Film Review – Wonka (2023)

Title – Wonka (2023) 

Director – Paul King (Paddington 2) 

Cast – Timothée Chalamet, Olivia Colman, Matt Lucas, Keegan-Michael Key, Hugh Grant 

Plot – A look at the early life of esteemed chocolate factory master Willy Wonka (Chalamet) and his rise against the odds. 

“You see… I’m something of a magician”

Review by Eddie on 15/12/2023

Proving that his work on the one two punch that was Paddington and then it’s universally praised sequel was not per chance, British director Paul King has managed to bring the same amount of energy, charm, heart and smarts he delivered with his marmalade loving bear to this high profile Willy Wonka prequel that should become the crowd pleasing hit of this years festive/holiday period. 

Utilising his comedy background and career making work on the cult UK TV series The Mighty Boosh (fans of which will be pleased to see a key role for Rich Fulcher here), King ensures that his musical infused adventure that follows Timothée Chalamet’s young Willy Wonka during his first attempts to conquer the chocolate world with his magical inventions and colorful showmanship, is a film that constantly is on the move and one that ensures it’s filled to the brim with wonder, whimsy and wackiness that should find it appealing to a wide ranging age-group and audience. 

It’s not as though the world was exactly crying out to find out more about the beloved character many of us fell in love with either in Roald Dahl’s original book or the Gene Wilder starring classic film from 1971 but King and his screenwriting partner Simon Farnaby instantly make us engaged and interested in this tale that has a wide ranging reach and works in a number of facets without ever losing momentum. 

Rarely pausing for breath between its colourful character interactions, enjoyable song and dance numbers and more poignant aspects that make Wonka more than just all sugar and no substance, King’s enjoyable ride harbours a clear labour of love at its core that gels perfectly with its more old-school film-making vibe and delivery that once more acts as an example that Hollywood’s incessant nature to try and be “hip” and boundary pushing isn’t always needed to find a winning formula. 

Within King’s winning Wonka formula he has managed to create and gift a number of memorably fun performances from his talented cast and while Chalamet gives it his best shot in easily his most challenging performance yet, his role as Willy Wonka doesn’t always seem ideally suited to his acting sensibilities, it’s in the supporting cast that Wonka finds its comedic gold. 

From Olivia Colman’s yellow-toothed nasty Mrs. Scrubbit, Tom Davis’s wild-haired Bleacher, Keegan-Michael Key’s sweet-toothed police chief and Hugh Grant’s (bizarrely controversial) scene-stealing Oompa-Loompa, Wonka’s cast of newbies and industry vets alike all have a blast playing their parts here and Wonka’s overall feeling and end result seems to be the product of a film that was a lot of fun to make and bring to life. 

There may not be any groundbreaking new messages taking place here and I don’t suspect Wonka will ever be regarded as the type of family friendly all-time classic as its original source material or first film iteration are seen as but it would take a hard-hearted and Scrubbit like viewer to not find enjoyment from such an entertaining and imaginative new take on one of the worlds most well-known properties. 

Final Say – 

Another resounding success for director Paul King, who has here further established his reputation as the leader of family friendly cinematic adventures, Wonka is a charming and enjoyable big screen ride that deserves to be this years most resounding holiday hit.   

4 unsolved murders out of 5 

This will be the last post on the site for 2023. I hope everyone has a great holiday period and look forward to being back on deck in 2024. See you at the movies! 

7 responses to “Film Review – Wonka (2023)

  1. I was laughing when I saw the score as “unsolved murders” as a clear reference to the original Willy Wonka movie’s fridge horror since that’s one of the reasons it was considered ironically one of the scariest movies in America. Haha! It’s so weird that there’s another Wonka movie that happened in my lifetime despite the original existing way before I was born. If Hollywood isn’t doing remakes, they’re making prequels.

    • You will have to keep an ear out for the murder reference in this entry to!
      It’s strange with this film as I really don’t think we needed it but as it stands its a great family film and one that stands on its own even weighed up against the original.
      E

      • That’s something I’m trying to scour, but I’m struggling to find the other reference. You’re still talking about the review itself, right? It’s good they actually put effort in the prequel though.

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