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
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
@@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. 🙂
The opening credits theme still gets stuck in my head to this day
Aileen Quinn music is everything on here
Memories 😢😢
I grew up on this version and am so Thankful to see it looking good again! Thank you!
This Dorthy looks a lot like Alice in Wonderland.
Voiced by the title character from the Columbia movie adaptation of the musical, Annie!
That’s what I thought when I watched this as a little kid.
The Dorothy Gale of the books-- the "real" Dorothy-- is a blonde, so no, this one looks like Dorothy, not Alice.
@@nickwerner7983 Funnily enough, Broadway's first Annie, Andrea McArdle, once played Judy Garland in a biopic!
@@MaskedMan66 Well Dorthy looked like a brunette in all the TV shows and movies so with that she does look like Alice.
Never heard of this version , thanks for sharing
R.I.P. Lorne Greene (1915-1987) (The Wizard) and Billy Van (1934-2003) (The Scarecrow).
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?
oof but definitely not superior singing to judy's 😂
@NIGHTGUYRYAN maybe but that I think would be better to put to a vote, also has anyone found a DVD copy of this yet
the original Wizard of Oz is an awesome movie! such a classic!
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
7:59 Toto, come here this minute!
But thank you for uploading it 😢
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
😂 "Oh, well I understand"😂
When I was 5 years old, I actually thought this was from Studio Ghibli.
7:26
That Dog Looks Like Jock From
“Lady and the Tramp”
Surprised that Discotek hasn't picked this up seeing as they are currently reissuing any and all Japanese animation related to "The Wizard of Oz"
Just subbed to your channel
Ah yes Alice in Oz. Don't get me wrong I love this but that's what I thought it was when I was a kid
Dorothy Gale is blonde in the books.
28:10 Annie slaps the Lion
47:13 😭😭😭
This is a great version of the wizard of oz. Aileen Quinn is very good if only she could sing.
She can. You just happen not to like the way she sings.
Anime story of The Wizard of Oz with some friends of Oz Scarecrow, Tin-man and Cowardly Lion! Just like Alice in Wonderland!
No, just like "The Wonderful Wizard of Oz."
1:17:43 Paramount Home Video
The witch just kinda shrunk like clothes in a hot dryer
Oh my god, are Auntie Em and Uncle Henry doing Millet's "Angelus"? @1:16
Very definitely! The animators, or maybe the storyboard artist, obviously like that painting.
@@MaskedMan66 or maybe somehow Dalí was involved in this production.
@@turinshroudhologram Dali? How do you figure?
Who else thinks Dorothy looks like alice from alice in wonderland but couple years older 😂😂
Nope. She looks like Dorothy Gale, who was always a blonde in the books.
@@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. 🙂
@@MaskedMan66 I'll give it some thought 🤔💭 😊
Although Glinda lives with three other men, she's not easy
The Lion isn't a man. And as anyone knows who's read the books, each one of them gets a kingdom to rule over.
@@MaskedMan66 calm down, I was making a joke and referencing schreck
@@m.a.packer5450 Was calm to start with. Pretty obscure line.
Wizard of Oz = MK Ultra Program!!!
Nope.
Did anyone else here know that the original story in the book was a political satire much like a political cartoon
Silver shoes on a Gold road into a Green ILLUSION