PropertyValue
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  • Walt Disney Classics
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  • The Walt Disney Classics was a brand name used by Walt Disney Home Video on their home video releases of Disney animated features. Up to 31 of these films existed back then, but only 20 made it to the Walt Disney Classics series.
  • Walt Disney Classics was a line of VHS videos and Laserdiscs by Walt Disney Home Video, released between 1984 and 1994. Each film is available for a limited-time only before they went on "moratorium" and put back to the Disney Vault, where they were made unavailable for several years until being released again. With the release of Disney's first full-length animated motion picture on home video in October 28, 1994, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, the following movie titles from that line (Dumbo, Sleeping Beauty, The Sword in the Stone, Alice in Wonderland, Robin Hood, etc.), plus The Three Caballeros and all of Disney's real-life action motion pictures with animation except Song of the South were released as part of its follow-up line of VHS videos and Laserdiscs from Walt Disney Home Vid
  • Walt Disney Classics was a brand name used by Walt Disney Home Video on their American, Japanese, European, and Australian home video releases of Disney animated features. The last title in the Classics line from 1984-1994 was The Fox and the Hound. With the release of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, all the existing titles in the Classics line were replaced with the Masterpiece Collection line and the Classics line was canceled in the United States and Canada. Cassette copies of the original Classics series became much sought-after, and are very popular with collectors, since most retailers had the first home video release for Disney animated features in their stores up to the time when the label was discontinued. Animated features and other films containing animation (such as Mary Poppi
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dbkwik:disney/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:heykidscomics/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
abstract
  • Walt Disney Classics was a brand name used by Walt Disney Home Video on their American, Japanese, European, and Australian home video releases of Disney animated features. The last title in the Classics line from 1984-1994 was The Fox and the Hound. With the release of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, all the existing titles in the Classics line were replaced with the Masterpiece Collection line and the Classics line was canceled in the United States and Canada. Cassette copies of the original Classics series became much sought-after, and are very popular with collectors, since most retailers had the first home video release for Disney animated features in their stores up to the time when the label was discontinued. Animated features and other films containing animation (such as Mary Poppins and Pete's Dragon) continued to be released under the "Walt Disney Classics" label and its foreign language equivalents until around 2007 throughout Europe, and "Walt Disney Meisterwerke", the German equivalent series, is still in operation as of 2010 through its broader "Special Collection" range.
  • The Walt Disney Classics was a brand name used by Walt Disney Home Video on their home video releases of Disney animated features. Up to 31 of these films existed back then, but only 20 made it to the Walt Disney Classics series.
  • Walt Disney Classics was a line of VHS videos and Laserdiscs by Walt Disney Home Video, released between 1984 and 1994. Each film is available for a limited-time only before they went on "moratorium" and put back to the Disney Vault, where they were made unavailable for several years until being released again. With the release of Disney's first full-length animated motion picture on home video in October 28, 1994, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, the following movie titles from that line (Dumbo, Sleeping Beauty, The Sword in the Stone, Alice in Wonderland, Robin Hood, etc.), plus The Three Caballeros and all of Disney's real-life action motion pictures with animation except Song of the South were released as part of its follow-up line of VHS videos and Laserdiscs from Walt Disney Home Video, the Walt Disney Masterpiece Collection.