Little Red Riding Hood's Amazing Adventure (1990)

Little Red Riding Hood's Amazing Adventure (Japanese: 赤ずきんの旅, Hepburn: Akazukin no tabi) is a 1990 Japanese-American animated musical comedy-drama adventure fantasy film directed by Tom Wyner and Shuki Levy. Based on the fairy tale stories including Little Red Riding Hood, Puss in Boots, Alice in Wonderland, The Six Swans, and Rumpelstiltskin; the film went through a lengthy development process with a number of screenwriters. Ultimately, the screenplay was credited to Judy Freudberg, Tony Geiss and Peter S. Beagle; the storyline and art style differed from the original version. The original soundtrack was penned by the music composers by Shigeaki Saegusa and John Massari of Academy Award-winning songs by Rodgers and Hammerstein, John Barry and Don Black. The film features the English dub voices of Sophie Lara Winkleman, Amanda Root, Joan Sims, Ian James Corlett, Bailee Reid, Reg Williams with June Foray and Ewan McGregor (first role).

The movie was infamous for being in development hell with many people with some worked at Tezuka Productions who worked on Astro Boy/Kimba the White Lion, some of Disney and others who worked on Bambi/Alice in Wonderland, some of the people who worked on Woody Woodpecker and Little Audrey/Casper the Friendly Ghost, as well as some people who would later found Studio Ghibli (half-anime production)/Toei Animation (animation production), figures such as Haim Saban, Shuki Levy, Toru Hara, Nick Tafuri, Isao Takahata, Osamu Tezuka (last role), Nobutaka Nishizawa, Don Patterson, Kazue Morimoto, Raymond Jacobs, Kenichi Chikanaga, John Halas, Hisayuki Toriumi, and Bill Melendez being involved with the movie before all dropping out.

The film was released in Japan and in the United States on March 9, 1990 by the Toho-Towa and Paramount Pictures Corporation.

Production
With the film tentatively scheduled for release in 1988 before Kiki's Delivery Service and Little Nemo, likewise, the animation crews on Little Red Riding Hood's Amazing Adventure and The Adventures of Dorothy Gale effectively competed against each other to see which film would finish first. By early 1988, My Neighbor Totoro had progressed further than Little Red Riding Hood's Amazing Adventure with Osamu Tezuka before its last role in one year later.

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Cinematic influences
At this time, it also encouraged his staff to see a variety of films. These ranged from the mainstream, such as The Fox and the Hound (1981)—to which it made direct reference in a story meeting pertaining to the scene in which Red Riding Hood grown up in ten years ago after allowing Granny to die believing she is Red Riding Hood with Pussy. Little Red Riding Hood's Amazing Adventure, as well as the two films to follow it, were also influenced by such an expressionist films as Darby O'Gill and the Little People (1959), The Wild Swans (1977), The Secret of N.I.M.H (1982), The Black Cauldron (1985) and Kiki's Delivery Service (1989), both of which were recommended by Disney to his staff. This influence is particularly evident in the scenes of Red Riding Hood searching for Pussy through the forest, when in ten years later, the Adult Red Riding Hood kills Countess Leonard with his dagger. The latter scene was also inspired by Bambi (1942), Alice in Wonderland (1951), Charlotte's Web (1973) and The Lion, The Witch & The Wardrobe (1979), to which Disney made specific reference in story meetings.