idea.
Of course, this gambit wouldn't have worked in the book. The Scarecrow would be the only one who could have managed it, since he's made of Munchkin clothes and Winkies and Munchkins are the same size. Also, the Lion was four-legged and the size of a small horse.
@RockManLP I would say Threepio for the Tin Woodman.
The chord change at 2:32 always gets me.
And the lion trying to hide his tail!🤣
what was the wicked witch of the west real name in the wizard of oz the 1939 movie version?
@@PabloRuizMega Margaret Hamilton played Elmira Gulch/The Wicked Witch of the West in the 1939 movie. She was not given a name like Glinda (the name 'Elphaba' was given to her later in the reimagined WOO books 'Wicked' et al.)
“Oh we love the old one, oh we love the old one, oh we love the old one…”
@@jcsman4244 Nope. It's "Oh-Ee-Yah! Eo-Ah!"
As a kid born in the late 50's, The Wizard of Oz used to come on annually usually on a Sunday evening. Yeh...no instant media back then. The march of the witches guard during this part of the soundtrack was always what I waited for. It is down right funky and if I fell asleep before this scene, I was always bummed out. Did i say this is downright funky? As a kid i was convinced!
I'm waiting on Smithers popping out and saying, "SHHH!" Mr Burns is sleeping!" XD
I know right? I thought I was the only one
+WolfieMcMuffin That's when I first heard it.
+WolfieMcMuffin i dont know which is more famous. This or the Simpsons reference of it
Sssshhh! Mr Trump is sleeping!
Shhhh Hillary is on her period.
The ceremony with the guards was 1:06 always one my favorite scenes. They look and sound scary as hell. It's actually what always inspired me during drill and ceremony in the Army
Well , you gotta give them credit. They kicked ass when they absolutely had to ( and this was prior to their Wizardry improvements ) 2:00
They didn't need "improvements"; they already had what they needed. And they did a LOT more than this in the book. How about the Tin Woodman beheading forty wolves sent to destroy them?
@@MaskedMan66 holy shit that's metal as fuck.
@@MaskedMan66 fucking legend 😔✌️
@@trikkinikki970 Yep. In the book, the Witch only sent the flying monkeys as a last resort.
First she sent a pack of wolves, and the Tin Man killed them all.
Then, she sent a bunch of crows, and the Scarecrow took them out.
Next were a swarm of bees, and again the Tin Man stepped up (They briefly took apart Scarecrow and covered Dorothy and the Lion with his straw so the bees would only see and attack Tin Man, their stingers broke off on his tin body, and thus they all died).
Then, she sent an army of her Winky guards after them, and this time it was the Lion's turn to step up, as he scared them all away with one roar.
When all those failed, she sent the flying monkeys.
My senior year in High School I played football and my team did that chant before our games and during our huddles
Spihk heart bust!? Can you use Bozeman Hotmail Recipient's Roomies Ghnavel Feces to explain to the biblical vessels that even though Bozeman Hotmail Recipient's dad Seen Bozeman Hotmail Recipient's new Amsterdam liquor why would Bozeman Hotmail Recipient's dad ask Bozeman Hotmail Recipient about going to thrive, the answer will be no!!
The drill sequence for the winkie guards and how they file into the castle was interesting, as are their Halberds. I wonder if military experts choreographed it? Though I must say, probably the most interesting guard change I've ever seen. Six guys at parade rest out front, as the relieving guards march single file up the center. The shift change then switch places with the guards being relieved, who then march into the castle. Smooth.
I love how there's a triumphant upbeat to the music as Scarecrow, Tinman and Cowardly Lion are entering the castle.
I always laugh when the lion says "whose them? whose them?!"
"Who's them? Who's them?"
I get to play a Winkie in the play Wizard of Oz!
Better start learning my lines.
Oh-we-oh! We-ohh-oh!
Done!
If you've seen the script, you know it's, "Oh-Ee-Ah! Eoh-Ah!"
Wow, I haven't seen this in YEARS. It's timeless.
And so the Cowardly Lion, Scarecrow, and Tin Man covertly and discreetly sneak into the Wicked Witch of the West’s castle disguised as winkies! How clever.
The discipline of the changing of the guard, the music always fires me up, has always been my favorite part of the movie
1:51 lol. A three stooges moment
Triple Lol 😂😂😂😄😄😄😅😅😅
This scene always terrified me as a kid in the 90s! The structure of the witch's castle looks so dark, expressionless, uninviting, and stone-cold; like a big prison. So creepy!
The funny thing is that in the book, the WWW actually kept a beautiful castle.
It is terrifying
It's beautiful
I know the script says they're just chanting vowels but I like the theory that they're chanting " oh we loathe the old one" giving the twist that they actually dislike the witch
agarcia827 I've never heard of that theory, I love it!
No. They’re saying “ all we owe, we owe her”. Quite different than what you said, jackass
call me a sucker, but I've always loved the tin man! the way he shows such concern for Dorothy "Oh I'd hate to think of her in there! We've got to get her out!" when he's on the verge of tears, he always just get me in the feels!
I love him so much.
Whenever he cries, it makes me want to give him a hug. It gets me every time!
@@SillyCreatureSally Definitely, you and me both!
When I was a kid, I always thought the guards were chanting "Oreo."
Sounds like Oreo yum
I LOVE every line from the lion in this scene, especially his terrified, "What's that? What's that?" at the beginning.
My favorite is "Do you think it'd be polite, dropping in like this?"
LOL
Also, honorable mention to "Who's them, who's them?"
The swatting at the out-of-control tail just cracks me up 😂
+ifeelpretty57 It's got a mind of its own when he's really scared.
My fav part of this scene: 0:57-1:17 Showing the 🦁 some compassionate and bravery for Dorothy until he tried to bail out. 😂
The Lion is So Hysterical in This Scene😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆
I love how the guards get the jump on them and they still lose 😂
The one with no heart starts crying. The one with no brain leads them with a plan to get into the castle. And the one with no courage leads the off camera fight with the three armed guards who ambushed them from behind, (as you can see his tail and hear his roar during that fight).
This scene combined with the scene at the end when the Wizard gives them a Diploma, A Testimonial, and a Medal turn this into one of the most inspirational movies ever.
The point is, they had those things all along. The Tin Man's crying always gets me 💗
@@SillyCreatureSally Yes, in fact they had an abundance of the things that they sought. But more importantly, as opposed to what others sought from the Wizard, The Scarecrow, The Tin Man the Tin Man and The Lion considered Brains, a Heart and Courage in high regard,
which is also, why, when he was leaving, the Wizard selected those three to be the leaders, and replace him as the Wizards of Oz.
Very inspirational.
@@JakeMcClake2 Not as Wizards, just as Rulers. In the book, the Tin Woodman went back to the West, as the Winkies had asked him to succeed the Wicked Witch as their ruler. The Lion killed a giant spider that had been eating the animals in a forest in the Quadling Country, and so became their King.
In the second book, the Scarecrow lost the throne to a revolutionary called General Jinjur, but she was soon ousted by the rightful heir, Princess Ozma, who has ruled Oz ever since. 🙂The Scarecrow happily returned to country life, building a mansion in the shape of an enormous ear of corn. Now and then, he rules the Munchkin Country in lieu of its king and queen.
I love the matte work in this movie so much. The shots of the Emerald City and the witch's castle don't look quite real, but I don't really want them to. They look like places out of a dream and they're perfect.
The matte work is top notch, and did you notice that the river looks like it's flowing?
I remember when they spoofed this scene on Duck Dodgers in the episode, The Fudd. Daffy, Porky and Marvin even used the same strategy as The Scarecrow, Tin Man and Lion.
I don't know why.. But that guard hymn thing is dangerously catcy! I'mma be hummin' it fer weeks!
"oh we love the old one"
+Denver Satterwhite "Oh-Ee-Ah! Eoh-Ah!" It's in the script and the closed captioning on the home video releases.
The lion is Hella funny when he dove through that window I was dying 😂😂😂😂😂
When my sisters and I were toddlers my dad used to hoist us on his shoulders/back and do the Winkie Chant. It wasn’t until I was around 4 years of age that I watched this film for the first time I discovered this was where my dad got this inspiration from.
As idiotic as this trio is, I guess an invincible scarecrow, an axe wielding robot and a LION could handle a few guards.
The axe isn't as useful as you might think. The Tin Man was once a normal woodsman until the witch cursed his axe so that he could only use that axe and that he'd keep accidentally hitting himself with it. Whenever he lost a limb, he went to a blacksmith and had him make a prosthetic out of tin. Eventually this came to include everything else on his body, including his head.
I think it's funny how the guards ditched their weapons AND abandoned the high ground to get the literal drop on them, and they still lost.
I think the witch wanted to capture them alive: otherwise those flying monkeys would have done more damage than they did: well at least to lion and tinman.
Pika Zilla
Not sure about the Scarecrow. Yeah, he survived after getting disemboweled, but you can't do much as a torso
Pika Zilla
In a movie chucked full of classic moments, this scene with the guards chanting is still one of my favorites.
Chock.
I had forgotten how great this movie is. Probably the greatest of all time.
1:53 I like how the guard just found them, and started fighting and after this they won. I JUST LOVE THIS PART!!!!
(P.s I mean Scarecrow, Tin man and cowardly lion just won... I LOVE IT!!!!)
Cowardly Lion was fierce and ferocious, whether he knew it or not!
@@Dallas_K Did you notice him picking his teeth? I think he ate those three!
The lions reaction to seeing them gets me everytime 😂
@@kyleoelrich462 He smells them first.
You'll notice that each of them acts in accordance with the character traits they're seeking from The Wizard. Implying that perhaps they had them all the time. Much like Dorothy's ability to return home.
0:28 One of my favorite parts of the movie!
2:32 Best part of the music.
2:12 Tin Man actually looks like one of the guards lol
That chant was missing from "Oz the Great and Powerful" and I was sorely disappointed.
IZtheDoomMovie it had it's chance to redeem itself with that.
IZtheDoomMovie I just stumbled upon your epic Irken remixes scrolling through invader Zim remixes and now i find this comment made by the same creator xD
what a coincidence!
Oh wow! Neat, lol
The scarecrow obviously says he has no brain but he's obviously coming up with some really really smart idea plans on how to break into the witch's castle to free Dorothy.
1:06
Lion: I may not come out alive, but I’m going in there! There’s just one thing I want you fellas to do.
Tin mans and scarecrow: What’s that??
1:13
Lion: *TALK ME OUT OF IT!!!*
LOL
Oh wee oh, we ohhhhh
Wacky song, isn't it?
sha11235 oreo oreeeeooo O.O xD
*James Hetfield riffs intensifies*
to this day when i gm a rpg with an fell host of a terrible lord of yore, THIS is the marching paean I hum to the PCs
According to the screenplay, it's "O-Ee-Yah! Eoh-Ah!"
Love this part.It's my favorite.Love the uniforms and the chant.And that the guards actually feared and hated the Witch.Lion,Scarecrow and Tin Man going in there to rescue Dorothy.What's not to love?
Of course, in the book, the boys were in no position to help, and Dorothy took out the Wicked Witch all by herself! 🙂
Are they saying Oreo? XD
That's what writers of Wreckit Ralph thought :)
Damian Darkholme I love that reference in the movie I'm watching this and laughing about it! XP
I knew someone was going to ask that.
They are singing, "O-Ee-Yah! Eoh-Ah!"
No, they're saying Oreos tomorrow, oreos tomorrow.
Is this were Metallica got this part from in "The Frayed Ends of Sanity"?
DYLANTHEHEDGEHOG9000 yup.. they had to pay in order to use it in their song
yeah
+DYLANTHEHEDGEHOG9000 James Hetfield is the Cowardly Lion's little brother.
no hes not
Yep. Maybe that's why they don't play it live often. They may have to pay royalty for it or the song structure is a lot complex.. i am just guessing.
Never hunger, never prosper
I have fallen pray to failure
Struggle within,
Triggered again
Now the candle burns at both ends
truapped under skizofrenia, falling deep pintó dementia
growing conspiracy
everyone is after me
Frayed ends of sanity! Hear them calling
Hear them calling meeeee.
1:16 Scarecrow and Tinman's faces 😂
"No you don't!"
"Ohh no!"
Lion Tried To Bail Out of The Idea😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆
I always laugh when the Lion has trouble controlling his own tail while marching with the guards.
" talk me out of it" he says! 😂
It’s 2024 and I still find that March to be too catchy! As a millennial, I find it hard to believe this film is 85 years old.
this classic came on Thanksgiving night in the 70s it's one of the best movies made . The Guards march is so badass. this movie will live forever.
When I was a kid this film use to scare the hell out of me. When that witch came and took Dorothys dog stuff fell apart literally. even the house fell on the witch I knew things were going to happen badly.now at sixty it's a pretty remarkable film considering that it was written in the 30,s wow.it was very complexed and unique. Absolutely a film every child should see to learn about good and evil.
Probably my favorite part would be the fight with the guards and the trio. It looked as though the trio was done for but when you see them coming out with the clothes, makes you think "What did they do to win that fight?"
Well, the Tin Woodman had that axe, and you may have noticed the Lion picking his teeth.
The Scarecrow also had a gun.
This was the classic movie I love of all time The Wizard of Oz !
Love Cowardly Lion, "You think it'll be polite, dropping in like this?" LOL
that's a great line! i love it.
I always thought it was cool that the Scarecrow, Lion, & Tim Man were able to take out 3 guards who got the jump on them.
The Lion tries to push his tail out of sight as they march in.
I remember in first grade, my substitute teacher I had had us do the Winkie March when we had to come in from recces. It was fun.
I agree after watching this, that OZ never gave them anything that they didnt already have.
That's been the whole point of the story for 118 years.
Sounds like a good song lyric
Old habits reappear
Fighting the fear of fear
Growing conspiracy
Everyone’s after me
Frayed ends of sanity
Hear them calling
Hear them calling MEEE!!!!!!
I watched this movie every year until I was 19. This was one of my favorite parts. My favorite one was when they went to see the wizard the first time.
From 0:43-0:44, I love how Scarecrow said that he has a plan to get inside the witches castle when he thought he has no brain and he even told Dorothy that he won't try to manage things because he can't think but he was very good at thinking his plan and he came up with that great idea on how to tease those apple trees just to get apples. All this shows that Scarecrow, Tinman, and Lion had everything they were wanting (brain, heart, and courage) but, they just didn't know they have it. Plus at the end of the movie in the Emerald City, Scarecrow was very smart to solve that math equation where he thought he didn't have a brain.
This was all shown in the book, 39 years before the movie. 🙂
@@MaskedMan66 I know but, it's also nice to comment all these things for the movie where you can't comment about it on the book unless the book was being read on UA-cam showing page by page as someone is reading word for word with a voiceover in the background.
What are the guards singing in the Wizard of Oz?Audiences have claimed to hear various lyrics to the "Winkie Chant" performed by the Wicked Witch of the West's guards.
They include "All we own, we owe her"; "Oh we love the old one"; and
"Oh we loathe the old one." The screenplay shows that the correct lyrics
are "O-Ee-Yah! Eoh-Ah!."
Well, they say "Oreo" of course !!!
OREO we all want lol it was the cookie :)
I always thought is was "for we are loyal"
mrpentium I always just heard "Oh-wee-oh! Ohhh!
+2012endofanerror its actually "All we own, we owe"
Best bit of the scene:
Scarecrow: I've got a plan to how to get in there.
Lion: He's got a plan.
Scarecrow: And you're gonna lead us.
Lion: Yeah. (stammers a bit, then looks at Scarecrow) Me?
Scarecrow: Yes, you.
Lion: I-I gotta get her outta there?
Tin Man: That's right.
Lion: (looks back and forth at both of them) Alright....I'll go in there for Dorothy. Wicked Witch or no Wicked Witch. Guards or no guards, I'll tear em apart. (bark-like roar) I may not come out alive, BUT I'm goin' in there. There's only one thing I want you fellas to do.
Scarecrow and Tin Man: What's that?
Lion: Talk me out of it.
(Scarecrow and Tin Man look at him judgingly)
Great stuff, eh? Just one nit-picky little detail: after the Scarecrow says, "I've got a plan how to get in there," the Lion says, "Oh, fine! He's got a plan."
I watched this movie at least 300+ times as a kid. My mother said this was my favorite movie when I was a little boy(I'm 24)
This is a masterpiece,it can't be repeated or copied great movie and it was a young girls Dream . The producers was incredible
Of course, in the book, Dorothy and Toto really did go to Oz. 🙂
“There’s Only One Thing I Want You Fellas To Do”? “What’s That”? “Talk Me Out of It”😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆
The Lord of the Rings totally got inspiration from this scene when Frodo, Sam and Gollum were at the gates of Mordor.
Tinman: Shhhh
Gets tackled
The three: WOAAHHH!!!!
I love the TinMan! I have two versions of the TinMan tattooed on my arms, this version and '78 Wiz version. When I was a kid when I saw the TinMan cry in this I always felt the need to cry as well. The TinMan was my childhood hero and still is to this day!
Would you consider getting either the W.W. Denslow version and/or the John R. Neill version put somewhere?
This might interest you (no peeking at the comments; there's a major spoiler):
ua-cam.com/video/Pk7Voz75GRw/v-deo.html
Oh my gosh same. His crying always gets me. I will cherish him forever. He's so sweet. And I'll be honest, Jack Haley was VERY cute.
I always thought those guards were neat. I liked that march and their spears looked cool
i say the "oh ree o" when we get oreos at the store
I used to say that too! but they are actually saying "Oh we know the old one" Like the old elphaba ( if you've seen wicked) but I still laugh and say that too!
😂😅😅😅
@@avitalgoldberg-curran4956 😂
Someone I think they were kind of advertising Oreos
0:29 That chant they're doing is actually a new reimagining of Moris Day and the Time's "Jungle Love".
"I'm that type of guy" LL Cool J
A neat trick, since Morris Day hadn't been born yet.
I first saw this movie when I was a little kid. I was always scared of the witch, but I loved the guards and the flying monkeys! I really liked their designs and I thought their outfits looked really cool and pretty. Plus, the chant that the guards do is really cool and catchy!😄❤️
Fierce Tigergirl I was scared of the witch when I was little as well
Winged Monkeys, and yeah, I always thought they were funny. 🙂
0:29
Ohhhh, that's what Wreck It Ralph was parodying
I love the part when the orchestra picks up.
2:32
My daughter got me the Special Edition of the Wizard of Oz & in the documentary they discuss what the soldiers are actually chanting... Of course, it's voice actors/singers of which they slowed down to sound deeper-voiced & stuff...I forget off the top of my head what it is - next time I watch that I'll let you know...