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YellowBrickRoad is a 2010 American horror film directed by Jesse Holland and Andy Mitton and starring Cassidy Freeman, Anessa Ramsey and Laura Heisler.It is about an expedition to discover the fate of an entire town that disappeared into the wilderness 70 years earlier.
Follow the yellow brick road through a piece of cinematic history. ... The 8 best Judy Garland movies to stream for her ... Burke was coming off a 1938 Best Supporting Actress Oscar nomination for ...
It took as many as twelve takes to have Toto run alongside the actors as they skipped down the Yellow Brick Road. All the Oz sequences were filmed in three-strip Technicolor, [23] [24] while the opening and closing credits, and the Kansas sequences, were filmed in black and white and colored in a sepia-tone process. [23]
The yellow brick road is a central element in the 1900 children's novel The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by American author L. Frank Baum. The road also appears in the several sequel Oz books such as The Marvelous Land of Oz (1904) and The Patchwork Girl of Oz (1913).
They follow a damaged yellow brick road to the Emerald City, which is in ruins and its citizens, including the Tin Man and Cowardly Lion, turned to stone. The Wheelers - people with wheels instead of hands and feet - seize them but they are saved by a mechanical man, Tik-Tok , who explains he was told by Scarecrow , the king of Oz, to await ...
The Yellow Brick Road and Beyond: Actor / Munchkin: Also "Special Thanks" credit, credited as Jerry Marin Hollywood Celebrates Its Biggest Little Stars! Himself: The 78th Annual Hollywood Christmas Parade: Himself: To Oz! The Making of a Classic: Himself (Archive footage) 2010: Frankenstein Rising: Manlon: Dahmer vs. Gacy: Mime: Heroic Ambition ...
Meinhardt Frank Raabe (/ ˈ m aɪ n ˌ h ɑːr t ˈ r ɑː b i /; September 2, 1915 – April 9, 2010) was an American actor. [1] [2] He was one of the last surviving Munchkin-actors in The Wizard of Oz, and was also the last surviving cast member with any dialogue in the film.
He places him in a group of writers with Charles Dickens (1812–1870), John Ruskin (1819-1900), George MacDonald (1824–1905), and Oscar Wilde (1854–1900). They brought an oppositional political perspective to their fairy tales and questioned the classical fairy tales and society at large.