* AccidentallyCorrectWriting: The vertically-challenged King Koo Koo claims at one point that UsefulNotes/{{Napoleon|Bonaparte}} would look tall compared to him. This line was based on the common myth that Napoleon was abnormally short. However, Napoleon was actually 5’7”, so technically, he ''would'' be tall compared to Koo Koo, it's just that so would almost any other human.[[note]] The reason for the centuries-old discrepancy is that contemporary records listed Napoleon as 5’2”, but that was in ''French feet'', and a pre-metric French foot translates to about 13 English inches (instead of 12). So, Napoleon was average height for a late-1700's aristocrat, and taller than male peasants. The difference in measuring systems plus Napoleon's nickname "the little corporal" (meant in French as a term of endearment, not a slam) PLUS his well-known habit of surrounding himself with VERY tall guards, made it incredibly easy for his British enemies to caricature him as a tiny man.[[/note]]
* ApprovalOfGod: While critical reception of the film was mixed-to-negative, ''Raggedy Ann'' creator Johnny Gruelle's descendants loved it.
* BoxOfficeBomb: Budget: $4 million; Box office: $1.4 million.
* CreatorBacklash: Creator/RichardWilliams didn't look back on the film itself with much fondness, admitting at a book signing apppearance that it "was a fuck up" in hindsight. At an appearance at Ottawa International Animation Festival, when animator Steve Segal let it slip that he thought John Canemaker's Making Of book, ''The Animated Raggedy Ann'', was better than the actual film, Richard ''agreed'' with him.
* FakeNationality: Niki Flacks and Marty Brill are both American. Flacks does a French accent for Babette, while Brill does a German accent for King Koo Koo.
* KeepCirculatingTheTapes: The film was released on VHS in the late 1980s and 90s, but copies are rare and it has never seen a DVD or Blu-Ray release due to its current owners having no interest in making the investment. It's shown up on the internet here and there and -- since it was filmed in Panavision -- any festival screenings are forced to work with tortured theatrical prints to present it in the correct aspect ratio.
* MissingEpisode: As detailed below, the original negative of the film allegedly disappeared shortly after the film was released with no clues as to where it could possibly be. Simon and Schuster, who now own the rights, have expressed no interest to invest in hunting it down, meaning that it most likely won't be found.
* MoneyDearBoy: The ITT Corporation, who funded the production, had just helped the CIA to overthrow the president of Guatemala (yes, really) and saw a significant drop in stocks as a result. They decided to invest in a piece of major entertainment to quickly recoup their losses, choosing the Literature/RaggedyAnn character because of her recognizability. They pushed production duties onto their publishing arm the Bobbs-Merrill Company and had it distributed through 20th Century Fox to downplay their involvement.
* OneForTheMoneyOneForTheArt: Richard Williams only took the directing job so he could fund ''WesternAnimation/TheThiefAndTheCobbler''.
* RealLifeRelative: Marcella, the owner of Raggedy Ann, is played by Claire Williams, the daughter of director Richard Williams.
* ReferencedBy:
** [=HotDiggedyDemon=] sings "No Girl's Toy" in an episode of ''WebAnimation/BrainDump''.
** Ragatha of ''WebAnimation/TheAmazingDigitalCircus'' is modeled after the Raggedy Ann from this movie (Creator/{{Gooseworx}} is a self-professed fan of the movie). Creator/MichaelKovach (the voice of Jax, whose voice is modelled after Mark Baker's Raggedy Andy) recorded his own cover of "No Girl's Toy" to celebrate the pilot receiving 20 million views. The episode "Candy Carrier Chaos" also features the Fudge, whose design and voice is a direct reference to the Greedy.
* ScrewedByTheNetwork: ITT sold the Bobbs-Merrill Company and the rights to the film to Simon and Schuster for $1 once it was finished. According to a long-standing claim, the original physical negative of the film was lost in the kerfuffle. Because the film was a flop, Simon and Schuster have never had the interest in looking for the original negative, and thus the film's home video releases stopped following the VHS generation.
* ThrowItIn
** Didi Conn had laryngitis when she voiced Ann. Richard Williams decided to include it in the film because it worked for the more emotional scenes.
** Improvisation was encouraged among the actors, most notably the camel's line "Look at mah poor knees!"
* TroubledProduction: Original director Abe Levitow died during production, so the film was produced by a team of Broadway producers who'd never worked on a film, let alone animation, making it difficult for them to know what they wanted. The crew eventually assembled consisted mostly of recent art school graduates and veterans of theatrical shorts who'd never worked on a feature, including director Creator/RichardWilliams himself, meaning that everyone was at different levels of experience and ability. Williams, who could not work for a budget, balked at the initial proposition for [[LimitedAnimation UPA-style animation]] and insisted that, to get the storybook quality visuals he desired, he would need to have two fully operational units on either coast. This ambitious technique, plus the cost to fly Williams back and forth between the two to supervise and for animators to mail their scenes to the New York studio, caused the once-minuscule budget to skyrocket, slowed the production down resulting in several missed deadlines. It confused the animators, with one unit sometimes completing a scene the same day it had been assigned to the other unit. Emery Hawkins, who animated [[SignatureScene the infamous "Greedy sequence,"]] got fed up and [[ScrewThisImOuttaHere quit halfway through]] reanimating the scene for the second time, forcing two assistants to finish it for him. When the studio told Williams that there was no money left to give the film his trademark ArtisticTitle, he cursed them out and animated it himself. Williams was eventually [[ExecutiveMeddling fired and replaced]] at the tail end of production simply to get it finished.
* UncreditedRole: Raggedy Andy is the only character whose animator is not credited in the opening titles.
* WagTheDirector: The decision to include so many musical numbers was a demand from Joe Raposo, who refused to let more than ten songs be cut.
* WhatCouldHaveBeen
** The film began as a stage musical, then as a live action film with humans as dolls before it was decided that that'd be too hokey. When it was decided that it would be animated, it was envisioned as having low-budget, UPA-style animation until Richard Williams was brought on and designed the production to resemble 19th century children's books to compliment the lavish, classical animation he wanted.
** Production was originally going to be handled by Creator/ChuckJones' studio Sib Tower 12, who had produced a Raggedy Ann Halloween TV special, with Jones' frequent collaborator Abe Levitow directing. Levitow had a massive heart attack and died before production, so Jones recommended Creator/RichardWilliams, with whom he'd worked on his AnimatedAdaptation of ''Literature/AChristmasCarol'', as a replacement.
** At one point, Creator/JoeOriolo (who, by coincidence, had animated on the Creator/FleischerStudios two-reeler adaptation of ''Raggedy Ann and Andy'') was considered as a director for the project, but lost the option when Richard Williams became director.
** Corny Cole, one of the animators, said in ''The Animated Raggedy Ann and Andy'' that the Greedy was originally conceived as a GiantSpider-like creature with "all kinds of hands."
* WriterRevolt: The guy King Kookoo says "Fire him!" to (during the climax of the movie) is a caricature of Richard Williams. It was added when several of the animators got fed up with his seemingly hard direction.