The most noteworthy aspect of Journey Back to Oz, a slipshod animated
sequel to the classic live-action movie The
Wizard of Oz (1939), is the fact that Liza Minnelli provides the voice of
intrepid heroine Dorothy Gale. (Minnelli’s mother, legendary entertainer Judy
Garland, played the role in The Wizard of
Oz.) Minnelli acts the part with passion and sweetness, singing several
songs with her signature gusto, but the novelty of her presence isn’t
sufficient to make Journey Back to Oz
feel special. Setting aside the film’s second-rate visuals—production company Filmation’s
crude style falls somewhere between the cheapness of Hanna-Barbera and the elegance
of Walt Disney—the main problem is the story, an unimaginative retread of the
original film. When Journey Back to Oz
begins, Dorothy is once again bored in Kansas, wishing for a return visit with
her magical friends. A cyclone conveniently appears, plopping Dorothy on the
side of the Yellow Brick Road. She meets several new friends, discovers that
the kingdom is once again threatened by a wicked witch, and rallies new and old
pals to help restore order.
Even though the makers of Journey Back to Oz borrowed liberally from the work of L. Frank
Baum—the creator of the Oz universe—new
characters and contrivances fail to impress. The Signpost (Jack E. Leonard) is
a likeable dunderhead patterned after the original story’s Scarecrow;
Woodenhead Pinto Stallion III, a wooden horse, serves the same
valiant-but-clumsy function as the original story’s Tin Man; and so on. Worse,
beloved characters appear in disappointing iterations. For instance, the
Cowardly Lion is portrayed as having lost the nerve he gained with Dorothy’s
help, and the Scarecrow, though now King of Oz, is a non-presence who spends
most of the story in captivity. Furthermore, Filmation’s strategy of frontloading
the voice cast with famous actors is distracting, because each of the actors
adheres to his or her familiar persona. For instance, Ethel Merman delivers obnoxiously loud
vocals as the witch Mombi, while Paul Lynde, portraying the new
character Pumpkinhead, sounds like his usual bitchy-queen self.
Yet another
problem is the film’s song score, penned by Hollywood pros Sammy Cahn and Jimmy
Van Heusen, because the numbers are hopelessly trite compared to the magical
tunes in The Wizard of Oz. The
Cahn-Van Heusen numbers range from the saccharine (“Keep a Happy Thought”) to
the embarrassingly blunt (“That Feeling for Home”). Ultimately, Journey Back to Os doesn’t trample on fond memories—as did the
bizarre live-action 1985 sequel Return to
Oz—but the whole thing feels half-assed and unnecessary. No wonder the picture flopped during its initial theatrical release. Nonetheless, Journey Back to Oz found an audience when
it was resuscitated for television a short while later, with new live-action
bits featuring Bill Cosby created to bracket the original animated feature.
Journey
Back to Oz: FUNKY
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