Review | Wonka movie review: Wizard of Oz meets Mary Poppins in Timothée Chalamet-led musical origin story of Roald Dahl’s chocolatier Willy Wonka
- Playing the eccentric chocolatier from Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Chalamet shows his versatility, and shades of Gene Wilder in his 1971 turn as Wonka
- Mixing earnest ambition with a desire to spread happiness through chocolate, Chalamet is truly charismatic, but Hugh Grant as the scheming Lofty steals the show

4/5 stars
Willy Wonka, the eccentric chocolatier created by British author Roald Dahl who first appeared in his beloved 1964 novel Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, is given a lavish new origin story in the musical fantasy Wonka.
Set to a string of toe-tapping tunes penned by Neil Hannon of pop outfit The Divine Comedy, Wonka introduces audiences to Wonka as he arrives in an idyllic European city, where he hopes to sell his unique range of magical chocolates.
On his first night in town, the penniless chef is duped by Olivia Colman’s scheming landlady Mrs Scrubbit, and her dim-witted henchman, Bleacher (Tom Davis), into incurring a massive debt, which he must pay off by working interminable hours in her miserable laundry room.
With the help of Scrubbit’s other prisoners, including young chambermaid Noodle (Calah Lane) and Jim Carter’s former accountant, Willy sneaks out and sets up shop in the city centre. His exotic wares soon attract the ire of a cabal of villainous rival chocolatiers, who enlist the chief of police to run him and his all-too-affordable chocolates out of town.