Francais | English | Espanõl

Charlie Bucket

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory character
Charlie Bucket
Gender Male
Personality Although very poor, Charlie is kind and loves Willy Wonka
Family Parents Mr. and Mrs. Bucket, Grandparents Grandpa Joe, and Grandma Josephine (on his father's side), and Grandpa George and Grandma Georgina (mother's side)
Town/City the character lives in Unknown
Portrayed by None

Charlie Bucket is the title character in the Roald Dahl children's book Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and its sequel, Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator. He is shown in all versions of the story to have strong moral character in contrast to the rest of the children who visit Willy Wonka's factory.

Contents

[edit] Actors

Charlie was played by Peter Ostrum in the 1971 musical film adaptation, titled Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory, and Freddie Highmore in the 2005 film Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. He is the hero in all versions and wins the factory due to his moral character and honesty. He lives with his mother, who remains nameless, and Grandpa George, Grandma Georgina, Grandpa Joe, and Grandma Josephine. In the 2005 version of the film, Charlie's father (Noah Taylor) is also present.

[edit] Different versions of Charlie

In addition, both adaptations deal with the major complaint about the character being so passive and having little to do in the factory tour beyond staying out of trouble.

[edit] Charlie in the 1971 film

Charlie and the Chocolate Factory character
Charlie Bucket
185px
Charlie Bucket portrayed by Peter Ostrum in the 1971 film
Gender Male
Personality Similar to book
Family See Above
Town/City the character lives in Unknown (believed to be the same town as the factory)
Portrayed by Peter Ostrum

In the 1971 film adaptation, Charlie and Grandpa Joe steal some Fizzy Lifting drink, and are nearly cut up by a ceiling fan as the gases in the drink send them rising. Willy Wonka reprimands Charlie for doing this, and nearly refuses to give Charlie his factory. Charlie then hands back the Everlasting Gobstopper that was meant to go to Arthur Slugworth. Appreciative of Charlie's honesty, Wonka gives Charlie the factory. Charlie in the 1971 movie also has a black-and-white TV set. This Charlie is more similar to the book version in appearance. Charlie appears to live in the same town as the Wonka factory in this version of the film.

In the book and the 2005 movie Charlie is displayed as a nearly perfect kid whereas the other "bad" children have serious character flaws. In this movie Charlie is discouraged as the tickets are found by the other winners. An example involves a scene not mentioned in the book or in the 2005 adaptation. Charlie is with his mother who is washing clothes and Charlie is clearly upset that the third ticket has been found. His mother tries to reassure that, when the contest is over, he will be like the other millions of children in the world who wanted a ticket but lost. Charlie responds by saying "But I AM different. I want it more than any of them." In the book and 2005 adaptation, Charlie is more apathetic when each ticket is found.

Charlie and the Chocolate Factory character
Charlie Bucket
Charlie Bucket played by Freddie Highmore in the 2005 remake
Gender Male
Personality Similar to book, although Charlie loses his respect for Wonka later in the film.
Family See Above
Town/City the character lives in Unknown
Portrayed by Freddie Highmore

In the 2005 film adaptation, Charlie continuously asks Wonka questions about his youth, often sending him into flashbacks. Charlie loves his family very much, and refuses to give them up in exchange for Wonka's factory. In the end, Charlie helps Wonka reconcile with his father, and moves his family into the factory (to be exact, the chocolate room). Charlie in this particular version of events seems to reside in England, though the exact location is more ambiguous than the previous film. Also, Charlie in both the 2005 and the 1971 version has a television set.

Additionally, Charlie idolizes Wonka more than the previous film. He has a drawing of the factory, saved the wrappers of his birthday candy, and also made a scale model of the factory out of sub-quality toothpaste caps his father found at work. Although, towards the end of the film after Charlie turns down Wonka's first offer of the factory, he loses respect for Wonka because he doesn't hold family in such high regard. But Charlie's opinion of him changes for the better, when Wonka realises (with Charlie's help) that family is an important part of having a successful chocolate factory.

Charlie is mocked by both Augustus and Violet. Even though Veruca is spoiled rotten and Mike likes violence, they both seem to tolerate Charlie, or at least know of his plight.

[edit] In the video game

You play as Charlie in all levels of the video game. Charlie's duty is to clean up the messes left behind by the naughty children and help return them to normal.


Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (Roald Dahl)
Characters:

Willy Wonka | Oompa-Loompas | Charlie Bucket | Augustus Gloop | Veruca Salt | Violet Beauregarde | Mike Teavee | Grandpa Joe | Mr. Slugworth | The Candy Man | Prince Pondicherry | Vermicious knid | Mr. and Mrs. Teavee | Mr. Salt | Mr. Beauregarde | Mrs. Beauregarde | Dr. Wilbur Wonka (only in Tim Burton film)

Books: Charlie and the Chocolate Factory | Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator
Films: Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory | Charlie and the Chocolate Factory
Misc.: Differences between the book and film versions | Golden Ticket | Wonka Bar | Video Game | other Roald Dahl films | other Roald Dahl books
es:Charlie Bucket

Personal tools