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Raggedy Ann & Andy: A Musical Adventure

  • 1977
  • G
  • 1h 24m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
1.2K
YOUR RATING
Marty Brill, Didi Conn, Paul Dooley, Niki Flacks, Hetty Galen, Sheldon Harnick, George S. Irving, Joe Silver, Arnold Stang, Fred Stuthman, Alan Sues, Allen Swift, and Mark Baker in Raggedy Ann & Andy: A Musical Adventure (1977)
Raggedy Ann and Andy leave their playroom to rescue Babette, a beautiful French doll kidnapped by pirates.
Play trailer2:19
1 Video
99+ Photos
Hand-Drawn AnimationAdventureAnimationComedyFamilyFantasyMusical

Raggedy Ann and Andy leave their playroom to rescue Babette, a beautiful French doll kidnapped by pirates.Raggedy Ann and Andy leave their playroom to rescue Babette, a beautiful French doll kidnapped by pirates.Raggedy Ann and Andy leave their playroom to rescue Babette, a beautiful French doll kidnapped by pirates.

  • Directors
    • Richard Williams
    • Abe Levitow
    • Don Bluth
  • Writers
    • Johnny Gruelle
    • Patricia Thackray
    • Max Wilk
  • Stars
    • Claire Williams
    • Didi Conn
    • Mark Baker
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    1.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Richard Williams
      • Abe Levitow
      • Don Bluth
    • Writers
      • Johnny Gruelle
      • Patricia Thackray
      • Max Wilk
    • Stars
      • Claire Williams
      • Didi Conn
      • Mark Baker
    • 45User reviews
    • 16Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:19
    Trailer

    Photos324

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    + 320
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    Top cast19

    Edit
    Claire Williams
    Claire Williams
    • Marcella
    Didi Conn
    Didi Conn
    • Raggedy Ann
    • (voice)
    Mark Baker
    Mark Baker
    • Raggedy Andy
    • (voice)
    Fred Stuthman
    Fred Stuthman
    • The Camel with the Wrinkled Knees
    • (voice)
    Niki Flacks
    Niki Flacks
    • Babette
    • (voice)
    George S. Irving
    George S. Irving
    • The Captain
    • (voice)
    Arnold Stang
    Arnold Stang
    • Queasy
    • (voice)
    Joe Silver
    Joe Silver
    • The Greedy
    • (voice)
    Alan Sues
    Alan Sues
    • The Loonie Knight
    • (voice)
    Marty Brill
    Marty Brill
    • King Koo Koo
    • (voice)
    Paul Dooley
    Paul Dooley
    • Gazooks
    • (voice)
    Mason Adams
    Mason Adams
    • Grandpa
    • (voice)
    Allen Swift
    Allen Swift
    • Maxi-Fixit
    • (voice)
    Hetty Galen
    Hetty Galen
    • Susie Pincushion
    • (voice)
    Sheldon Harnick
    Sheldon Harnick
    • Barney Beanbag
    • (voice)
    • …
    Ardyth Kaiser
    • Topsy
    • (voice)
    Margery Gray
    • The Twin Penny
    • (voice)
    Lynne Stuart
    • The Twin Penny
    • (voice)
    • Directors
      • Richard Williams
      • Abe Levitow
      • Don Bluth
    • Writers
      • Johnny Gruelle
      • Patricia Thackray
      • Max Wilk
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews45

    6.71.2K
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    Featured reviews

    cnote3535

    Just as weird as I remembered.

    I actually found a copy of this movie recently. I hadn't seen it in easily twenty years and its one of those movies that ALWAYS had stuck with me. Every time I mentioned it to someone, they would look at me a little strangely. Watching the film again brought back alot of memories and I was amazed at how much I had actually retained.

    The animation style is very interesting because each character is done by a different animator, each using their own style. At times this is a little jarring but overall it adds to the mood of the movie which is WEIRD. The film switches from happy musical numbers to the dolls getting trapped in a pit with a grotesque, horrifying candy monster (one of the images that was burned into my memory 26 years ago.) Definitely a great deal of imagination involved in this film. If you can find this, its definitely worth watching.
    lowercasegods

    An oasis of warmth in the cold wasteland of seventies animation

    People not quite into their twenties take for granted the warm, feel good animated films that are available to them these days. Starting with Who Framed Roger Rabbit in 1988 (though unfairly attributed to The Little Mermaid a year later), a renaissance of animation had begun that is still going strong today (thanks mostly to Pixar). But the privileged children of the 90's would never know of the cold, bleak wasteland of theatrical animation in the 1970's. With the advent of Fritz the Cat in 1971, soft, fuzzy, family-friendly animation fell out of favor with the studios, and ushered in the dark wave of adult themed cartoons. Ralph Bakshi led the pack with such topical and wholly adult productions as Coonskin (a.k.a. Streetfight), Wizards, Heavy Traffic, the original Lords of the Rings, and the previously mentioned Fritz the Cat. Soon his violent vision was adopted by other renegade animators and before long, virtually all animated films were saddled with either a PG or dreaded R rating. So it goes without saying that a sweet little film like Raggedy Ann and Andy: A Musical Adventure hardly had an audience when it was released in 1976. The fact that it ever got made is a testimony to the desperation of the studios and people who so desperately missed the sweet and touching films in the old Disney vein. This film dared to be cute, had the tenacity to be sweet, had the temerity to be gentle, the chutzpah to be (GASP!) KID FRIENDLY! In all fairness, it must be stressed that RAAA was not alone in their attempt to bring softness back into modern animation. Charles Schulz's wonderful Peanuts characters had two great attempts in the seventies with Snoopy, Come Home and Race For Your Life, Charlie Brown. And the usually rigid and slap-sticky Hanna Barbera brought us that lovely tear-jerker of a cartoon, Charlotte's Web. But these productions were far and few between, and never on such a grandiose scale as their more violent bretheren. With RAAA, director Richard Williams (the real brain trust behind Who Framed Roger Rabbit, not Robert Zemeckis, who only directed the live action) not only attempted to revive family friendly cartoons, but also attempted to bring back lavish, fluid animation and movie musical sensibilities. In doing so he brought back some of animation's pioneers to make sure the film was done right. Grim Natwick (creator of Betty Boop, animator of Snow White and Richard's mentor) lent a hand, along with countless others, in the creation of The Greedy, King Cuckoo, the Camel with the wrinkled knees and the rest of Johnny Gruelle's storybook menagerie. The Brilliant Joe Raposo (of Sesame Street fame and brain trust of Kermit the Frog's Bein' Green)provided delightful songs for the film (The Camel's sweet and somber song alone is worth watching this film), and Didi Conn and Mark Lynn-Baker voiced the title characters to perfection. The net result of this creative hodge podge was one of the warmest, most entertaining and family friendly cartoons to break through the doom and gloom of standard 70's animation.

    Regretfully, movie critics denounced the film for reasons too varied and unfounded to mention here. That, coupled with the fact that RAAA became avalanched by the glut of violent animation and the wealth of bad family films, resulting in it barely making a blip on the pop culture radar. Thanks to old school television programming (does anyone else recall Nickelodeon's Special Delivery?), I re-discovered this long lost treasure in the mid 80's, and had the foresight to immortalize it (along with some vintage 80's commercials) on Beta video (and you don't get much more vintage that Beta). This has been a gem in my movie collection ever since, and still holds a special place in my heart and my childhood. So modern movie going audiences, count your blessings. You have warm, family friendly animation dropped at your feet these days. But you never know. The day may come again soon where such kid-oriented fare becomes passe, and the studios return to churning out violent, bleak animation, just as they did in the 70's. If that day does come, however, I still have a copy of Raggedy Ann and Andy to see me through the darkness, comforting me in the knowledge that, at least in animation, good will always rise out of the ashes of evil.
    7Baldach

    Fond memories

    The last time I saw the movie I was around seven years, so my opinions might be jaded over time. At the time I enjoyed the filming that switched between cartoon and live action. At the time I felt sad for the blue camel and his sad life. Also I felt glee when after Captain Contagious kidnapped the heroine (a princess or toy shepherdess) the tables the were turned on him. Unfortunately the producers never decided to transfer this movie to VHS, so all I have are twenty year old memories. I am sure that if I saw the movie again I would consider it corny and sappy, but I really enjoyed it the movie at the time.
    6carm15

    Good when little, trippy now

    I own an incredibly battered copy of this movie, which leads me to believe that I loved it when I was maybe 6 or 8, but looking back from my young adulthood, I can't say I enjoy it as much. It sat on a shelf for a few years before I dusted it off to reminisce with a movie that I remember loving so much, especially because the main voice was also the woman from Shining Time Station (another kiddie fave). But I soon found that 80% of the scenes made me feel like I was in a chemically-induced state of mind (which I've never actually done, but I'm sure the sensations are similar). Aside from overall creepiness from the male characters, I still appreciate the girly, cutesy message it sends that I oh-so-highly enjoyed in my childhood. But I may not watch it again until I have a dreamy-eyed daughter of my own
    8Vagabear

    an uneven nonetheless charming children's film

    I have very fond memories of this film, as I saw it with my two younger sisters when it first shown theatrically in 1977 and I was eight years old. Apparently it was deemed a failure - and is now practically forgotten (the pan-and scan videocassette - which never did justice to the picture or it's ambitious Panavision compositions is now out-of -print.) The film is very stylized (shades of YELLOW SUBMARINE) and admittedly uneven. Some of the characters and sequences are exquisite while others are somewhat juvenile and undistinguished. The sad discarded blue camel (shades of Eeyore) and his blue song are truly heartwarming. Joe Raposo's songs are for the most part simply beautiful. Definitely a worthwhile curiousity that will probably (sadly) fall into total obscurity.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      This film was last released on home video in its full screen VHS format in 1992. No DVD release is scheduled, not even in widescreen, due to legal issues. However, Garrett Gilchrist, who restored The Thief and the Cobbler (1993) as "The Recobbled Cut", restored this film in widescreen and has put it on video sharing websites.
    • Goofs
      During the "Rag Dolly" number, when all the dolls sing together, Raggedy Andy takes off his hat at one point. When he does so, another appears as if he never took it off.
    • Quotes

      The Camel: [singing] When you can't find a friend / And the road doesn't seem to end / And you're lonesome the whole day through / How can you be happy? / How can you be smiling? / How can you be anything but lowdown saggy and blue? / When there's nothing to share / And you don't have a dime to spare / And there's no one to comfort you / How can you be smiling? / How can you be singing? How can you be anything but lowdown saggy and blue? / I look around and see the sweet life everywhere. / I watch the cookie bushes shining in the sun. / The smell of sweet vanilla living blows in every breath of air. / Doesn't anybody want me? / Doesn't anybody care? / When you're wrinkled and cold / And your fortune has all been told / And you're nobody's "I Love You" / How can you be happy? / How can you be smiling? / How can you be anything but lowdown saggy and blue? / Sad but true. / How can you be happy? / How can you be singing? / How can you be anything but lowdown saggy / And rag bag baggy / And blue.

    • Connections
      Featured in Nostalgia Critic: Top 11 Nostalgic Mindfucks (2009)
    • Soundtracks
      I Look, And What Do I See?
      Music and Lyrics by Joe Raposo

      Performed by Didi Conn, Mason Adams, Sheldon Harnick, Allen Swift,

      Hetty Galen and Ardyth Kaiser

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    FAQ15

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 1, 1977 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Raggedy Ann & Andy Meet the Camel with the Wrinkled Knees
    • Filming locations
      • Boonton, New Jersey, USA(live action sequences)
    • Production companies
      • Bobbs-Merrill
      • International Telephone and Telegraph Corporation
      • Lester Osterman Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $4,000,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 24 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39 : 1
      • 2.35 : 1

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    Marty Brill, Didi Conn, Paul Dooley, Niki Flacks, Hetty Galen, Sheldon Harnick, George S. Irving, Joe Silver, Arnold Stang, Fred Stuthman, Alan Sues, Allen Swift, and Mark Baker in Raggedy Ann & Andy: A Musical Adventure (1977)
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    By what name was Raggedy Ann & Andy: A Musical Adventure (1977) officially released in India in English?
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