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The Patchwork Girl of Oz

  • 1914
  • 1h 21min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
5.4/10
609
TU CALIFICACIÓN
The Patchwork Girl of Oz (1914)
AdventureComedyFamilyFantasy

Ojo y Unc Nunkie se han quedado sin comida, por lo que deciden viajar a la Ciudad Esmeralda, donde nunca morirán de hambre.Ojo y Unc Nunkie se han quedado sin comida, por lo que deciden viajar a la Ciudad Esmeralda, donde nunca morirán de hambre.Ojo y Unc Nunkie se han quedado sin comida, por lo que deciden viajar a la Ciudad Esmeralda, donde nunca morirán de hambre.

  • Dirección
    • J. Farrell MacDonald
  • Guionista
    • L. Frank Baum
  • Elenco
    • Violet MacMillan
    • Frank Moore
    • Raymond Russell
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    5.4/10
    609
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • J. Farrell MacDonald
    • Guionista
      • L. Frank Baum
    • Elenco
      • Violet MacMillan
      • Frank Moore
      • Raymond Russell
    • 19Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 6Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Fotos13

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    Elenco principal26

    Editar
    Violet MacMillan
    Violet MacMillan
    • Ojo, a Munchkin Boy
    Frank Moore
    • Unc Nunkie, Ojo's Guardian
    Raymond Russell
    • Dr. Pipt, the Crooked Magician
    Leontine Dranet
    • Margolotte, his wife, who makes the Patchwork Girl
    • (as Haras Dranet)
    Bobbie Gould
    • Jesseva, his daughter, betrothed to Danx
    Marie Wayne
    • Jinjur, a Maid in the Emerald City
    Richard Rosson
    • Danx, a Noble Munchkin
    • (as Dick Rosson)
    Frank Bristol
    • The Soldier with the Green Whiskers (Omby Amby)
    Fred Woodward
    • The Woozy, a Quaintness…
    Todd Wright
    • The Wizard of Oz
    Bert Glennon
    Bert Glennon
    • The Scarecrow
    • (as Herbert Glennon)
    Hal Roach
    Hal Roach
    • The Cowardly Lion
    • (as Al Roach)
    • …
    Dave Anderson
    Dave Anderson
    • The Hungry Tiger
    • (as Andy Anderson)
    Jessie May Walsh
    • Ozma of Oz, the Ruler of the Emerald City
    William Cook
    • The Royal Chamberlain
    Ben Deeley
    Ben Deeley
    • Rozyn, the Village Fiddler
    Lon Musgrave
    • The Tin Woodman
    Pierre Couderc
    Pierre Couderc
    • Scraps, the Patchwork Girl
    • (as The Marvelous Couderc)
    • Dirección
      • J. Farrell MacDonald
    • Guionista
      • L. Frank Baum
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios19

    5.4609
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    Opiniones destacadas

    8FieCrier

    cute movie, which still entertains after nearly 100 years!

    Quite an enjoyable movie. I'd seen it twice before (in the Origins of Film box set), and watched it again with my grandmother who was born the year it was released. L. Frank Baum produced, and was evidently on the set with the director.

    A young boy named Ojo (played by a woman) lives with his Unc Nunkie, and they've run out of food. They decide to go to Oz, where there is always more than enough food.

    On the way, they encounter a wizard who's been working on a potion for six years to create life. His wife, using a magic wand, assembles a human-size patchwork doll to use the potion on. It won't have brains, since that makes for better servants says the wife. Ojo decides to mix up some magic brains and surreptitiously put them in, however. After the Patchwork Girl (played by a man) is brought to life, there's an accident that results in the wizard's wife, Unc Nunkie, and the Munchkin lover of the wizard's daughter being petrified. Munchkins in this film are not little people, though they do wear different costumes.

    Ojo, the Patchwork Girl, the wizard, his daughter and her friends must go out to collect ingredients for an antidote: three hairs from a Woozy's tail, a six-leaved clover, and a gill of water from a Dark Well. The daughter has her father shrink her petrified boyfriend down to doll size, since she can't be without him.

    On the way, they meet one-legged Hoppers, tribal Tottenhots, and jolly Horners. They encounter a maid of Oz who helps them, but who also develops a liking for the petrified Munchkin.

    The sets are simple, yet nicely establish a fantasy world. Costumes are good too. The wizard character is stooped and knock-kneed (possibly from stirring a potion for six years with his hands *and* legs?). The Woozy is neat, a big boxy cat played by Fred Woodward, who specialized in animal roles (he does several others in this movie). Despite being a simple costume, it seems more real than some CGI creations.

    The Wizard of Oz, the Tin Man, the Scarecrow, and the Cowardly Lion show up towards the end. The original mission to obtain food is forgotten by that point!

    It's a cute movie, and I suspect that despite being silent (with musical score added) and black and white, and ninety-one years old that it would still delight small children.
    F Gwynplaine MacIntyre

    Better than that Munchkin movie

    "The Patchwork Girl of Oz" was the most racist of L. Frank Baum's Oz novels, featuring the Tottenhots (stereotyped Africans) and also an ambulatory Victrola phonograph that sings ragtime songs in an offensive "darky" dialect. Fortunately, this film version (written and directed by Baum himself) omits the ragtime racism and reconceives the Tottenhots so that they're only barely recognisable as racist stereotypes. This is a fun movie, which I recommend without reservation for adults and kids.

    It is of course rather a crude film, even by silent standards, and hampered by cross-sexed casting in both directions. The hero of the film, a Munchkin boy named Ojo, is obviously played by an adult woman. The Patchwork Girl, Scraps, is very obviously played by a man. However, Pierre Couderc, the French acrobat who plays this role, gives an incredible performance. He effortlessly turns backward handsprings and shoulder kips, his performance made even more amazing by the bulky costume and elaborate hoop skirt he's wearing. There's one very amusing sight gag when the Patchwork Girl and the Scarecrow meet for the first time. Ah, true love!

    The plot of this film is a simplified version of the Oz novel. Orphan boy Ojo and his elderly Unk Nunkie visit Doctor Pipt the magician. Pipt has invented the Powder of Life, which brings life to any inanimate object it touches. (Why doesn't it animate its own container?) Pipt's wife Margolotte has made a girl dummy out of patchwork quilts, which will become Margolotte's maidservant after Pipt animates it. When Pipt brings the Patchwork Girl to life, her exuberance causes her accidentally to spill another elixir over Margolotte and Unk Nunkie, which transforms them into marble statues. Dr Pipt can't reverse the enchantment until he mixes another batch of the Powder of Life, which requires certain ingredients ... including three hairs from a Woozy's tail. Ojo sets forth to obtain the ingredients.

    Animal impersonator Fred Woodward does amazing work as several different animals. Woodward is the spiritual father of Janos Prohaska, a 1960s stuntman who specialised in portraying animals and aliens. One of the roles Woodward plays here is the Woozy, a creature whose body is made of cardboard boxes. (This is a very low-budget movie, but that's part of its charm.) The squared-off look of the Woozy in the Oz book's illustrations was obviously inspired by the low-budget costume worn by Woodward in this movie.

    TRIVIA NOTE: Watch for Harold Lloyd and Hal Roach Snr (very early in their careers) in grass skirts and body paint as two of the Tottenhots. Shortly after this movie was filmed, Roach received the inheritance which enabled him to set up his own film studio. Juanita Hansen, later a Roach actress, appears briefly here. Also glimpsed is Charles Ruggles, who would soon get his big break as Private Files in L. Frank Baum's stage musical "Tik-Tok in Oz".

    "The Patchwork Girl of Oz" is an absolute delight, which adults and children will enjoy in repeated viewings. There are some impressive sets and costumes, despite the low budget. Jaded modern audiences will sneer at the very crude special effects, but I would rather watch this movie instead of a certain overrated MGM musical starring Liza Whatsername's mother.
    6lee_eisenberg

    Oz's other link to Laurel & Hardy

    The most famous movie adaptation of a novel by L. Frank Baum entails Toto, a tornado, ruby slippers and a yellow brick road. Well, it turns out that Victor Fleming's 1939 adaptation was not the first. An earlier screen version of "The Wizard of Oz" was a 1925 loose adaptation of the story, notable for casting Oliver Hardy as the Tin Woodsman.

    And then there were the adaptations in which Baum himself participated. He founded the Oz Film Manufacturing Company and made some movie versions of his novels. These aren't the most sophisticated adaptations but are worth seeing as a look into early cinema. "The Patchwork Girl of Oz" features things like people getting turned into statues (and one of them getting shrunken down so that a woman can carry him). Yeah, Baum came up with some wacky stuff.

    One interesting thing about this movie is that the lion is played by none other than Hal Roach, best known as the producer of Laurel & Hardy's movies. It appears that only Stan Laurel didn't get to go to Oz on the silver screen. Of course, I can't picture him in Oz without imagining that he would have turned everything upside down. In other words, it would have been another fine mess that he'd gotten himself into!

    Anyway, this movie is worth seeing. I wonder what Baum would have thought of the most famous adaptation of his work, had he lived to see it.
    Snow Leopard

    Enjoyable Story & Characters; Pretty Resourceful Despite the Rough Edges

    The enjoyable story and characters in "The Patchwork Girl of Oz" makes it a fun movie to watch, and it is also pretty resourceful for its era. It does have a lot of rough edges and shows some signs of age, but its energy and creativity more than make up for those. As with all of the Oz features made by L. Frank Baum's own studio, it shows his influence in the way that the fantasy world of Oz is brought to life with enthusiasm.

    As with most of Baum's Oz stories, it has plenty of oddball characters and offbeat developments. A couple of odd casting choices add to the curious feel, with Pierre Couderc making Scraps look much like a male, and Violet Macmillan making Ojo seem more like a young girl. But they and the rest of the cast give their characters plenty of life, which really is more significant in a movie like this. As in the other Oz movies in the series, Fred Woodward also gets to perform a number of his costumed animal characters.

    The story is one of Baum's most creative ones, telling a complex story in which the agendas and motivations of many different characters come into conflict. This adaptation is imaginative in using a lot of different techniques to reproduce the look of the characters, the magical events, and the hectic activity.

    Much of it works rather well, and all of it represents a very good attempt for its time. Very few film-makers of the era ever tried to make a full-length picture out of such challenging fantasy material, and even if it has a fair number of rough edges, it remains a worthwhile and entertaining effort.
    6spompermayer

    Interesting Little Film

    As a child, The Patchwork Girl of Oz was my favorite Oz book. This silent film version is a charming look at how Oz was envisioned by it's creator--L. Frank Baum produced the film. The story however does stray from the book and some of the scenes are a bit disjointed. Motion pictures were in their infancy in 1914--most films were stagebound dramas, so to see a fantasy film from this period is unique.

    The Patchwork Girl or "Scraps" is played by French acrobat Pierre Couderc. The part where Scraps catches the eye of the Scarecrow is very amusing. Also, the Yoop character is a forerunner to the Winged Monkeys who terrorized Judy Garland 25 years later.

    In the video version I saw, the pivotal scene where Scraps is brought to life and tips over the Liquid of Petrification, is missing or destroyed--but the rest of the film is intact however.

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    Argumento

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    • Trivia
      Harold Lloyd and Hal Roach, who both have minor roles in this film, met on this set in San Diego. Roach was impressed by Lloyd's energy and sought him out when he formed his production company The Rolin Film Company in July 1914 after receiving a small inheritance. Although their association was stormy, their association was ultimately one of the most successful in silent film history.
    • Errores
      The character of Ojo is stated several times to be a boy, but is referred to as a girl in one of the dialogue caption cards.
    • Conexiones
      Featured in American Masters: Harold Lloyd: The Third Genius (1989)

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    • How long is The Patchwork Girl of Oz?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

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    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 28 de septiembre de 1914 (Estados Unidos)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idiomas
      • Ninguno
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • The Ragged Girl of Oz
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Los Ángeles, California, Estados Unidos
    • Productora
      • The Oz Film Manufacturing Company
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Tiempo de ejecución
      1 hora 21 minutos
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Silent
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.33 : 1

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