How Did The Wizard Of Oz End?

2026-04-07 22:25:32 234
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4 Réponses

Mila
Mila
2026-04-08 22:31:10
Classic case of 'be careful what you wish for.' Dorothy spends the whole movie desperate to leave Oz, only to discover home was her heart's destination. The actual mechanics—Glinda's reveal about the slippers, the heel-clicking, waking up in bed—are straightforward, but the emotional resonance isn't. Her tearful reunion with Aunt Em gets me every time. The brilliance is how Baum (and the filmmakers) make you question reality. Why do the farmhands mirror her Oz friends? Why does Toto chase Miss Gulch like the Witch? It suggests Oz was Dorothy's psyche processing real fears and friendships. That gray area between fantasy and growth is why this ending endures.
Graham
Graham
2026-04-09 00:30:50
The ending of 'The Wizard of Oz' is deceptively simple but layered. Dorothy returns home, yes, but the emotional payoff comes from her realizing home was what she wanted all along—not the flashy Emerald City or the Wizard's promises. What gets me is how the story frames her adventure. Was Oz real? The film cleverly leaves clues: the farmhands' resemblance to her companions, the Wicked Witch's parallel to Miss Gulch, even the ruby slippers being mismatched in Kansas (one pair was silver in the book!). It's a masterclass in symbolic storytelling. Dorothy's final line—'And you were there, and you!'—addresses her Kansas family, but her tone suggests she's also thanking her Oz friends. That duality kills me every time. The ending respects kids' intelligence by refusing to say 'it was just a dream.' It validates imagination as its own kind of truth.
Julian
Julian
2026-04-11 04:53:22
That finale! Dorothy wakes up in her bed, Kansas monochrome after Oz's technicolor explosion, and it's such a gut punch. All those wild experiences—tornadoes, flying monkeys, talking trees—reduced to a bump on the head? But the brilliance is in the details. The farmhands share traits with her Oz friends (Hunk's logic like the Scarecrow, Hickory's kindness like the Tin Man), suggesting Oz was a subconscious journey. The Wicked Witch even resembles Miss Gulch! The movie winks at us: reality and fantasy aren't so separate. Dorothy insists it wasn't a dream, and I believe her. The way she clutches Toto, tearfully saying 'There's no place like home,' feels earned. She needed Oz to appreciate Kansas. It's a kid's adventure with an adult lesson: sometimes you have to get lost to find yourself.
Chloe
Chloe
2026-04-12 11:05:39
Dorothy's journey in 'The Wizard of Oz' wraps up in this bittersweet yet heartwarming way. After all the chaos in Oz—meeting the Scarecrow, Tin Man, and Cowardly Lion, defeating the Wicked Witch, and realizing the Wizard was just a regular guy—she finally learns the power was in her all along. Glinda reveals the ruby slippers could take her home anytime. Clicking her heels three times, she wakes up in Kansas, surrounded by family, wondering if it was all a dream. But the way her friends in Oz mirrored real people in her life makes you think... maybe it wasn't. That ambiguity is what sticks with me—the idea that adventures change us, even if others dismiss them as fantasy.

I love how the ending doesn't spoon-feed answers. The farmhands' parallels to her Oz companions hint that the magic was real in some way, or at least that Dorothy's growth was. It's a gorgeous metaphor for how childhood imagination shapes us. And Aunt Em's line, 'We dream a lot of nonsense when we grow up,' hits differently after seeing Dorothy's 'nonsense' save a whole kingdom. The film leaves you questioning what's real, much like how nostalgia tints our own memories.
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