'And - Oh, Auntie Em - there's no place like home!' is the last line in the beloved 1939 film version of 'The Wizard of Oz'. It's spoken by Dorothy Gale while she's lying in bed, looking at her family and friends, and holding onto her pet dog Toto. The sentence is part of what she says with everyone in the room in mind. But it's directed towards Aunt Em, who comforts a Dorothy beginning to tear up over the sheer happiness at being back home.
"There's no place like home" is the famous line that is in the movie but not the book version of "The Wizard of Oz."
Specifically, the line is what Dorothy Gale must say in the beloved 1939 film version in order to get back home to Kansas. It is what Glinda the Good Witch tells her to say. In contrast, in the original 1900 book edition, Glinda states that Dorothy must command the magic shoes where to go. Dorothy volunteers, "Take me home to Aunt Em!"
The horse of a different color was a character in The Wizard of Oz. It was a horse that continually changed colors. This is the most famous instance of that phrase being used, and it was an early film, but surely the phrase existed before than and was probably spoken in earlier films.
find out on line
This is a line from Grand Hotel,
Say hello to my little friend
This quote is from the movie The Usual Suspects directed by Bryan Singer
I think your looking for the Wizard of Oz.
finding neverland
Mah gudness!!
The horse of a different color was a character in The Wizard of Oz. It was a horse that continually changed colors. This is the most famous instance of that phrase being used, and it was an early film, but surely the phrase existed before than and was probably spoken in earlier films.
find out on line
This is a line from Grand Hotel,
Nobdoy puts Baby in a corner
Jerry Macguire
Say hello to my little friend
4
Jerry Maguire
This quote is from the movie The Usual Suspects directed by Bryan Singer