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Even with a snoozy cast, you'll get swept away in effects-era version of classic wizarding world

‘Oz’ worth your time In the movies’ version of March Madness, director Sam Raimi turns out to be a better Tim Burton than Bryan Singer. Unlike “Jack the Giant Slayer” Singer, Raimi has a sense of humor. Taking on a prequel to the fairy tale that frightened generations, Raimi does scary. And he does it well.

Published: March 8, 2013 at 6:22 a.m. PSTUpdated: March 8, 2013 at 6:20 a.m. PST
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‘Oz’ worth your time In the movies’ version of March Madness, director Sam Raimi turns out to be a better Tim Burton than Bryan Singer. Unlike “Jack the Giant Slayer” Singer, Raimi has a sense of humor. Taking on a prequel to the fairy tale that frightened generations, Raimi does scary. And he does it well.

“Oz the Great and Powerful” is a winning back-engineering of the Oz fantasy, a “How the Wizard got to be wonderful” romp that is a stunning update of “The Wizard of Oz’s” effects, and the most gorgeous use of 3-D since “Alice in Wonderland.”

Screenwriters Mitchell Kapner and David Lindsay-Abaire manage just enough whimsy to make the movie’s two hours pass without irritation. Raimi, having cut his teeth on horror and brought “Spider-Man” to life, was the right guy to make this emerald-tinted world pop off the 3-D screen.

But the cast, plainly packed with second or third choices, lets it down. Is there anything in James Franco’s past that suggests a larger-than-life, fast-talking, womanizing con-man?

And the three witches — Theodora, Evanora and Glinda — are Bland, Blander and Blonde Bland.

Oscar “Oz” Diggs is a magician who escapes the cut-rate Baum Bros. Circus in 1905 Kansas only to be swept, by tornado, to the Merry Olde Land of Oz. Where things aren’t merry.

The king is dead, and “the prophecy” says that only a great wizard can replace him. Plainly, the guy with the same name as the place is their man.

Intrigues? The witch Theodora (Mila Kunis, never prettier) is smitten with him, her sister Evanora (Rachel Weisz) is jealous. They want the wizard to rid Oz of the Great Menace, Glinda (Michelle Williams), which Oz, easily bribed, agrees to do.

Sidekick? That would be Finley, a flying monkey Oz saves, who owes a “life debt” to the pretend-wizard. He’s amusingly voiced by Zach Braff.

Oz must travel by bubble through the far corners of Oz and sort out who the real villain is and how to fight the hideous, 3-D flying baboons who have supplanted the flying monkeys.

Franco, as Oz, turns on the charm and oozes insincerity as he passes on what he’s learned conning small-town audiences – “Lies, the stepping stones on the road to greatness.”

But the witches – an Oscar winner, an Oscar nominee and a Golden Globe nominee among them – haven’t the necessary vamp to make these conjurers sing. A trip to “Wicked” would have helped.

Even with the stunning production design – done by “Alice in Wonderland” Oscar winner Robert Stromberg – that starts our story in a black-and-white Kansas, where humor and pathos pop up, even with Danny Eflman’s playful score, this “Oz” starts to drag in less than an hour.

You might miss the witches’ guards’ (Raimi crony Bruce Campbell is one) song – “Oooo weee oh.” As the “climactic battle” story arc of way too many filmed fairy tales settles in, you might find yourself checking the time and asking, “Donde estan los Munchkins?”

But fear not. Raimi knows what you want. When he’s done giving a new generation of tykes frights about apes that fly in the night, he’ll cover it all. If it isn’t Oz without Dorothy and those ruby red slippers, he at least does justice to L. Frank Baum’s malleable wizarding world.

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Clockwise from top left: James Franco stars as Oz; Michelle Williams plays Glinda; and Mila Kunis is The Wicked Witch of the West in “Oz the Great and Powerful. (DISNEY PHOTOS)
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