The Wizard of Oz.
I'm serious.
Beloved by film makers, Broadway patrons, old and young, everyone... except me.
I just don't get the big deal about the film. It feels very hackneyed, the songs feel forced, and frankly the film comes off as cliche, as does the acting, songs, sets, choreography, costumes, everything.
And I know what many of the Oz fans answer to this- "That was just the period! It'd be like if you said Shakespeare was a poor writer because folks don't talk like that in our time!"
And my answer is... yes, that was the period- but they went WAY too far, and made it WAY too dated, and frankly even within the context of its time, I just don't see it as being well done. An example of a film that DOES hold up? I'd say "Duck Soup," but technically that was a weak-to-so-so release (though now its a classic, Top 10 Best Comedies material) so I'll just say the Marx Brothers films in general. 4/5 of the humor still holds up to today (5/5 if you know the context the topical humor was written in and can get the joke on that account), and the acting is not AT ALL cliched or hackneyed. Groucho. Harpo. Chico. Zeppo. All hold up today (especially Groucho and, as a non-speaking performer, Harpo) performance-wise, and all still shine as great comedic acting. The people who ARE cliche, notably Margaret Dumont's characters, are that way by DESIGN, that's what makes them funny- they're so cliche and stock, the stereotypical snooty, upper-class woman, that it is a THRILL to see Groucho come in and just crash their world, the world of the Victorians, with sexual inuendos and sleight of speech.
Now take "Oz."
I can't say the same- Dorothy gasps or gets sad or worried at exactly the same time and with the exact words that the audience expects her to use. That would seem on the surface to be a good thing, but it isn't; there's a BIG difference between connecting with an audience emotionally and them just knowing what you'll say and do before you do it and being connected in THAT way.
With the Marxes, you NEVER know what they'll say or do next.
The songs- bland, very much stuck in the period. The Marxes are that way, too, except they carry over a bit better, for the simple reason they are just performed more engagingly. The Scarecrow will go on for a few minutes on the simple idea about a brain, Tin Man a heart... Groucho'll sing and the song will be on a topic, but at least with sly asides and inuendos that extend the reach of the song a bit into the modern day... and, again, its Groucho, so the energy level is FAR higher than the performers in "Oz."
Effects I won't knock, as that's not fair to do.
Everything is so bright and colorful, it actually at times seems LESS colorful than a Marx Brothers black-and-white, or a Stooges, or something like "Casablanca," a GREAT black-and-white that's set in period and carries through to today. The thing is, while "Oz" is colorful... its so colorful that it just cancels itself out. The Yellow Brick Road is Yellow, really, really yellow... the scenes are bright, really, really bright... the Emerald City is green, really, really green... it's like if I start drinking Mountain Dew and don't stop. The first can- good, if not tooth-rotting and a jolt to the senses (why ELSE do you drink Dew?) ;) The second- same. The third-0 still good, but the sugary taste is creeping in. Foruth- really sugary, the taste is becoming secondary. Six in- its just pure sugar and you're on a sugar-high and the great jolt the first can gave is lost, dulled... by the end of the 12-pack, you're just out cold from the sugar... or dead. :p
So that's how I feel about it, and my pick.
Sorry, most people (including all my friends) but I don not care for "The Wizard of Oz."