Tom and Jerry: Back to Oz
Tom and Jerry: Back to Oz | |
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File:Tom and jerry back to oz box.jpg DVD cover | |
Directed by | Spike Brandt[1] Tony Cervone |
Produced by | Spike Brandt Tony Cervone Sam Register |
Written by | Paul Dini |
Based on | Tom and Jerry by William Hanna and Joseph Barbera The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by L. Frank Baum The Wizard of Oz by Noel Langley Florence Ryerson Edgar Allan Woolf Tom and Jerry and the Wizard of Oz by Gene Grillo |
Starring | Billy West Bob Bergen Grey Griffin Jason Alexander Joe Alaskey Michael J. Gough Rob Paulsen Todd Stashwick Frances Conroy Stephen Root Kath Soucie James Monroe Iglehart Amy Pemberton Andrea Martin Spike Brandt |
Music by | Michael Tavera |
Edited by | Dave Courter |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Warner Home Video |
Release date |
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Running time | 81 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
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Tom and Jerry: Back to Oz (also known as Tom and Jerry: Return to Oz) is a 2016 animated direct-to-video film starring Tom and Jerry, produced by Warner Bros. Animation, with animation being done by Digital eMation. It is the final Tom and Jerry direct-to-video film to be distributed by Warner Home Video internationally. The film is a sequel to the 2011 animated film, Tom and Jerry and the Wizard of Oz. It is also the first sequel in the direct-to-video film series of the Tom and Jerry franchise.
Plot[edit]
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Dorothy, Aunt Em, Uncle Henry, and their three farmhands are still cleaning up after the twister when they find themselves on the verge of losing what is left of the family farm, when neighboring Mr. Bibb files a lawsuit claiming that the twister released some of the Gale pigs who then plundered his prize watermelon patch. He takes the animals away unless Aunt Em, Uncle Henry and their farmhands can get jobs to get the money to keep their farm animals in twenty-four hours. Dorothy wants to help, but to her dismay, they tell her that she's too young. While her family is out looking for jobs, Dorothy, Tom, and Jerry stay at the farm to clean up the mess. However, they find themselves with a second problem: to their horror, one of the flying monkeys has come to attack. During the attack, Scarecrow, Tin Man, and Lion show up at Dorothy's farm. They tell Dorothy that Ruggedo the Nome King has taken over the Emerald City, captured Glinda and Tuffy, and took Glinda's wand, and now he wants to destroy Dorothy and seize her ruby slippers. Since his great fear of the Wizard has kept him underground, Dorothy and her friends journey to Topeka to get the Wizard to return to Oz and set everything straight.
After using some of Glinda's magic potion to bring the Gale farm tractor to life to take them to the Kansas State Fair, they are able to gain entry when they present the carnie at the gate with emeralds from the Emerald City to cover their entrance fee. Once they find the Wizard, he's grown tired of his magic shows and agrees to take them back to Oz in his hot air balloon, but needs the aid of another tornado to do so. Luckily, he keeps a bottle of magic tornado with him, and with the aid of a device one of the farmhands built to counter tornadoes in the future, they use it to travel back to Oz, but not without causing some damage to the State Fair in the process.
Once in Oz, they are attacked by the flying monkeys again, but Dorothy and the others have to separate from the Wizard when his balloon ends up getting several flying monkeys glued to it with one of his inventions and leave him to fend for himself. As they try to make it to the Emerald City on their own, they are attacked by the Jitterbug, whom Ruggedo released to slow them down, then are separated further when attacked by Ruggedo's Nomes, who capture Dorothy and the Scarecrow, while the Tin Man is thrown into the river, and Toto, Tom, and the Lion nearly fall into a chasm. Jerry rescues the Tin Man with aid from the Mouse Queen (whom Jerry falls in love with) and her soldiers, while the Lion takes Tom and Toto into the woods on the long route to the Emerald City since they were separated from Jerry and the Tin Man. Meanwhile, the Scarecrow and Dorothy are able to escape Ruggedo's Nomes, reach the Emerald City, and attempt to see if there's anything in the Wizard's old chambers that can help them, but are captured by Ruggedo.
As for Tom, Toto, and the Lion, they soon end up at the Lion's old castle, where it seems he's been replaced as the leader of the forest by a very hungry female tiger. Though in the end, Toto seems to get the Lion and Tiger to cooperate and use their troops to aid Dorothy.
Back with Dorothy and the Scarecrow, Dorothy willingly surrenders the ruby slippers to Ruggedo, who transforms them into boots that enable him to plunge the Emerald City into the gnomes' underground home before considering putting Dorothy and the Scarecrow into a bottomless pit. Before he can, he is surprised by Jerry, the Tin Man, Tuffy, whom Ruggedo kicked out earlier, the Mouse Queen and her troops, and soon after, the Lion, Tom, Toto, the Tiger and her forces. Though he is disarmed of Glinda's wand, he overpowers all of them via the ruby slippers, and nearly sends Dorothy, Tom, Jerry, Toto, Scarecrow, Tin Man, and Lion to their doom, before the Jitterbug, whom Dorothy convinced to ally with them earlier, is able to trap Ruggedo in his dance spell, along with animating a statue of Dorothy that rescues everyone.
Timmy, the Mouse Queen, and her troops use Glinda's wand to free her from her imprisonment, while Ruggedo is stripped of the ruby slippers when Tom and Jerry try to save him from falling into the bottomless pit and fail, leaving him to plunge to his doom. Once Dorothy puts them back on, she returns the Emerald City to the surface, and the Wizard arrives shortly thereafter, having managed to tame the flying monkeys that got glued to his balloon with one of his magic potions that made giant bananas for them.
With Oz safe once more, the Wizard returns to a formal position in the Emerald City while still leaving the Scarecrow, Tin Man, and Lion in charge, and after Dorothy asks about the ruby slippers, only to learn from Glinda that she's earned the right to keep them permanently, along with the Wizard adding on that she'll need them to visit them in Oz again often, Dorothy takes Toto, Tom, and Jerry back to Kansas. Once home, they use the potion the Wizard gave them to help pay off Mr. Bibb and have him cancel his lawsuit against the Gale farm. When Uncle Henry, Aunt Em, and the farmhands return with little success in town, Dorothy reveals her success in saving their animals and farm, impressing them enough to realize she is old enough to handle things on her own. While Tom and Jerry get into their old antics again, Dorothy is happy to know that no matter what happens, there's no place like home.
Voice cast[edit]
- Billy West as Tom Cat (uncredited)
- Bob Bergen as Jerry Mouse (uncredited)
- Grey Griffin as Dorothy Gale
- Jason Alexander as Nome King (Mr. Bibb)
- Amy Pemberton as Dorothy's singing voice and The Mouse Queen
- Joe Alaskey as The Wizard of Oz, Butch, Droopy
- Michael Gough as Scarecrow (Hunk)
- Rob Paulsen as Tin Man (Hickory)
- Todd Stashwick as Cowardly Lion (Zeke)
- Frank Welker (uncredited) as Toto
- Frances Conroy as Aunt Em, Glinda
- Laraine Newman as The Wicked Witch of the West. Appeared in the stock footage.
- Stephen Root as Uncle Henry
- Kath Soucie as Tuffy the Munchkin Mouse, Tractor
- Andrea Martin as Hungry Tiger
- James Monroe Iglehart as Jitterbug (Calvin Carney)
- Spike Brandt as Spike
Reception[edit]
Renee Schonfeld of Common Sense Media rated it 3 out of 5 stars saying "By blending solid new musical numbers with the old Oz favorites and including inventive new characters, Spike Brandt, Tony Cerone, and company have made this sequel funny and original."[2]
Follow-up film[edit]
Tom and Jerry: Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory was released on July 11, 2017.
References[edit]
- ↑ Tony Cervone [@Tony_Cervone] (21 May 2016). "@BritishKidsTV Spike is" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
- ↑ Schonfeld, Renee. "Tom and Jerry: Back to Oz Review". Common Sense Media. Retrieved June 10, 2020. Unknown parameter
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External links[edit]
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- 2016 films
- English-language films
- 2016 animated films
- 2016 direct-to-video films
- 2010s American animated films
- American films
- American children's animated adventure films
- American children's animated comedy films
- American children's animated fantasy films
- American black-and-white films
- American direct-to-video films
- American fantasy adventure films
- Animated comedy films
- Animated films about dogs
- Animated films about lions
- Animated musical films
- Animated films based on The Wizard of Oz
- 2010s children's fantasy films
- Animated crossover films
- Direct-to-video sequel films
- Films directed by Tony Cervone
- Films directed by Spike Brandt
- Films produced by Sam Register
- Fantasy adventure films
- Animated films based on children's books
- Films featuring anthropomorphic characters
- Films set in the 1900s
- Tom and Jerry films
- The Wizard of Oz (1939 film)
- Warner Bros. Animation animated films
- Warner Bros. direct-to-video animated films