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Funny / The Wizard of Oz

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  • Any scene with the farmhands.
    Hickory: (raising his hand in a fixed position) One day they're going to erect a statue to me in this town!
    Aunt Em: ...And don't start posing for it now.
    Hunk: (laughs unashamedly)
    • They're bordering on Three Stooges territory:
      (mending a fence, Zeke accidentally mashes Hunk's thumb with a hammer)
      Hunk: Ow! You got my finger!
      Zeke: Well why don't get your finger out of the way!?
      • Later, Zeke says, "You were lucky it was your finger and it wasn't your head!".
  • Aunt Em's speech to Miss Almira Gulch (where she says that what she wants to say to her is sacrilegious), of course that particular scene borders onto Moment of Awesome territory.
    • Though the look Uncle Henry gives her counts.
    • Dorothy's also awesome threat to Miss Gulch is to get out "or I'll bite you myself!"
  • Uncle Henry and Miss Gulch's first meeting.
    Uncle Henry: You mean she bit ya?
    Miss Gulch: No, her dog.
    Uncle Henry: Ohh...she bit her dog, eh? (''accidentally'' lets the fence door hit Miss Gulch on the butt)
    Miss Gulch: No!
  • This line...
    Dorothy: Professor Marvel, why can't we go with you and see all the crowned heads of Europe?
    Professor Marvel: Do you know any?! .... Oh, you mean the things note ...
  • The little "Oh!" that Dorothy gives when the house lands, considering she was just in the middle of a freaking tornado. Dorothy kills witches without even trying and slaps rampaging lions in the face. Of course she no-sells Mother Nature.
    • Most of the tornado scene is this (well, when it hits the house; everything before that is serious), considering that Dorothy passes two guys in a rowboat and an old lady knitting, neither of them appearing to care about the disaster occurring around them.
    • What's both funny and adorable is Dorothy waving to the men in the boat.
  • The Munchkins tell Dorothy that, for killing the Wicked Witch of the East, she's "history"; she gives a brief look of horror, before they clarify "she'll be history".
  • The Wicked Witch establishes herself as evil by learning that her sister is dead... and getting excited that now she can take her powerful magic shoes.
  • Glinda asks Dorothy if she's a good witch or a bad one. Dorothy says that she's not a witch, to which Glinda (having been told that a "new witch" had dropped a house on the Wicked Witch of the East) asks if Toto is the witch.
  • When Glinda tells the Wicked Witch to "Begone! Before someone drops a house on you!", the Witch actually looks up in alarm. Complete with Musical Sting.
    • Even funnier is that when she looks back at Glinda ("Very well...") she sneaks another quick glance up at the sky, as if a house might have appeared that quickly.
  • Dorothy lampshades how easily the witches transport themselves.
    "My! People come and go so quickly here."
    • Right after she says this, the munchkins giggle and nod in agreement.
  • Despite not having any brains, the Scarecrow makes a very good point.
    "I don't know [why I can talk without a brain]. But some people without brains do an awful lot of talking, don't they?"
  • The Scarecrow's way of getting apples is encouraging the sentient trees to throw them at him and Dorothy.
  • The Scarecrow shouting, "Yay! We're off to see a wizard!"... and then falling over.
    Dorothy: "You're not starting out very well."
  • During "If I Only Had a Brain", the Scarecrow notes that he could think of things he'd never "thunk" before.
  • Despite being an almost indestructible man of metal, carrying a weapon, no less, and an easily re-constructible man, both Tin Man and the Scarecrow are too weak to stand up to the Cowardly Lion.
    Tin Man: Yes, get up and teach him a lesson.
    Scarecrow: What's wrong with you teaching him?
    Tin Man: Well I hardly know him.
  • The Lion had some great one liners.
    • "How long can ya stay fresh in that can?" (to the Tin Man)
    • "Trapped! Trapped like mice – er – rats!"
    • "...Shucks, folks, I'm speechless!"
    • One of his best moments is the one where he says nothing at all. "Ehhhhh... and YOU, Lion!" Lion is of course too frightened to speak. "WELL?!" The Lion promptly faints.
      • The face he made just before he fainted is comedy gold.
    • Lion wakes up after Glinda destroys the poppy fields: "Unusual weather we're having, ain't it?"
    • "I do believe in spooks. I do believe in spooks. I do, I do, I do. I do believe in spooks. I do believe in spooks. I do, I do, I do, I do!" (He says this after the Tin Man states that he doesn't believe in spooks and then gets lifted up into the air).
    • Lion is playing with his tail in stress. He looks behind, terrified, as they walk down the hall to see the Wizard. When his friends ask what happened, he sobs, "Somebody pulled my tail!" Scarecrow says, "You did it yourself." and Lion looks at his tail in his own hands and goes, "I... oh."
    • Let's face it, the Cowardly Lion is CMoF personified!
    • And what we get in the film is apparently the toned down version, as Bert Lahr did a lot of improvising that unfortunately had to be cut as he had the other actors laughing their heads off— yes, even Judy Garland, who was otherwise having a hellishly awful time on the set by all accounts, and certainly must've appreciated the levity brought on by Lahr's improvisations.
  • When the poppy field puts Dorothy, Toto, and the Cowardly Lion into a Forced Sleep, the Scarecrow thinks they're just taking a little rest and says, "You can't rest now; we're nearly there!".
  • As Dorothy and her friends head out of the poppy field and towards the gate to the Emerald City, they get startled by a disembodied chorus singing.
  • The literal horse of a different colour (in fact several different colours; it changes from white to purple to red to yellow).
  • From "The Merry Old Land of Oz":
    • They apparently get up at twelve, start to work at one, take an hour-long lunch break, and clock out at two.
    • Dorothy asks if the spa lady can dye her eyes to match her gown. She responds in the affirmative.
  • Another gem from the lion:
    Lion: What do they got that I ain't got?
    Scarecrow, Tin Man, and Dorothy: Courage!
    Lion: You can say that again.
  • And this:
    Lion: All right. I'll do it for Dorothy! Wicked Witch or no Wicked Witch! Guards or no guards, I'll take them apart. I may not come out alive but I'm going in! There's just one thing I want you fellas to do!
    Tin Man and Scarecrow: What's that?
    Lion: Talk me out of it! (he starts to back up as Tin Man and Scarecrow give him glares before grabbing him)
    Tin Man and Scarecrow: Oh, no... No, you don't...
  • And then after the trio acquires some guard uniforms and joins the troop marching back inside the witch's castle, the Lion, last in line, fights to push his tail out of sight as it waves around.
  • Lion reading the sign at the entrance to the Witch's Forest: "I'd turn back if I were you." He nods and does an about-face, with Tin Man and Scarecrow promptly grabbing him and lifting him into the air. Lion even kicks his feet in the air in protest!
    • This also counts as Mood Whiplash; after a frightening scene where the quartet meet the Wizard of Oz, the Cowardly Lion runs back down the hallway and dives out a window.
    • Not to mention accidentally knocking the Scarecrow on his ass in the process.
  • When climbing the mountain to the Witch's castle.
    Lion: "I hope my strength holds out."
    Tin Man: "I hope your tail holds out!"
  • "The Great Oz has spoken! Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain!"
    • His line after being unveiled: I AM THE GREAT AND POWERFUL ... (meekly) Wizard of Oz.
    • The Wizard turning out to be every bit the con artist that Professor Marvel is. He couldn't even stop the balloon because he didn't know how it worked (though he may have been referring to the "magic" rather than the balloon itself). (Sounds like Dorothy dodged a bullet by disembarking early).
    • He explains how his balloon was knocked off course.
      Dorothy: Weren't you frightened?
      Wizard: Frightened? Child, you're talking to a man who's laughed in the face of death, sneered at doom, and chuckled at catastrophe... I was petrified.
  • A winged monkey attack and Dorothy in potential danger won't stop the Tin Man and the Cowardly Lion from cracking a couple of jokes at the Scarecrow's expense.
    Tin Man: What happened to you?
    Scarecrow: Well, they tore my legs off and they threw them over there, and then they took my chest out and they threw it over there.
    Tin Man: Well, that's you all over.
    Cowardly Lion: They sure knocked the stuffings out of you, didn't they?
  • The entirety of 'If I Were King of the Forest,' but especially when the Tin Man breaks a pot of flowers for the Lion to use as a crown.
  • What falls under Black Comedy as The Wicked Witch of the West narrates her own death at the hands of Dorothy.
    "You cursed brat! Look what you've done! I'm melting! melting! Oh, what a world! What a world! Who would have thought a good little girl like you could destroy my beautiful wickedness?"
    • She then screams "Look out! Look out! I'm going!" – as if despite her wickedness and even in her dying agony, she's politely warning the onlookers not to let her steaming melted remains get on their feet.
  • During the Tin Man's 'If I Only Had a Heart' dance, he starts falling back and forth, with Dorothy and the Scarecrow running back and forth to catch him, until finally, while Dorothy runs to the other side, the Scarecrow, fed up, just stands straight and puts his hands on his hips.
    • He also considers locking his new heart with a zipper.
  • When everyone is trying to find an alternative for what to do with Toto without having him be euthanized, Aunt Em manages to throw a little shade at Miss Gulch.
    Aunt Em: How about if [Dorothy] keeps him tied up? He's really very gentle... well... with gentle people, that is.

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