The movie Wicked feels less like a reimagining of The Wizard of Oz and more like a rebellion against it.
From the opening frame, it’s clear this isn’t Kansas anymore—or the Technicolor utopia we’ve come to associate with the 1939 classic.
Instead, Wicked recasts the story as a pointed critique of the Wizard, Oz’s gleaming authoritarian leader, and the system he represents. Gone is the bumbling, lovable fraud; in his place stands a shrewd manipulator whose machinations come to symbolize corruption and propaganda. The movie pulls no punches in making the Wizard a figure of ire, transforming him from a figurehead into the central antagonist of the tale.
This sharp turn isn’t new. Both Gregory Maguire’s novel and the Broadway production laid the groundwork for a sympathetic retelling of Elphaba’s story, the so-called “Wicked Witch of the West.”
But while the book was cerebral and the stage show leaned into its musical theater charisma, the movie opts for something bolder: a seething, cinematic anti-establishment statement. It doubles down on Maguire’s themes, turning every interaction with the Wizard into a battle of ideology.
There’s a revolutionary spirit here that’s reminiscent of Stanley Kubrick’s approach to The Shining. Just as Kubrick froze the Overlook Hotel, rejecting Stephen King’s fiery destruction of the haunted space, Wicked systematically dismantles the optimism of The Wizard of Oz. The original Oz was a world of vibrant cheer, where moral binaries were easy to grasp and order was restored with the click of ruby slippers.
Wicked rejects all of that, exposing the rot beneath the Emerald City’s glossy veneer and turning the Wizard into the story’s true source of evil.
The movie’s tone is darker, more dramatic, than its predecessors. The visual palette is rich with greens, blacks, and golds, a deliberate contrast to Oz’s usual saccharine brightness. Even Munchkinland looks less like a whimsical village and more like a microcosm of a broken society.
The musical numbers—still dazzling and operatic—are injected with a rawness that underscores the narrative’s revolutionary theme. Songs like “Defying Gravity” and “No Good Deed” bristle with fury and determination, no longer just anthems of self-discovery but rallying cries against tyranny.
And the Wizard? He’s portrayed as an unrepentant autocrat, wielding charm and cruelty in equal measure. His lies about Elphaba’s powers and motives go from whispers to full-on propaganda campaigns, cementing him as the face of a patriarchal regime. The film takes evident pleasure in dismantling his façade, making it impossible to separate the personal betrayal of Elphaba from the broader societal critique.
For fans of The Wizard of Oz, this may feel sacrilegious, even jarring. The 1939 film portrayed a world of clear moral binaries—good witches, bad witches, a righteous Dorothy. Wicked obliterates that simplicity, instead reveling in the gray areas of morality. Glinda is more complicit than virtuous, Dorothy is absent, and Elphaba is a tragic figure, the victim of a system that needs her to be the villain.
Cynthia Erivo stuns as Elphaba, delivering a performance packed with raw emotion and vocal power, particularly in her rendition of “Defying Gravity.” Ariana Grande brings surprising nuance to Glinda, balancing her comedic charm with a poignant undercurrent of moral conflict. Jeff Goldblum’s turn as the Wizard is both chilling and magnetic, embodying the perfect blend of charisma and menace.
Ultimately, Wicked is less about Oz and more about the systems of power that shape our perceptions. It’s a cinematic rebellion against the Wizard, against the mythology of Oz as a utopia, and perhaps against the naïve optimism of the original film itself.
Its kicker is as bold as its lead: Wicked isn’t content to simply rewrite the tale—it sets the whole thing on fire and invites you to watch it burn.