Review

Wonka: the perfect Christmas movie

Luca Fontana
6.12.2023
Translation: Elicia Payne

It’s an enchanting world in which Timothée Chalamet shines as the young Willy Wonka. This comes as no surprise since director Paul King has already made his two Paddington films a delight to watch at the movies.

Let me start off by saying that my review contains no spoilers. Any information stated here is featured in trailers that have already been released.


Not every back story is worth telling. Especially not when the origins are from Hollywood’s lack of ideas like when they simply fall back on what people already know. This is easier to market. And then the studio bosses build an entire cinematic universe around it. Gotta milk that cinematic cow well! That draws viewers in.

At least most of the time.

This is what Wonka’s all about

Despite being so young, Willy Wonka (Timothée Chalamet) harbours ambitious dreams. He wants nothing less than to become the greatest magician, inventor and chocolate maker in the world. So he travelled the world for seven years to perfect his skills, despite making enemies along the way... Do-ba-dee-doo.

When Wonka finally prepares to open his first store in a town world-famous for its chocolate, he faces fierce opposition from the nasty and cunning chocolate cartel. This has always ensured that chocolate remains expensive, while Wonka sells his at a ridiculously low price. Undeterred by the cartel’s attempts to compromise his creations, he relies on his ingenuity – and even a pinch or two of magic – to spread joy to the world with his chocolate.

A Christmas movie in the best, most cheesy sense

Criticism? I don’t like to criticise, but if I must...

It’s nice that Wonka's back story doesn’t just revolve entirely around him. It’s more about the effect Wonka has on the people around him with his bluntly charming personality – another thing that director King copied from his Paddington films.

My verdict: simple, magical and wonderful

I didn’t think it was possible, but Wonka is an enchanting movie that stimulates the imagination and warms the heart – perfect for the Christmas season. Admittedly, Wonka isn’t entirely free of clichés. But that doesn’t detract from the fun. This family movie is simply too heart-warming for both young and old.

The reason for this doesn’t just come from King’s direction full of charm, colour, wonder and ingenuity. Above all, it’s Timothée Chalamet as the perfectly cast, young Willy Wonka who carries the movie on his shoulders with ease. The fact that we don’t learn how his cosmopolitan version became the insular, opaque Wilder-Wonka of 1971 is a justified criticism. But it didn’t bother me.

The icing on the cake is then played by a completely different person anyway. A Brit: Hugh Grant. Not as an ageing beau. But an orange creature with green hair, shrunk to the size of a jar of sweets. I’ll just say one thing: make sure you stay seated during the credits.

Do-ba-dee-doo.


Wonka will be in cinemas from 7 December 2023. Runtime: 117 minutes. No age restriction.

Header image: Warner Bros.

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I write about technology as if it were cinema, and about films as if they were real life. Between bits and blockbusters, I’m after stories that move people, not just generate clicks. And yes – sometimes I listen to film scores louder than I probably should.


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