Nowadays people don't realize how much color plays a role in the real world and what a great impact it has on movies tv shows and novels especially L.Frank Baum’s “The Wonderful Wizard Of Oz” color plays a big role in this novel that helps the reader visualize and understand what the characters are going through from their mood to their appearance the role of color plays a huge part in the novel and symbolizes many things such as Dorothy's appearance the group meeting Glinda the good witch all of these clearly show how much color impacts the novel by giving the reader a better visualize throughout the story. Firstly the color in L.Frank Baum “The Wonderful Wizard Of Oz” I feel impacts the novel in a big way although I have never seen the movie …show more content…
Frank Baum also tells us that she prefers to be clean and her clothes being nice and pretty because visualizing this in my head tells me she wears cute little outfits and that she must be pretty young just with a few lines and color I can see how she looks and who she is as a character which shows how these colors symbolize Dorothy's appearance. Secondly, another part of the story that shows how much color impacts the novel and what it symbolized in a part of the story is where Dorothy, Lion, Scarecrow and Tim the Woodman meet Glinda the good witch of the South in the sentence it states “She was both beautiful and young to their
Could you ever imagine if The Wonderful Wizard of Oz written by L. Frank Baum didn’t have a yellow brick road or an Emerald City? The colors chosen are significant and give the story a deeper meaning. Three colors that stand out in the beginning, middle and the end of the novel are gray, yellow and green. In the novel The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, Baum’s use of color is symbolic by associating distinct colors with specific settings and characters.
And examples like these is what made the use of Technicolor in The Wizard of Oz so incredible. Filmmakers, actors, and film lovers across different spectrums were being exposed to how Technicolor made certain scenes in films come alive. The use of vivid color added artistic value to cinema. Color also represented many different vivid ideas and thoughts. And color was an important aspect in The Wizard of Oz. imagine if the yellow brick road was a plain gray or if the Emerald City never sparkle with mystifying colors of green. We would have experience a completely different Wizard of Oz.
The author of “Confessions of a Liberal Gun Owner” is both anti-gun and pro-gun. He argues that it is too easy for someone to obtain a gun and that there should be tighter regulations on gun ownership. But at the same time, he also believes that owning guns can be useful especially when they are needed to protect yourself or your family.
One of the Great Classics of the last 100 years has been The Wizard of Oz. Nearly everyone has seen it and if they haven’t seen it, they’ve heard about it. The Wizard of Oz has been considered a vividly imaginative work of fantasy in both its book and movie form. When the movie came out in 1939 America had its eye turned to the rest of the world as World War 2 unfolded yet it still captured the attention of many with its use of the new technology Technicolor and its fantastic story. At the time no one had ever considered it to be anything more than a work of fantasy, however as the years have gone by people have begun to notice certain aspects of the movie that relate to a time and eventually a movement that developed earlier in American history.
Colors have a large impact on society. They have the ability to affect people’s moods, appetites, and behaviors. Colors also have the ability to act as symbols. For example, the color white often acts as a symbol of innocence, and the color yellow often represents happiness. Throughout the book The Great Gatsby, multiple colors symbolize different aspects of Jay Gatsby’s life.
According to Film Art, it consists of “setting, costume and makeup, lighting, and staging” (Bordwell 115). In “The Wizard of OZ” these aspects of Mise-en-Scene all come together to make up a spectacular viewing experience. Created in 1939 and directed by Victor Fleming, “The Wizard of Oz” was one of the first successful Technicolor films. Since this film was shot primarily in color, it gave the directors and costume designers many new opportunities to use color in ways that they hadn’t been able to before. The main point I will be demonstrating is how the filmmakers effectively used color and costuming to convey certain feelings and messages throughout the film.
When assessing an infant or child for suspected child abuse Frist, the nurse needs to listen and observe, look the child's appearance, watch the behavior and interaction of the adults who accompanied the patient. Listen to the information provided while taking a history and looking for any signs or symptoms.
The standard color wheel puts blue to the right which correlates with the direction of the East. Yellow is to the left on the color wheel which correlates in same direction as the West. Symbolic associations affect emotions and we're chosen particularly to create direct and indirect perceptions that help create the essence of the story for the audience. The creator of The Wizard of Oz uses the significance of color combined with the significance of symbols to guide the readers attention to details or charactors is used to influence & engage the reader through the journey by influencing perceptions of charactors and psychological associations necessary to follow the plot. Experiencing the yellow brick road & the concept of a rainbow communicates better days ahead, hope & optimism. That hope led Dorothy to become stronger for the difficulties she had to overcome & overall empowered her rather then portraying her as a Daniel in distress. The yellow brick road creates the direction of Dorothy's dreams of a better happy place in contrast to home in dreary dark and white
In L. Frank Baum's "The Wizard of Oz," the coloration throughout the Land of Oz is quite important. Perhaps Baum used varying color themes as a metaphor for ethnicity; if so, this demonstrates that the Wicked Witches correlate to historical figures such as Francisco Pizarro, whom historian Jared Diamond describes (in his renowned novel, "Guns, Germs, and Steel") as having used fear as a weapon, in conjunction with the unseen and misunderstood force of disease (this could be a metaphor for magic).
The use of color is an important role in the novel. Baum was influenced by color. The Oz itself is divided into different counties, or regions. Each country of the Oz had its own distinct color. The color scheme is very important also.
On a chilly Halloween evening October 31, 2015. Jack and Alex started to get ready to go Trick or Treating. Their friend Jake was having a Halloween party. Jack asked his mom if she could go with to get the candy and she agreed. So Jack and Alex started to go stopping at people's houses to get candy.
References to black and white carry the most weight and contribute much to the actions of the characters; those colors often are used as a comment on race, on good and evil, on sexuality,
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz projects its message in a very subtle unsuspected way. For a child the story is just a magical story full of colors but underlying the colors “Baum created a children’s story with a symbolic allegory implicit within its story line and characterization” (50). The book is full of symbolism, when Dorothy lands on West Witch with her house, she is given a pair of silver slippers by the Good Witch of the North. She is
While there are many themes that L. Frank Baum writes about in The Wonderful Wizard of Oz that focuses on a young, maturing girl named Dorothy Gale; that is living in a grey world and then suddenly her life is full of color after a cyclone. Throughout the story, Dorothy Gale is reminded that the land of Oz is beautiful and much more interesting that Kansas ever will and it takes her awhile to realize it along her adventurous plan. The two themes that stand out throughout the story is the childhood to maturity that Dorothy progresses in and a twisted way that makes you see the virtue in the story, also known as the disability of it all. The Wonderful Wizard of Oz is not all just a children's fairytale. Although the land of Oz is depicted as
Crime, romance, tragedy. These qualities put together have the ability to make a fascinating book, but when taking a close look, one can find that there is more to it than that. In The Great Gatsby, colors and their connotations add another level of understanding to the book by symbolizing different social classes while creating imagery and adding to the reader's understanding of a dream. Most every color can be categorized through its connotations to the social classes they represent, mainly the old rich, new rich, and lower class. Everyday objects can all hold a deeper meaning when looking at something as simple as the color.