Hop off your broomstick and put down the Grimmerie if you haven't seen "Wicked: For Good" yet. Spoilers ahead!
In the 1939 film "The Wizard of Oz," the yellow brick road traversed by Dorothy (Judy Garland), her dog Toto, and her new friends in Oz is a cheerful, charming part of the movie (which also helps show off the film's stunning use of Technicolor). In "Wicked: For Good," it takes on a much more sinister meaning because it represents forced labor and oppression.
As production designer Nathan Crowley told RadioTimes.com in an exclusive interview, crafting this iconic pathway for Jon M. Chu's two-part adaptation of the Broadway musical "Wicked" — which itself is a take on "The Wizard of Oz" — took a strange turn for the second film, "Wicked: For Good." As Crowley put it, "The

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