i popped out me mom that year! too disoriented to remember this. i remember the english dub wmt nippon anime that i only learned it was japanese after looking for heidi.... probably did see it though.
🥹I TOTOLLY was looking for this movie! It was my 1st movie along w/ my 1st TV it came with/ a VCR! My dad bought one for me & my sister for our Xmas present!📺🎁 I’m literally in tears! 😭 Nostalgic memories! TY for this!🫶🏼
This was actually my introduction to Oz when i was a kid in the 90's. Still have nostalgic appreciation for this movie, and the song at the start has lived rent-free in my head for decades at this point.
I much prefer this version of the story to the one with Judy Garland. The one thing I wish is that this version was available on DVD. Does anyone know if it is somewhere?
I guess but I like seeing different takes on a story like they do in this movie though I am aware that a lot of things were changed from the original story including the color of the shoes
My favorite one was the hello kitty wizard of oz from hello kitty’s fairy tale theater when I was little which was based on the 1939 movie and ended with her waking up. I also saw a different cartoon of wizard of oz that wasn’t this but also ended with Dorothy running back to her family in Kansas and I didn’t like it because of that. I preferred the ending with her waking up from a dream, but then later I found out in the book it wasn’t a dream
Wow, what a find! Thanks for posting. I watched the opening and agree that theme is catchy. Just a PS: At 1:17 the image is an homage to "The Angelus," a famous 19th C. painting by Jean-Francois Millet that once was ubiquitous in pre-Vatican II Catholic homes. I'm gonna come back and watch the whole thing. The 1939 classic will be hard to beat...
This is unlike the original 1939 version this is more like the book minus a few things but this one is pretty fair... My favorite character is the Cowardly Lion 🦁 I can relate to him I don't have much courage like he has
@@garycarpenter6433 That doesn't make any difference; the 1910 one was still the original. And you're missing out; some of the best movies in the world are silent, like _Metropolis_ from 1927 and _The Artist_ from 2011. By the way, L. Frank Baum made two Oz movies of his own in 1914: _The Patchwork Girl of Oz_ and _His Majesty, The Scarecrow of Oz._ 🙂
@@MaskedMan66 oh really I never knew that I've not read the books only seen the movie and return to oz and this cartoon version but thanks for letting me know...as people say you learn something new everyday 😊
@@krystalgorman86 As the Cowardly Lion said, "Ain't it the truth, ain't it the truuuth?' :-3 L. Frank Baum never gave much of a physical description of Dorothy except to describe her hands as "chubby" on one occasion. W.W. Denslow did the illustrations for the first book, and tinted some of them different colors, but again didn't give Dorothy a definable hair color. When John R. Neill took over the art from the second book onward, he definitely drew Dorothy as a short-haired blonde, and Ruth Plumly Thompson, who took over the authorship after Baum passed away, explicitly described Dorothy as a "golden-haired child" in one of her books. 🙂
@@krystalgorman86 But I do recommend the Oz books; Baum wrote fourteen, and the contributions by other authors eventually brought the Oz canon to what's now called The Famous Forty. 🙂
No, it wasn't. Some college prof in the 1960's superimposed his ideas on the story to try to liven up his lecture, and too many people took him seriously.