Post by Kira Geneva on Feb 13, 2005 17:47:38 GMT -5
(c) 1971 Warner Bros., (c) 2005 Carolyn Gates, (c) 1977 Lucasfilm
AN: The following is a crossover between Star Wars and Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory. It happens shortly after his family settles in, and in the Star Wars case, it happens before, during, and after Return of the Jedi. It is the first in a series of adoption tales, of adoptions Willy Wonka has made of creatures that live in his factory.
Willy Wonka: Tales of the Adoptions: The Ewoks
Charlie Buckett was absolutely glowing. He simply couldn't believe his eyes. He once was a very poor little boy, living in no more than a dirty shack with cruddy plumbing, beds as flat as pancakes, walls of pure cement, people old and tired. Now he was in what was practically the castle most children only dream of, a castle full of the brightest colors, rooms full of endless products of practically a child's imagination, beds luxurious as clouds, abundant food and comfort, and Charlie Buckett and his family couldn't possibly be happier. A while ago he had nobody to play with, no one to talk to, no time for any play due to his paper route the only extra thing that kept the family moving along, with four of the grandparents bed-ridden. Now his Grandpa Joe, his mother and all of his family were starting new lives with wonderful new friends and fantastic new experiences to enjoy for all time.
All because of one contest, one coin, one golden ticket, and the heart of one man.
Willy Wonka.
Willy Wonka was a candymaking genius, a beloved man who made millions of men, women and children all over the world happy with his candy. He had shut his factory down because all the great candy makers of the world were sending in spies to steal his secret recipes. He had vanished from the map completely. Then suddenly, mysteriously, nobody knowing why, three years later, the most amazing thing happened.
The factory started working again. Candies were coming out like never before. But the gates stayed locked so that the competition stayed outside. The legend amongst the whole world was, no one ever went in, no one ever went out. One day, he had begun a worldwide contest, sending out five golden tickets in five candy bars. The world went absolutely berzerk, buying Wonka products by the dozens in order to find the golden tickets. The tickets went to five children, four who simply were not worthy of such a prize, what having a golden ticket meant. A tour of the entire factory and all its wonders, and a lifetime supply of chocolate. Charlie, thanks to some money he’d found in a local sewer and two candy bars he’d bought, one for himself and the other for his Grandpa Joe, the one, when he least expected it, would have a golden ticket.
Four, due to their own bad behavior, greedy Augustus from Germany, rude Violet and television addict Mike from America, and spoiled rotten Veruca from England and their parents, were booted out of their factory by their own rotten behavior in one way or another.
The one that was left was Charlie, who would get the lifetime supply of chocolate and so much more...
He would inherit the entire factory.
Willy Wonka had sent out the five golden tickets in order to find an heir to his legendary factory. He decided to retire, and decided to find a child (not a grown up who'd do everything his own way) to tell all his precious candymaking secrets to, a child who could be easily trained in the ways of machines and cooking, shipping and marketing, competition and moneymaking, but most importantly, keeping everything exactly moving along to the rhythm of Wonka tradition, a child to take care of all his employees, the Oompa Loompas, from the hidden, tiny country of Loompaland.
That was where Mister Wonka went after vanishing after locking the gates. The Oompa Loompas were in terrible trouble in the desolate land of fierce predators literally eating them left and right. Wonka decided to perform a miraculous exodus of the entire nation of Oompa Loompas, who lived in the great, big, whimsical factory with him.
The family, invited to move in with him, of course, being that he was only eleven years old, had officially moved in, receiving every luxury and comfort they could ever dream of having. Three days after they'd moved in, Wonka decided it was time to train Charlie in the ways of the factory at last.
That also meant showing him other secrets, other secrets he'd dare not tell anyone in the whole world, be they media, president, king, queen, child or grown up, rich man or poor man, secrets he'd dare not tell even Veruca, Augustus, Violet or Mikey as the children were on tour of the factory
Five days later, as the three other grandparents, Grandpa George, Grandma Georgina and Grandma Josephine were in a specialized muscle-massage-walking-therapy class to free them of being bed ridden so they could move about the factory like Charlie and his Grandpa Joe, Wonka would do just that.
AN: The following is a crossover between Star Wars and Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory. It happens shortly after his family settles in, and in the Star Wars case, it happens before, during, and after Return of the Jedi. It is the first in a series of adoption tales, of adoptions Willy Wonka has made of creatures that live in his factory.
Willy Wonka: Tales of the Adoptions: The Ewoks
Charlie Buckett was absolutely glowing. He simply couldn't believe his eyes. He once was a very poor little boy, living in no more than a dirty shack with cruddy plumbing, beds as flat as pancakes, walls of pure cement, people old and tired. Now he was in what was practically the castle most children only dream of, a castle full of the brightest colors, rooms full of endless products of practically a child's imagination, beds luxurious as clouds, abundant food and comfort, and Charlie Buckett and his family couldn't possibly be happier. A while ago he had nobody to play with, no one to talk to, no time for any play due to his paper route the only extra thing that kept the family moving along, with four of the grandparents bed-ridden. Now his Grandpa Joe, his mother and all of his family were starting new lives with wonderful new friends and fantastic new experiences to enjoy for all time.
All because of one contest, one coin, one golden ticket, and the heart of one man.
Willy Wonka.
Willy Wonka was a candymaking genius, a beloved man who made millions of men, women and children all over the world happy with his candy. He had shut his factory down because all the great candy makers of the world were sending in spies to steal his secret recipes. He had vanished from the map completely. Then suddenly, mysteriously, nobody knowing why, three years later, the most amazing thing happened.
The factory started working again. Candies were coming out like never before. But the gates stayed locked so that the competition stayed outside. The legend amongst the whole world was, no one ever went in, no one ever went out. One day, he had begun a worldwide contest, sending out five golden tickets in five candy bars. The world went absolutely berzerk, buying Wonka products by the dozens in order to find the golden tickets. The tickets went to five children, four who simply were not worthy of such a prize, what having a golden ticket meant. A tour of the entire factory and all its wonders, and a lifetime supply of chocolate. Charlie, thanks to some money he’d found in a local sewer and two candy bars he’d bought, one for himself and the other for his Grandpa Joe, the one, when he least expected it, would have a golden ticket.
Four, due to their own bad behavior, greedy Augustus from Germany, rude Violet and television addict Mike from America, and spoiled rotten Veruca from England and their parents, were booted out of their factory by their own rotten behavior in one way or another.
The one that was left was Charlie, who would get the lifetime supply of chocolate and so much more...
He would inherit the entire factory.
Willy Wonka had sent out the five golden tickets in order to find an heir to his legendary factory. He decided to retire, and decided to find a child (not a grown up who'd do everything his own way) to tell all his precious candymaking secrets to, a child who could be easily trained in the ways of machines and cooking, shipping and marketing, competition and moneymaking, but most importantly, keeping everything exactly moving along to the rhythm of Wonka tradition, a child to take care of all his employees, the Oompa Loompas, from the hidden, tiny country of Loompaland.
That was where Mister Wonka went after vanishing after locking the gates. The Oompa Loompas were in terrible trouble in the desolate land of fierce predators literally eating them left and right. Wonka decided to perform a miraculous exodus of the entire nation of Oompa Loompas, who lived in the great, big, whimsical factory with him.
The family, invited to move in with him, of course, being that he was only eleven years old, had officially moved in, receiving every luxury and comfort they could ever dream of having. Three days after they'd moved in, Wonka decided it was time to train Charlie in the ways of the factory at last.
That also meant showing him other secrets, other secrets he'd dare not tell anyone in the whole world, be they media, president, king, queen, child or grown up, rich man or poor man, secrets he'd dare not tell even Veruca, Augustus, Violet or Mikey as the children were on tour of the factory
Five days later, as the three other grandparents, Grandpa George, Grandma Georgina and Grandma Josephine were in a specialized muscle-massage-walking-therapy class to free them of being bed ridden so they could move about the factory like Charlie and his Grandpa Joe, Wonka would do just that.