RETURN TO OZ (PG)
D: Walter Murch
Disney/Silver Screen Partners (Paul
Maslansky)
US/UK 1985
110 mins
Fantasy
W: Walter Murch & Gill Dennis [based on the
stories by L. Frank Baum]
DP: David Watkin
Ed: Leslie Hodgson
Mus: David Shire
PD: Norman Reynolds
Fairuza Balk (Dorothy Gale), Jean Marsh (Nurse
Wilson/Mombi), Nicol Williamson (Dr. Worley/Nome King), Piper Laurie (Aunt Em), Matt Clark (Uncle Henry)
An unnecessary sequel to a The Wizard Of Oz which came
five decades too late and succeeds only in sucking the magic completely out of the fictional world brought to cinema in the 1939 film.
Dorothy, committed to an insane asylum following her
traumatic experiences, finds herself whisked back to a nightmarish Oz bereft of munchkins and talking lions, where she must stop an evil queen's plans to make things even more
depressing.
One can only wonder what Disney were thinking when they
gave the green light to this project, which appeals to nobody in particular, seeming more like an easy cash-grab by exploiting a children's classic.
Even the choice of director, Walter Murch, who plied his
trade as an editor & sound man prior to his debut with this, is a head scratcher.
The production design, visual effects and other technical
aspects are fine, but the film offers nothing else, except to maybe provide shock treatment to naughty little children.
4/10