The Sequel To Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory That Charlie’s Mother Deserves
The house wasn’t nearly large enough for so many people, and life was extremely uncomfortable for them all. There were only two rooms in the place altogether, and there was only one bed. The bed was given to the four old grandparents because they were so old and tired. They were so tired, they never got out of it.
Grandpa Joe and Grandma Josephine on this side, Grandpa George and Grandma Georgina on this side. Mr and Mrs Bucket and little Charlie Bucket slept in the other room, upon mattresses on the floor. In the summertime, this wasn’t too bad, but in the winter, freezing cold draughts blew across the floor all night long, and it was awful…
Then very slowly, with a slow and marvellous grin spreading all over his face, Grandpa Joe lifted his head and looked straight at Charlie. The colour was rushing to his cheeks, and his eyes were wide open, shining with joy, and in the centre of each eye, right in the very centre, in the black pupil, a little spark of wild excitement was slowly dancing. Then the old man took a deep breath, and suddenly, with no warning whatsoever, an explosion seemed to take place inside him. He threw up his arms and yelled ‘Yippeeeeeeee!’ And at the same time, his long bony body rose up out of the bed and his bowl of soup went flying into the face of Grandma Josephine, and in one fantastic leap, this old fellow of ninety-six and a half, who hadn’t been out of bed these last twenty years, jumped on to the floor and started doing a dance of victory in his pyjamas.
INT. DAY . THE BUCKETS’ family home. CHARLIE and GRANDPA JOE have just left for their factory tour. MRS BUCKET puts down her laundry stick and gazes over the four-poster bed.
MRS BUCKET [ tiredly ]: How many of the rest of you can walk?
Silence .
MRS BUCKET : I mean it. Just tell me. Just – please tell me. I won’t get angry.
Grandma Josephine, Grandpa George, and Grandma Georgina slink a little lower under the covers.
MRS BUCKET : Tell me that none of you knew. That he kept it from all of us, somehow. That you didn’t know about it, that he could…Just tell me.
Silence .
MRS BUCKET : Because I don’t think I could take it. [ She swipes at her eyes furiously ] It’s been twenty years. Twenty years of sleeping on the floor and taking in laundry and…Four bedpans. Four bedpans, for twenty years. Tell me I wasn’t cleaning the bedpan of a man who could use the facilities by himself for twenty goddamned years .
Grandma Josephine coughs slightly.
MRS BUCKET : Grandma Josephine. He was your husband. You knew him the best. Please tell me. What you knew. If you knew anything.
GRANDMA JOSEPHINE [ quietly, as if to herself ]: We – he tried to say something, at first.
MRS BUCKET : At first?
GRANDMA GEORGINA : Well, it’s a very comfortable bed, you have to understand.
GRANDMA JOSEPHINE : He spilled his soup on me. We had a deal, and at the first chance he got, he revealed our secret and left me covered in soup.
GRANDPA GEORGE : Josephine, don’t –
MRS BUCKET : Don’t what , Josephine?
GRANDMA JOSEPHINE : He forfeited his right to secrecy when he left me covered in cabbage soup to go on his damn candy tour. Kate…we can all walk.
MRS BUCKET : Christ .
GRANDMA JOSEPHINE : And dance too, pretty well, most of us.
MRS BUCKET : Do you have any idea how many nights I’ve stayed up until two or three in the morning to wash enough strangers’ clothing to keep this family together?
GRANDMA JOSEPHINE : Well, we can hear you pretty well from the bed, actually.
MRS BUCKET : How did it start?
GRANDMA GEORGINA : How does anything start, really. Who even remembers.
MRS BUCKET : I remember. I remember the day you stopped working. My own son sleeps on the floor.
GRANDMA JOSEPHINE : Good for children, to sleep on the floor. Keeps the spine straight.
MRS BUCKET : You said you broke your ankle.
GRANDMA JOSEPHINE : I’m not a doctor. I only knew that if I stayed in bed, the odds of my ever coming down with a broken ankle would substantially diminish. So I made the choice that made sense for me.
GRANDMA GEORGINA : And I saw how comfortable Josephine and Joe looked, and you kept asking someone to help you with the sweeping, and so I thought maybe if I said I broken my ankle too…
MRS BUCKET : For twenty years?
GRANDMA JOSEPHINE : If it helps, we stopped lying about it after the first six. You just sort of stopped asking what was wrong that day.
GRANDMA GEORGINA : You really only have yourself to blame for that.
MRS BUCKET : I’ve been supporting this entire family single-handedly for twenty years and now I find out the four of you were just resting?
GRANDPA GEORGE : I really did break my ankle.
GRANDMA GEORGINA : Oh, did you?
GRANDPA GEORGE : Yes. About fourteen years ago, I think.
GRANDMA GEORGINA : How’s the ankle now?
GRANDPA GEORGE : Oh, it’s fine, thanks for asking.
GRANDMA GEORGINA : And then you had to go and ruin everything, Josephine. You and your husband. We had the greatest con on record going, and now look at us.
GRANDPA GEORGE : Probably going to have to help with the dishes now, I shouldn’t expect.
MRS BUCKET [ tremblingly ]: Get out.
GRANDMA GEORGINA : Be reasonable, Kate. We don’t normally get up until after you’ve left to go rag-picking at 11. Give us a little time to adjust.
MRS BUCKET : GET OUT OF THIS HOUSE.
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I had an English teacher in high school who thought Grandpa Joe was one of children's literature's worst characters for EXACTLY THIS REASON.
You had a brilliant English teacher, then.
Also for encouraging honest little Charlie to cheat and steal and lie and get revenge. GRAMPA JOE IS FIRED.
Still doesn't negate the awfulness of "Cheer Up Charlie". I always fast forward through it because that is THE WORST SONG EVER.
That's the scene where I realized Charlie was totally a twee indie fanboy, complete with his damn record bag. The film was really ahead of its time.
Back in the dark ages, before VCRs and DVRs and Netflixes, we had to watch this in real time and that terrible song was our cue to run to the bathroom and get a snack.
YES IT WAS.
My poor cousin Charlie has this song sung at him at most family gatherings. He's a hockey player, and I firmly believe that his insane aggression during games is solely down to "Cheer Up Charlie."
GRANDPA JOE IS A MONSTER. Oh, Granpa Joe. Suddenly you can walk. I SEE YOU, GRANDPA JOE. WE ALL SEE YOU!
And Charlie? You're going to take Gpa J to the factory? Not your mom who devotes literally her whole life to keeping you alive and not living in an abandoned train tunnel wearing clothes made of newspaper, unlike your lazy grandparents who all sleep in the same bed together like a bunch of old sex freaks?
Not to mention that Grandpa Joe would've been covered in weeping bedsores after 20 years of barely moving. That had to be a health hazard.
That whole bed situation is disturbing on A LOT of levels.
And when they failed to immediately comply, wrath rushed over her. Wrath as she'd never known; never dared to feel. Not hot, like you'd expect, but cold waves of fury.
She reached for her pile of oily, dirty rags and threw them upon the bed. Nobody moved. They had been conditioned to be still in front of her for so long. By the time they saw her reaching for the lamp, it was too late. The shock of the wall of flames pushed her from her icy rage.
A smile crept across her face.
She extended her arms in front of her, slowly unfolding her tired fingers. For the first time in twenty years, she felt warm.
*weeps at the beauty of it all*
ALL SHALL LOVE ME AND DESPAIR
Nothing less than mass murder would make up for Mrs Buckets life.
Am I hallucinating or was there really a sequel to the Charlie & the Chocolate Factory that involved a space ship and blob monsters that ate people alive? I vaguely remember it being terrifying, but less terrifying than the two part story right above this comment from HandsIntheEyre and [sic]. Yikes, you guys.
You are not hallucinating. It's "Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator" and it is an absolute FEVER DREAM of a children's book. (Of course my highly weird 8 year old self adored it.)
You are not hallucinating. Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator. It exists.
VERMICIOUS KNIDS. I'm still traumatized, 30+ years after reading that freaking book.
Someone mentioned that there was a movie version of the Glass Elevator? I freaking LOVED that book. Vermiscious knids were a terrifying foe, but could be defeated with song and dance and circus skils. I love quite a lot of rahl dahl, actually, but one of his stories for adults was so traumatic i'm tearing up now just think about it. its about a bot who can turn into a swan, but he is being bullied, bratutally beaten by the awful kids, and he tries to turn into a swan so he can fly way. naturally they are scared of this, so keep throwing rocks at the swan, even as it takes of. I've already given away most of the plotline, so i'll hush now. but yeah. Rahl sure knew how to write a story. entrancing.
CHARLIE AND THE GREAT GLASS ELEVATOR
I can't remember if the other grandparents were also walking around in that one, but I think they were definitely in space?
I think it was still just Charlie, Willy Wonka, and Grandpa Joe. It basically picks up where the book ends with the elevator lifting them all into space for various adventures on Space Station U.S.A.
…no, I'm having flashbacks to the grandparents getting turned into babies in the sequel. I am pretty sure this is a thing that happened.
One of them gets turned into negative numbers, which I'm pretty sure makes her a fetus-ghost.
YOU ARE 100% RIGHT. I DID NOT LIKE THIS BOOK.
Nope, they were all there, being absolutely useless.
They get youthening serum, and one of the grandmas takes too much and they have to go to the underworld and squirt her with agening serum to make her appropriately aged.
No, there was, Charlie & the Great Glass Elevator. It was probably devastating political commentary, as it involved a lot of White House officials. Still kind of ignored the parents, though.
You are not! It is Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator and, oddly enough, I read it several times as a child without having read the first book.
The blob creatures are called Vermicious Knids.
And were genuinely terrifying for some reason. When my own kids were reading Roald Dahl, I picked it up to check, and I still got a real twinge of being disturbed by the Knids.
I have a pretty vivid recollection of some illustration in the BFG that was a pile of picked over children's bones outside an orphanage window after a visit from the bad giants. Roald Dahl did not fuck around.
Did you ever read his more adult stuff? I had a collection of short stories called "Skin" and fuck me, a couple of those were intense (at least for 13-year-old me)
This was one of the few Dahl books I did not like. I DID however love the term "Vermicious Knids."
SCRAM!
is what I remember about the Vermicious Knids.
And didn't all of the grandparents age backwards until they were babies? Or until they ceased to exist? Or something? I don't know. I remember reading the sequel as a child and finding the whole thing kind of traumatizing.
Yeah, I get the impression that it's best known as a film in the US, but in the UK the novels are much better known. They also give the grandparents a reverse ageing potion and one of the Grandmas remembers seeing the Mayflower leaving.
Also, I seem to remember that it's pretty clear in the second book that the other three grandparents are pretty awful, although Grandpa Joe is still a hero.
wait, Glass elevator is a FILM?!
Like Alice Through the Looking Glass, this is another under-read 'sequel' that I've always liked better than the original. The Vermicious Knids! The name alone send shivers down my spine.
We had a board game based on Dahl. The Vermicious Knids were about the only good thing about it.
Charlie's mom didn't deserve this sequel! She was going to be able to quit laundering anyway, when Charlie won the chocolate factory! All she gets out of this is the knowledge that her entire family are fraudulent moochers, instead of just one! Including HER OWN PARENTS! This sequel establishes that her own parents lied to her for twenty years! Oh god the poor woman, this is the most monstrous sequel ever, her only child is apprenticed to a serial killer and now she has no one left in the world, she is going to end up drinking lye, or hanging herself from a licorice noose at the factory, and then the Oompa-Loompas will sing about it.
SHE DESERVES BETTER THAN THIS.
maybe … she wakes up and it's all a dream? And Kristen Stewart is her girlfriend?
Oh. Damn. You make a good point!!
Hey, none of the other children on the tour of the factory died! (in the book, anyway.) They just experienced very unpleasant things, like turning into a giant blueberry, or getting sucked up a chocolate pipe.
In the first draft there was a girl that would have been turned into Peanut Brittle: http://www.roalddahl.com/roald-dahl/archive/archi …
She gets a better version where she gets to go on the tour, and not only is it wnderful for her, she also makes damn sure charlie stays away from chololate rivers and fudge moutains, and all just be being nice and holding his hand tighly. http://www.roalddahl.com/roald-dahl/archive/archi …
"If Grandpa Joe can dance, Grandpa Joe can work."
I <3 you forever for bringing this phrase into my life. I use it regularly on my students and boyfriends when they're being lazy and unproductive. They . . . don't find it as amusing as I do.
This piece just made me love you even more. Poor Mrs. Bucket . . .
They even give Charlie a hard time about spending *his* hard-earned dough on bread. For them.
Ayn Rand nailed it: If Grampa Joe can dance, Grampa Joe can work. (Also all the daft things they do in the factory are his idea.)
(By the way, has anyone else ever noticed that "The Candyman Can" and "No-One Is Alone" are pretty much the same song?)
"If Carpet Man don't dance, Carpet Man don't EAT!"
And I just KNEW Sondheim was ripping off Newley and Bricusse!
Which is the songwriting equivalent of Imelda Marcos stealing an orphan's one pair of shoes.
I just enjoy saying "Bricusse" like Billy Crystal -as- Sammy.
"I’m not a doctor. I only knew that if I stayed in bed, the odds of my ever coming down with a broken ankle would substantially diminish. So I made the choice that made sense for me."
I love this so much. That probably says something about me …
That is totally going to be the next trendy health craze. After orthorexia, orthopraxia!
There's a word for that diet mess? Beautiful. "an orthorexic does not desire to become thin but wants to feel pure, healthy and natural"
and not shut up about it and play into the hands of BIG 613 (this is the terrorist organization I've just created for diet books) (Yes, there's a lair).
I see what you did there.
It's pronounced "Bouquet."
"LADY of the HOUSE, speaking!" (says Mrs. Bucket before she lights the grandparents' bed on fire).
THIS. FOREVER.
YES, YES, YES.
Friday nights were pizza, Keeping Up Appearances and Mr. Bean when I was a kid. Because I was normal and cool.
Sunday afternoons: Keeping Up Appearances and Are You Being Served?
We are the cool kids!
Just wanted to say that it's been guessed that the Vermicious Knids were named after the phylum Cnidaria, which includes jellyfish
(guessed by me)
THANK YOU. I thought I was the only person ever who found that whole thing profoundly disturbing.
I still get pissed that Charlie took his grandpa who lied about his mobility instead of his tired overworked mom. WHEN DOES SHE GET A VACATION?!
Mallory, you had me from Mrs. Bucket's first line.
HOW MANY OF THE REST OF YOU CAN WALK
I got the giggles like you wouldn't even