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5 new of 58 responses total.
rcurl
response 54 of 58: Mark Unseen   Aug 30 17:27 UTC 2007

Thanks for information on a second movie. I don't recall it, although I was
around in the 80s, and had a child that would have enjoyed it. I think I'll
look for it as the video store.
remmers
response 55 of 58: Mark Unseen   Aug 31 11:56 UTC 2007

The movie is available on DVD.  IMDB has some information on it:
http://imdb.com/title/tt0089908/

I saw "Return to Oz" once, when it first came out in 1985.  It's kind of
dark, but Baum's books can be that way too.  Overall, I think the film
does a better job of capturing the tone of Baum's Oz books than does the
1939 Judy Garland "Wizard of Oz", brilliant though the latter is.
rcurl
response 56 of 58: Mark Unseen   Aug 31 18:53 UTC 2007

The part of Garland's "Wizard of OZ" where Dorothy had to destroy the 
Wicked Witch of the West was the part that was perhaps closest to the Baum 
tone. Nowhere in the books is everyone skipping along singing happy tunes.

(Dorothy did NOT say "There is no place like home" while clicking her 
heels together, to get back to Kansas.)
remmers
response 57 of 58: Mark Unseen   Sep 10 14:02 UTC 2007

Re-watched "Return to Oz" the other night on DVD.  It was better than I
remembered - visually dazzling, with mood very close to Baum's writing
and a look that closely mimics John R. Neill's illustrations for the
series.  (Neill didn't illustrate "The Wizard of Oz" but did all the
sequels from the early 1900s into the 1940s.)

The story re-arranges plot details from a couple of Baum's Oz books and
throws in some new material.  Basically, Dorothy - home in Kansas after
her first visit to Oz - is swept away in a flash flood and finds herself
back in Oz.  The yellow brick road has crumbled and the Emerald City is
in ruins, its inhabitants turned to stone.  The story describes how
Dorothy and various friends she picks up along the way solve the mystery
of how this happened and restore Oz to its former glory.   

The film features a number of Baum's characters - Dorothy's Aunt Em
(played by Piper Laurie) and Uncle Henry, Jack Pumpkinhead, Belina the
talking hen, the Tik Tok Man, Mombi the witch, Princess Ozma, the Nome
King (Nicole Williamson), and the Gump (a flying sofa with a moose
head).  Some very cool claymation special effects.  Quite a tour de
force and a lot of fun, although it's probably too intense and scary for
very young children.
rcurl
response 58 of 58: Mark Unseen   Sep 11 01:41 UTC 2007

You beat me to it...since you mentioned it, Return to OZ has been on my
must-see DVD list, especially after having just read all the books that seem
to cover the material used in the movie.
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