Charlie and The Chocolate Factory

A movie full of imagination and fun.

It's a movie that has been watched many times by movie lovers. The film also teaches great lessons to the audience. For example, carrying serious messages about capitalism, consumer culture, addictions, and human behavior, Charlie's Chocolate Factory is a film with social criticism beyond being a fantastic children's film. For this reason, every period feeds the audience different feelings and thoughts when watched at every age.


Based on Roald Dahl's novel The Chocolate Factory, Willy Wonka & The Chocolate Factory was released as a musical film in 1971. The second adaptation, directed by Tim Burton, was released in 2005: Charlie's Chocolate Factory!

Legendary character Willy Wonka has a flamboyant and futuristic factory in an ordinary city. This fantastic factory is not accompanied by Charlie's house as an ordinary place in an ordinary city. This house, which has a rather unusual atmosphere, stands out as ordinary and different.

Willy Wonka is the owner of the world's most magical and mysterious chocolate factory. After many years, he decides to open the doors of his factory to five lucky children. Five children who find a golden ticket are entitled to visit the factory with an adult companion. Charlie Bucket, the child of a poor family, is thrown into the biggest adventure of his life by winning one of these tickets.

During the factory tour, the character and moral values of each child are tested. In this magical factory filled with chocolate river, flying candies, small Oompa-Loompa workers and other magical inventions, children and accompanying adults are waiting for extraordinary experiences.

The film highlights the importance of self-sacrifice, family ties, and imagination in the face of moral values and selfishness. Willy Wonka's background and family relationships reveal the depth and motivations of the character.

"Charlie and the Chocolate Factory" is about a boy's adventures in a magical chocolate factory full of imagination. Presented in Tim Burton's unique visual style, this film presents both a fascinating tale for children and a story with deep meanings for adults.