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SOMETHING
WICKED THIS WAY COMES
Director: Jack Clayton
Starring: Jonathan Pryce,
Jason Robards Jr, Diane Ladd
RETURN
TO OZ
Director: Walter Murch
Starring: Fairuza
Balk, Nicol Williamson, Jean Marsh
Disney are
understandably obsessed with their animated classics, and obviously care
little for their live action films, which include a number of very
interesting fantasy, science fiction and horror titles. Thankfully Disney
seem to be happy to license these titles out to third party companies, who
are very willing to give gems like Return to Oz and Something
Wicked This Way Comes a good home and the respect they deserve.
Return to Oz
is one the finest fantasy films made in the last thirty years, and yet
is considered to be something of a failure. Too grim for it’s intended
audience, and apparently too whimsical for older filmgoers, the movie has
only a cult following to champion its considerable merits, which include
terrific production design (closely based on original illustrations by
John R. Neill), a fabulous score by David Shire and Oscar-nominated
special effects, (including a lot of Claymation work by Will Vinton). The
film, based on elements from two of the Oz novels, Land of Oz and Ozma
of Oz, finds Dorothy (Balk) in a dilapidated Emerald City ruled by the
cruel Princess Mombi (Marsh) and the Nome King (Williamson).
Anchor Bay’s
disc presents the film in its theatrical ratio of 1.85:1 (sadly not 16:9-enhanced)
and with a full Dolby Digital 5.1 sound mix (director Murch is perhaps
better known as a very creative sound editor, whose credits include
Francis Ford Coppola’s Apocalypse Now and George Lucas’ THX
1138). The film looks better than ever, despite a little dirt and
dust, with vitally strong colour and sharp images. The disc contains a
recent eleven-minute interview with Balk, who obviously has fond memories
of making her first movie. Comparisons to the 1939 original are both
inevitable and odious. As time passes the original film becomes
increasingly archaic and saccharine, and it seems possible that the Harry
Potter generation may find the 1985 sequel, with its feistier heroine and
darker tone, more accessible.
It’s a shame
that Anchor Bay couldn’t have done something extraordinary with Something
Wicked This Way Comes, a deeply flawed version of Ray Bradbury’s
story that was undermined by studio meddling. The film, directed by The
Innocents’ Jack Clayton, was made in 1981, but wasn’t released
until 1983, after Georges Delerue’s score had been replaced by one by
wunderkind James Horner; Disney’s special effects department had pepped
up the movie with worthless animated sparkle; and some jarring new scenes
had been added. It’s regrettable that Anchor Bay wasn’t willing or
able to include the commentary track that featured on the NTSC laserdisc,
(which explained how Disney interfered with Ray Bradbury and Clayton’s
original intentions), and, for that matter, that disc’s isolated score.
Knowing Disney's archives are some of the best-maintained in the business,
it's also a shame that none of the unused footage has been included
(Anchor Bay later released another neglected Disney movie, The Watcher
in the Woods, with this sort of footage, so it seems that the studio
isn't adverse to opening its vaults). As it stands Something Wicked,
about a mysterious carnival that visits a small 1930s Illinois town,
exposing the darkest desires of the local inhabitants, is an entertaining,
but very Disneyfied, yarn. Anchor Bay must be credited for making the film
more widely available, (and for a satisfying widescreen (1.66:1)
presentation, with Digital 4.0 sound), but must realise that fans won’t
be happy until they’re able to compare the theatrical version with
Clayton’s original edit.
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