All right, I noticed that there are TWO Disney Classics "Alice in Wonderland" editions, both from different years, but ONE cover artwork design. It looks like THIS
This is the cover artwork when "Alice in Wonderland" was first released as part of the Walt Disney Classics collection, during what I call their "Cheesy Diamond" era, due to how cheesy their original animated Classics logo was, which showed up on this version. The tape label looks something like this:
(There was even a version of the 1986 release here in a slipcover case rather than clamshell packaging!)
However, in 1991 the movie was re-released to video (probably for its 40th Anniversary), along with "Dumbo and "The Sword in the Stone." While the other two got brand-new cover artwork, "Alice in Wonderland" KEPT the old 1986 cover artwork! Not only did it seem appropriate when sometimes the case would contain the original 1986 copy (the 1991 video reissues of "Dumbo" and "Sword in the Stone" sometimes also featured the original 80s tape), but it would cause a lot of confusion since a NEW VHS copy was also made in that era, and placed in the clamshell with the old packaging! The new tape looked like this:
The 1991 "Dumbo" and "Sword in the Stone" videos sometimes had newer editions like this.
Here are the differences between the two tapes:
1986 EDITION
Has white Beta-size label on tape with black text and diamond reading "THE CLASSICS Walt Disney Home Video."
It has that little holo sticker with a movie camera on its side.
The closed captioning was done by the National Captioning Institute.
It features the older, cheesy Disney Classics logo with the spinning words and zooming diamond and moog synth fanfare.
1991 EDITION
Has white, smaller text printed directly onto label space with small white diamond reading "Disney CLASSICS."
The closed captioning was done by Captions Inc. (they do most 1988-present Disney videos)
It features the updated, more common Disney Classics logo with Sorcerer Mickey and the Disney Masterpiece Collection-type music.
I first saw the 1991 edition (my friend has it), and that really confused me why it had an older-type cover artwork. It wasn't until this summer when I actually rented the 1986 edition of the movie from my local Blockbuster! (The video played PERFECTLY for its age, too!)
Do you think this will help if someone plans to find a Disney Black Diamond "Alice in Wonderland" video copy?