Her transformation into a blueberry punishes her obsession with status and "being first."

The 1971 film Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory is often viewed as a whimsical children's classic, but a closer look at its subtext reveals a dark, moralistic fable. The film functions as both a critique of postwar consumerism and a psychological exploration of discipline and entitlement. The Moral Architecture of the Factory

The psychedelic, terrifying boat ride serves as a psychological "break" from reality, signaling that the rules of the outside world no longer apply.

Should I focus more on (like Freud or Jung) or economic critiques ?