I believe that it's a team of four people, each with strengths and weaknesses who are on a common journey and have teamed up against the elements and a vengeful antagonist while on a journey to meet a common consultant.
I can't speak for Scarecrow and Lion, but in the book the tin man absolutely had prior business with the WWW that didn't end well.
All four of the travelers had a problem with no clear answer and were going to ask the Wizard who might have some sound advice. So it's a road trip for folks with a common destination
Also the flying monkeys were their own people and geased to obey the amulet, which WWW possessed.
Also, the solution really was the friends they made along the way. If I were Dorothy, I'd rather be there than Kansas.
In the books she does stay in Oz and obtains magical keys and shit. The movie ended up being an "Adventure's over, girls, go back home where you're safe and sound" propaganda during the time that some people thought women were no longer needed in the workforce.
Honestly pretty insulting to flip the narrative like they did.
I wouldn't exactly call being trapped in a house that was lifted by a tornado and dropped on someone's head "murder" in the classical sense. And it's not like the witch was going to need those shoes anymore. Besides, Dorothy didn't steal the shoes, the "Good" Witch Of The North looted them off the dead body and gave them to Dorothy. Are you going to turn down shoes from some weirdo that just pulled them off a dead body like it wasn't the first time that's happened?
I think there are many beloved films where women help men before solving their own problems.
The problem is when you write in characters to be perfect saviors who only help others as a narrative device to make themselves look good, and not out of any actual need to help each other. Examples: Captain Marvel, Little Mermaid live action, Mulan live action, Velma, Madam Web, Catwoman, the new Star Wars films, etc.
That said, some of these films have an active following. I personally thought Halle Barry Catwoman was good even if the character had less of a character arc rather she just got forcibly overwritten.
"As for you, young lady, you want to go home, right?"
"No, not anymore. I wanna stay here and become the new Wicked Witch."
"Nonsense. Now click your big, honking boots together three times and wish to go home to Kansas, to live in poverty with your dirt-farming, tee-totalling aunt and uncle!"
It’s a story a pooling together making up for each others weaknesses and work as a team. in the end finding with some confidence or perspective from the people around them they may have had it in them all along but sometimes we need someone to show us the way. It’s a story how we are a collective people who are all individuals within them.
Though I realize the original post is just an easy joke
I think the implication is that a woman exists to help others, rather than herself. That you're only good if you prioritize the men in your life - like you mentioned yourself.
IDK about this one. The sequel (which is definitely canon /s) she lives in a mental institution from her severe delusions. at the end of the original she wakes up from her episode surrounded by loving family and all of those broken fantasy men are farm hands concerned about her. - just a joke