#tom and jerry and the wizard of oz 2011
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
quotes-from-oz · 3 months ago
Text
Why is the title card to Tom and Jerry and the Wizard of Oz a more accurate homage to the '39 film than Wicked: Part 1?
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
9 notes · View notes
leeshabeth90 · 21 days ago
Text
Tumblr media
19 notes · View notes
zodgory · 7 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
When they were all quite presentable they followed the soldier girl into a big room where the Witch Glinda sat upon a throne of rubies. She was both beautiful and young to their eyes. Her hair was a rich red in color and fell in flowing ringlets over her shoulders. Her dress was pure white but her eyes were blue, and they looked kindly upon the little girl. "What can I do for you, my child?" she asked.
Full List of Glindas starting left to right:
Billie Burke, MGM's The Wizard of Oz (1939)
Natalie Cole, The Wizard of Oz in Concert: Dreams Come True (1995)
Michael Herring, Del Rey's Glinda of Oz paperback (1981)
Ariana Grande, Universal's Wicked: Part One (2024)
Alfredo Alcala (art), John Romita (art direction), and Michele Wolfman (colorist), Marvel's The Marvelous Land of Oz (1975)
Toho's The Wizard of Oz (1982)
The Muppets Wizard of Oz (2005)
Hilary Lee Gaess, The Wonderful Land of Oz (1969)
Tom and Jerry & The Wizard of Oz (2011)
Skottie Young (illustrator), The Marvelous Land of Oz, Issue 7 (2009)
W. W. Denslow, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1900)
Anne Bachelier, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (2014)
Uzo Aduba, The Wiz Live! (2015)
Journey Back to Oz (1972)
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1910)
Dorothy and the Wizard of Oz (1907)
Joely Richardson, Emerald City (2017)
Anna Galvin, Tin Man (2007)
The Wizard of Oz (1990)
Deborah Cox, The Wiz (2024)
Sheryl Lee, Wild at Heart (1990)
Legends of Oz: Dorothy's Return (2013)
Kristin Chenoweth, Wicked (2003)
Michelle Williams, Oz the Great and Powerful (2013)
Sunny Mabrey, Once Upon a Time (2014)
Lena Horne, The Wiz (1978)
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz | Ozu no mahôtsukai (1986)
John R. Neill, The Marvelous Land of Oz (1904)
Charles Santore, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1995)
Dee Dee Bridgewater, The Wiz (1975)
93 notes · View notes
skullislandproductions · 3 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Tom reacts to a tasty treat in this Post-it storyboard panel from “Tom and Jerry & The Wizard of Oz,” 2011 (look below to see the 9 panel page of Post-its before they were placed into the 2 panel storyboard template).
29 notes · View notes
witchesoz · 7 months ago
Text
The Wicked Witches of the West (2)
Of course, when talking about the most famous Wicked Witch of Oz, we HAVE to go by the 1939 "The Wizard of Oz" movie, the MGM production that ended up making Oz a worldwide phenomenon and shaped pop culture's view of the Land of Oz to this day, overshadowing the original Baum novels for many, many decades, up until... Well up until today.
The 1939 movie is also a crucial part of the development of the Wicked Witch of the West's design, as the MGM's Witch played by Margaret Hamilton became THE most famous face of the character, and a defining visual for basically most witches in pop culture. The black dress with the pointy hat, the long chin with the hooked nose, the sharp fingernails, the broomstick, the wicked cackle and above all the green skin - all of this became utterly iconic, despite none of these elements being present in Baum's novel.
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Of course a huge part of the success of this specific incarnation of the Witch was Margaret Hamilton's performance. She famously played the Wicked sorceress a few more times - never actually putting back the exact same makeup or outfit, but still carrying on the spirit of the character throughout various media.
The most famous example is the Sesame Street episode considered "lost" for a very long time and that the Internet has been so obsessed about. There Hamilton plays back the Wicked Witch, though in a more disheveled version and with as an added touch a green lining on the cape:
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Hamilton would also play back the Wicked Witch of the West on the "Paul Lynde Halloween Special":
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Several other media were created as a direct follow-up or continuation of the 1939 MGM movie, and as such reuse the "MGM design" of the Wicked Witch, with various modifications. For example I am thinking of the 1990 cartoon series "The Wizard of Oz", an animated direct-sequel to the MGM movie, where the Witch reappears with some design change (the facial features are more bulbous, the pointy nails are painted red, the outfit is purple instead of black)
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
A more recent example would be the children cartoon "Dorothy and the Wizard of Oz", another serial-sequel to the MGM movie and where the witch makes recurring appearances. Though the design was made to fit more Hamilton's makeup and outfit, the purple touch remains, to help with the natural difficulty of animating an all-black outfit.
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
And, of course, you also have the infamous "Tom and Jerry and the Wizard of Oz"
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
A much more well-received and famous revival of Hamilton's character was the 2011 musical "The Wizard of Oz", a stage transposition of the MGM movie by Andrew Lloyd Webber. The witch in this production, while taking back all the MGM-specific traits (the green skin, the black outfit, the broomstick) also has personal features that make her stand out. Notably the heavy use of feathers in her outfit and the evolution of her hair, which goes from a spiral hairdo evoking both a witch's hat and a tornado, to an "exploded" form more reminiscent of a storm cloud. This results in a more "aerial" witch with a strong sky-motif to her.
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
33 notes · View notes
mx-piggy · 2 years ago
Text
Maybe I missed Muppets Mayhem discussions from back when the show came out but I’m wondering what you guys thought of the human characters of the show?
I watched a YouTube review of the show, and I was somewhat surprised at the fact that the reviewer hated the human characters so much, which I do understand as someone who had to force myself to try to like them.
For me I guess I agree that they were the weakest element of the show, and I think it was a mistake to have the human characters be equally as important as the Mayhem. What I enjoyed about the Muppets 2011 was that it knew not to have the human characters ‘hijack’ the movie. I’m not a Muppets expert or anything but the role of humans in Muppet media has always been to support the Muppets, as opposed to having the Muppets be the supporting cast to the humans. It was always a celebrity guest in the Muppet Show, not the other way around.
At times, I think that the Muppets Mayhem felt like those Tom and Jerry movies where it was Charlie and the Chocolate Factory or the Wizard of Oz, but Tom and Jerry were there for some reason (apologies for the niche reference). Like, the show felt less like a Muppet series but a Goldbergs-esque sitcom that just happened to have Muppets in it. It might have been in part because it’s rare for Muppet media to have such a limited number/range of Muppets in it, if that makes sense? Like, it’s never just Kermit and Miss Piggy, or just Gonzo, Rizzo and Pepe. Typically, most/all of the Muppets are present. So, it feels a little less Muppet-y, at least for me. This isn’t an original thought but I feel like Scooter could have functioned well in this show, possibly in the place of Nora (because he was the Mayhem’s road manager in the original Muppet Movie IIRC? So, that might have made it feel more Muppet-y.
With all of that said, I didn’t actively dislike the humans in the show, and I actually quite liked Moog. Overall, the main human characters were a little basic for my taste, but I think the main problem for me was how heavily they featured. Their lack of depth would have been fine if they weren’t treated as having the same importance as the Mayhem. Like, I really didn’t care for Nora and Moog’s relationship; if I wanted that sort of thing, I could go to literally any other sitcom with a pair of male and female main characters of a similar age. I was never actively annoyed by the human characters’ presence, but I just never found myself overly interested in them? They’re just boring, shallow sitcom characters to me (other than Moog, who I like and respect as a fellow Mayhead, though I wish he had less to do with Nora and more to do with the Mayhem). I probably would have liked the humans more if they better supported the Mayhem from a narrative standpoint, as opposed to being the stars of the show and having the Mayhem be secondary to them.
I am hoping, probably in vain, that the humans’ involvement in the show will reduce to a reasonable extent, where they can act as supporting characters for the Mayhem. Failing that, I’m hoping that the human characters will grow on me.
28 notes · View notes
jaydofmo · 2 years ago
Text
The Royal Podcast of Oz: New episodes!
We have new episodes for The Royal Podcast of Oz! The Movies of Oz: Tom and Jerry in Oz It's a double feature as Jay and Sam Milazzo discuss Tom and Jerry's take on MGM's The Wizard of Oz from 2011 and then they turn to its far more worthy sequel in 2016's Tom and Jerry: Back to Oz.   Angelo Thomas Interviews Kirk Thatcher Angelo Thomas gives us a holiday surprise with an interview with Kirk Thatcher, director of The Muppets Wizard of Oz. There's another episode of Movies of Oz coming very soon. http://dlvr.it/SzytKT
0 notes
brookston · 2 years ago
Text
Holidays 8.23
Holidays
Asian Corpsetwt Day [Every 23rd]
Battle of Kursk Day (Russia)
Black Ribbon Day (Baltic states)
Daffodil Day [also 4th Friday]
European Day of Remembrance for Victims of Stalinism and Nazism (EU)
Find Your Inner Nerd Day
Flag Day (Ukraine)
Gai Jatra (Cow Festival; Kathmandu Valley, Nepal)
Goldfinch Day
Hashtag Day
Health Unit Coordinator Day
Hebron Massacre Anniversary (Israel)
Hug Your Sweetheart Day
International Blind Dog Day
International Day For the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and its Abolition (UN)
Internaut Day
Kharkiv City Day (Ukraine)
Liberation from Fascist Occupation Day (Romania)
National Cheap Flight Day
National Levi Day
National Physicians Day (Iran)
National Plumber's Day
National Sneak Off to the Beach Day
One-Way Street Day
Permanent Press Day
Purple Poppy Day (UK)
Ride the Wind Day
Sacco-Vanzetti Memorial Day
Schueberfouer Shepherd’s Fair begins (Luxembourg)
Singin’ in the Rain Day
Slavery Remembrance Day
Tuberose Day (French Republic)
Umhlanga Day (Eswatini, f.k.a. Swaziland)
Valentino Day
William Wallace Day (Scotland)
Food & Drink Celebrations
Buttered Corn Day
Cuban Sandwich Day
National Spongecake Day
Swedish Meatball Day
World Vada Pad Day (Maharashtra, India)
4th Wednesday in August
La Tomatina (World’s Biggest Food Fight; Buñol, Spain) [4th Wednesday]
Independence Days
Aerlig (Declared, 2001) [unrecognized]
Feast Days
Alexander Calder (Artology)
Appollinaris Sidnonius, Bishop of Clermont (Christian; Saint)
Appreciate What You’ve Got Day (Pastafarian)
Ascelina (Christian; Saint)
Asterius, Claudius, Domnina, Neon, and Theonilla (Christian; Martyrs)
Chǔshǔ begins (China) [Thru 9.7]
Day of Hephaestos (Pagan)
Day of Nemesea (Old Roman Goddess Nemesis, defender of the relics & memory of the dead from insults)
Dollond (Positivist; Saint)
Éogan of Ardstraw (Christian; Saint)
Eugenius of Ireland (Christian; Saint)
Gaura Parba (Women’s Festival to Goddess Gauri; Nepal)
Great Feast of the Netjeru (All Gods/Goddesses; Ancient Egypt)
Hammer Fraggle (Muppetism)
Janmashtami (Lord Krishna Nativity; Hindu)
Justinian the Hermit (Christian; Saint)
Kirvis (Harvest Festival; Lithuania)
Lupus (a.k.a. Luppus) of Novae (Christian; Saint)
Nemeseia (Ancient Greece)
Nuclear Accident Day (Church of the SubGenius)
Philip Benitius (Christian; Saint)
Quiriacus and companions, of Ostia (Christian; Saint)
Rose of Lima (Christian; Saint)
Theonas, Archbishop of Alexandria (Christian; Saint)
Tydfil (Christian; Saint)
Vertumnalia (Old Roman God of the Change of Seasons)
Vulcanalia (Ancient Roman festival to Vulcan)
Zacchaeus of Jerusalem (Christian; Saint)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Tomobiki (友引 Japan) [Good luck all day, except at noon.]
Premieres
Alice Adams (Film; 1935)
Angel Has Fallen (Film; 2019)
Animal Crackers (Film; 1930)
Barton Fink (Film; 1991)
Better Off Dead (Film; 1985)
The Big Sleep (Film; 1946)
Cherry Pink and Apple Blossom White, recorded Perez Prado (Song; 1954)
DC Super Hero Girls: Hero of the Year (WB Animated Film; 2016)
The Death of Superman (WB Animated Film; 2018)
Drinking Buddies (Film; 2013)
Freeway (Film; 1996)
The Girl at the Ironing Board (WB MM Cartoon; 1934)
Going! Going! Gosh! (WB MM Cartoon; 1952)
Grace, by Jeff Buckley (Album; 1994)
Henry IV, Part 2, by William Shakespeare (Play; 1600)
Knighty Knight Bugs (WB LT Cartoon; 1958)
Lover, by Taylor Swift (Album; 2019)
She Loves You, by The Beatles (UK Song; 1963)
She’s the One (Film; 1996)
Teen Wolf (Film; 1985)
The Sun Also Rises (Film; 1957)
Superior Duck (WB Cartoon; 1996)
Superman: Man of Tomorrow (WB Animated Film; 2020)
That ’70s Show (TV Series; 1998)
Tom and Jerry and the Wizard of Oz (WB Animated Film; 2011)
The World’s End (Film; 2013)
Today’s Name Days
Isolde, Philipp, Rosa, Zachäus (Austria)
Rozalija, Ruža, Ružica (Croatia)
Sandra (Czech Republic)
Zakæus (Denmark)
Signe, Singe (Estonia)
Signe, Varma (Finland)
Rose (France)
Isolde, Rosa, Zachäus (Germany)
Bence (Hungary)
Fabrizio, Maria, Regina (Italy)
Benjamins, Ralfs, Spriditis, Vitālijs (Latvia)
Girmantas, Pilypas, Tautgailė (Lithuania)
Signe, Signy (Norway)
Apolinary, Benicjusz, Filip, Laurenty, Sulirad, Walerian, Waleriana, Zacheusz (Poland)
Filip (Slovakia)
Rosa (Spain)
Signe, Signhild (Sweden)
Eugene, Eugenia, Geena, Gena, Gene, Genie, Gina, Jina, River, Zacchaeus, Zaccheus (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 235 of 2024; 130 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 3 of week 34 of 2023
Celtic Tree Calendar: Coll (Hazel) [Day 16 of 28]
Chinese: Month 7 (Geng-Shen), Day 8 (Gui-Chou)
Chinese Year of the: Rabbit 4721 (until February 10, 2024)
Hebrew: 6 Elul 5783
Islamic: 6 Safar 1445
J Cal: 25 Hasa; Foursday [25 of 30]
Julian: 10 August 2023
Moon: 43%: Waxing Crescent
Positivist: 11 Gutenberg (9th Month) [Dollond]
Runic Half Month: As (Gods) [Day 11 of 15]
Season: Summer (Day 63 of 94)
Zodiac: Virgo (Day 2 of 32)
1 note · View note
brookstonalmanac · 2 years ago
Text
Holidays 8.23
Holidays
Asian Corpsetwt Day [Every 23rd]
Battle of Kursk Day (Russia)
Black Ribbon Day (Baltic states)
Daffodil Day [also 4th Friday]
European Day of Remembrance for Victims of Stalinism and Nazism (EU)
Find Your Inner Nerd Day
Flag Day (Ukraine)
Gai Jatra (Cow Festival; Kathmandu Valley, Nepal)
Goldfinch Day
Hashtag Day
Health Unit Coordinator Day
Hebron Massacre Anniversary (Israel)
Hug Your Sweetheart Day
International Blind Dog Day
International Day For the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and its Abolition (UN)
Internaut Day
Kharkiv City Day (Ukraine)
Liberation from Fascist Occupation Day (Romania)
National Cheap Flight Day
National Levi Day
National Physicians Day (Iran)
National Plumber's Day
National Sneak Off to the Beach Day
One-Way Street Day
Permanent Press Day
Purple Poppy Day (UK)
Ride the Wind Day
Sacco-Vanzetti Memorial Day
Schueberfouer Shepherd’s Fair begins (Luxembourg)
Singin’ in the Rain Day
Slavery Remembrance Day
Tuberose Day (French Republic)
Umhlanga Day (Eswatini, f.k.a. Swaziland)
Valentino Day
William Wallace Day (Scotland)
Food & Drink Celebrations
Buttered Corn Day
Cuban Sandwich Day
National Spongecake Day
Swedish Meatball Day
World Vada Pad Day (Maharashtra, India)
4th Wednesday in August
La Tomatina (World’s Biggest Food Fight; Buñol, Spain) [4th Wednesday]
Independence Days
Aerlig (Declared, 2001) [unrecognized]
Feast Days
Alexander Calder (Artology)
Appollinaris Sidnonius, Bishop of Clermont (Christian; Saint)
Appreciate What You’ve Got Day (Pastafarian)
Ascelina (Christian; Saint)
Asterius, Claudius, Domnina, Neon, and Theonilla (Christian; Martyrs)
Chǔshǔ begins (China) [Thru 9.7]
Day of Hephaestos (Pagan)
Day of Nemesea (Old Roman Goddess Nemesis, defender of the relics & memory of the dead from insults)
Dollond (Positivist; Saint)
Éogan of Ardstraw (Christian; Saint)
Eugenius of Ireland (Christian; Saint)
Gaura Parba (Women’s Festival to Goddess Gauri; Nepal)
Great Feast of the Netjeru (All Gods/Goddesses; Ancient Egypt)
Hammer Fraggle (Muppetism)
Janmashtami (Lord Krishna Nativity; Hindu)
Justinian the Hermit (Christian; Saint)
Kirvis (Harvest Festival; Lithuania)
Lupus (a.k.a. Luppus) of Novae (Christian; Saint)
Nemeseia (Ancient Greece)
Nuclear Accident Day (Church of the SubGenius)
Philip Benitius (Christian; Saint)
Quiriacus and companions, of Ostia (Christian; Saint)
Rose of Lima (Christian; Saint)
Theonas, Archbishop of Alexandria (Christian; Saint)
Tydfil (Christian; Saint)
Vertumnalia (Old Roman God of the Change of Seasons)
Vulcanalia (Ancient Roman festival to Vulcan)
Zacchaeus of Jerusalem (Christian; Saint)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Tomobiki (友引 Japan) [Good luck all day, except at noon.]
Premieres
Alice Adams (Film; 1935)
Angel Has Fallen (Film; 2019)
Animal Crackers (Film; 1930)
Barton Fink (Film; 1991)
Better Off Dead (Film; 1985)
The Big Sleep (Film; 1946)
Cherry Pink and Apple Blossom White, recorded Perez Prado (Song; 1954)
DC Super Hero Girls: Hero of the Year (WB Animated Film; 2016)
The Death of Superman (WB Animated Film; 2018)
Drinking Buddies (Film; 2013)
Freeway (Film; 1996)
The Girl at the Ironing Board (WB MM Cartoon; 1934)
Going! Going! Gosh! (WB MM Cartoon; 1952)
Grace, by Jeff Buckley (Album; 1994)
Henry IV, Part 2, by William Shakespeare (Play; 1600)
Knighty Knight Bugs (WB LT Cartoon; 1958)
Lover, by Taylor Swift (Album; 2019)
She Loves You, by The Beatles (UK Song; 1963)
She’s the One (Film; 1996)
Teen Wolf (Film; 1985)
The Sun Also Rises (Film; 1957)
Superior Duck (WB Cartoon; 1996)
Superman: Man of Tomorrow (WB Animated Film; 2020)
That ’70s Show (TV Series; 1998)
Tom and Jerry and the Wizard of Oz (WB Animated Film; 2011)
The World’s End (Film; 2013)
Today’s Name Days
Isolde, Philipp, Rosa, Zachäus (Austria)
Rozalija, Ruža, Ružica (Croatia)
Sandra (Czech Republic)
Zakæus (Denmark)
Signe, Singe (Estonia)
Signe, Varma (Finland)
Rose (France)
Isolde, Rosa, Zachäus (Germany)
Bence (Hungary)
Fabrizio, Maria, Regina (Italy)
Benjamins, Ralfs, Spriditis, Vitālijs (Latvia)
Girmantas, Pilypas, Tautgailė (Lithuania)
Signe, Signy (Norway)
Apolinary, Benicjusz, Filip, Laurenty, Sulirad, Walerian, Waleriana, Zacheusz (Poland)
Filip (Slovakia)
Rosa (Spain)
Signe, Signhild (Sweden)
Eugene, Eugenia, Geena, Gena, Gene, Genie, Gina, Jina, River, Zacchaeus, Zaccheus (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 235 of 2024; 130 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 3 of week 34 of 2023
Celtic Tree Calendar: Coll (Hazel) [Day 16 of 28]
Chinese: Month 7 (Geng-Shen), Day 8 (Gui-Chou)
Chinese Year of the: Rabbit 4721 (until February 10, 2024)
Hebrew: 6 Elul 5783
Islamic: 6 Safar 1445
J Cal: 25 Hasa; Foursday [25 of 30]
Julian: 10 August 2023
Moon: 43%: Waxing Crescent
Positivist: 11 Gutenberg (9th Month) [Dollond]
Runic Half Month: As (Gods) [Day 11 of 15]
Season: Summer (Day 63 of 94)
Zodiac: Virgo (Day 2 of 32)
0 notes
adamwatchesmovies · 2 years ago
Text
Tom and Jerry & the Wizard of Oz (2011)
Tumblr media
While I didn't enjoy this film, that doesn't mean you won't. No matter what I say, the people involved in this project did it: they actually made a movie. That's something to be applauded. With that established...
I don't often give movies "So Bad It's Good" ratings. Even rarer are low “So Bad It’s Good” ratings. If a movie isn't good and isn't enjoyably awful, it probably isn't pleasant under any definition. I'm making an exception for Tom and Jerry & The Wizard of Oz. Why? Well, it all began with Tom and Jerry and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory; a film so bad you had to see it to believe it. No one in their right mind would rent or buy that cinematic mistake. All of its profits must have come from grandparents with poor eyesight desperate to find their grandkids a last-minute Christmas gift. After seeing it, no one would give any Tom and Jerry films - past or future - a chance but it's still available for purchase today. As long as Tom and Jerry and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory is out there, the only audience for this… adaptation? Spoof? Follow-up? to the 1939 Judy Garland classic are demented cinephiles who purposely seek bad movies. Why aren’t they going to be pleased? Read on.
While reuniting Dorothy Gale (voiced by Grey Griffin) with her dog Toto, Tom and Jerry get sucked into a twister and transported to the magical land of Oz. Following Dorothy’s tracks on the yellow brick road, they meet munchkin Tuffy (voiced by Kath Soucie) who tells them of the great and powerful Oz (Joe Alaskey) - the only being who can help them return home.
Unlike Tom and Jerry and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, this isn’t a straight retelling of the original film with the two violence-prone cat and mouse clumsily jammed in. This is an “original movie” with an original plot. It's sort of a Lion King 1 ½ type of story. We see familiar events from a new angle. For instance, did you ever wonder how that bucket of water ended up in the Wicked Witch of the West’s castle? You'll know its back story after this film. What’s that? You never cared? You shouldn't, and that's why this movie fails. This side story is razor thin. In fact, the whole thing clocks in at a slim 56 minutes - far less than the film it’s spinning off of. Unfortunately, since you don’t care about anything, it feels much longer.
This is a perfect example of a film that would be better if it were worse. The new songs are bad, but they’re lame, not cringe-inducing and not memorable. The animation is cheap. I only counted one scene in which a character had a shadow. However, the budget isn’t so low that characters are constantly off-model or animated in a way that makes for great stills. Similarly, since the plot is new, there are no plot holes or nonsensical developments like we had in the Charlie and the Chocolate Factory ripoff. This means there is less to make fun of and many more reasons to become bored.
This is a picture for a non-existent audience. No adult watching will go “I’d much rather watch this than the classic!” If you haven’t seen Dorothy Gale’s original adventure, you won’t understand this plot because it assumes you already know the story and blazes through important information. It isn’t good, and isn’t bad enough to be fun. There’s no reason to see this film and everyone who made it knew this perfectly well. I can’t think of any reason why anyone should ever see it but I also don’t hate it enough to care if you disagree. (On DVD, November 23, 2018)
Tumblr media
3 notes · View notes
quotes-from-oz · 3 months ago
Text
Ugh, okay I know I was supposed to read a book yet but I couldn't wait any longer! So I'm taking the L and watching Tom and Jerry and the Wizard of Oz. This will be a simple good time and a nice return to the slapstick Hanna Barbera cartoons of my childhood
7 notes · View notes
leeshabeth90 · 4 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Reuploading these alithy gifs after reediting them. They look better than my previous ones.
34 notes · View notes
acmeoop · 2 years ago
Text
Tumblr media
I Take My Duties Very Seriously “Tom and Jerry & The Wizard of Oz” (2011)
27 notes · View notes
skullislandproductions · 3 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
“This guy?!” Tom and Jerry are enlisted by Auntie Em, to work together to keep an eye on Dorothy in “Tom and Jerry & The Wizard of Oz,” 2011. Final frame and rough storyboard of this moment, both animated and boarded by myself.
20 notes · View notes
jurassicdinodrew · 2 years ago
Text
Tumblr media
Tom and Jerry double Oz adventures.
This here is the cover of the double features of Tom and Jerry's adventures in the land of Oz, along with some links to the movies.
2 notes · View notes
makaientjluvdaprince · 3 years ago
Photo
Tumblr media
I just watched Tom and Jerry & The Wizard of Oz (2011)
3 notes · View notes