One could find a VHS of The Little Mermaid 2 Return to the Sea at several online sites. Some of these online sites are "eBay", "Craigslist", and "Amazon".
The Little Mermaid was first released on VHS in the year 1990. This was one year after the movie came out in theaters.
The movie "The Little Mermaid II: Return to the Sea" can be purchased in various formats. Some formats in which the movie "The Little Mermaid II: Return to the Sea" can be purchased are on VHS, Blu-ray, and DVD.
Anyone who wants to buy it obviously, although I can't imagine there are that many people who want to buy it.
I looked and looked and couldn't find it online i did find the vhs of it tho- http://www.amazon.com/Stay-Night-VHS-Barbara-Hershey/dp/6304230044 wish i could have been more helpful- sorry it's not even on DVD yet
There are many places where one can find an Ambico VHS rewinder. One can find an Ambico VHS rewinder at popular on the web sources such as Amazon and eBay.
DreamWorks only released Shrek 1 and 2 on VHS. On November 12, 2007, Shrek the Third come out in both DVD and HD DVD formats.
To find the value of out of price DVDs you could take them to a collector that specializes in media adaptations. To sell or get an idea of the price you could also use an online auction website and compare with identical or similar items.
There used to have a VHS copy for sale on ebay. But today I couldn't find it on the wesbite
To name a few, there are, Hercules, Aladdin, Beauty and the Beast, Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty, Snow White, The Little Mermaid, Toy Story, 101 Dalmations, The Lady and the Tramp, and so much more
You are no doubt referring to the 'phallic castle cover'. Honestly it's only worth what someone is willing to pay for it, considering you can see the original castle on the web. Therefore, that aspect of the cover isn't exactly rare and hard to find. Now that VHS tapes aren't being made anymore, it could be considered a collectible so it might be worth something, but a recent search on ebay showed someone selling the 'banned cover' for as little as $1.99, and as high as $99 so like I said, it only has as much value as you place on it.
Super VHS was an 'improved' version of VHS. The picture was much better. But, while you could play a VHS on a Super machine, you could NOT play a Super tape on a regular VHS machine. It never matched the mainstream success of regular VHS. ************ Most standard VHS VCR's made since 1995 can *play* S-VHS tapes but the resolution is reduced to that of standard VHS. It's called SQPB for Super-VHS Quasi-Playback. S-VHS VCRs have the S-VHS logo and a mini DIN 4 video output port and one for input. AFAIK all S-VHS VCRs also support linear stereo and Hi-Fi stereo recording and playback. Playing a standard VHS tape on an S-VHS VCR, using the S-Video out, will get you the best possible playback quality from the standard tape, but it will still be less than S-VHS.
You could find it online, and it's also on DVD and VHS, and probably a few other formats too.