This theatrical version of Lewis Carroll's 1865 classic features a combination of live characters and stop-motion animation.This theatrical version of Lewis Carroll's 1865 classic features a combination of live characters and stop-motion animation.This theatrical version of Lewis Carroll's 1865 classic features a combination of live characters and stop-motion animation.
- Lewis Carroll
- (voice)
- …
- The Vice Chancellor
- (voice)
- …
- Dr. Liddel
- (voice)
- …
- The Prince Consort
- (voice)
- (as David Read)
- …
- Puppet Character
- (voice)
- Puppet Character
- (voice)
- Puppet Character
- (voice)
- The Tailor
- (voice)
- (as Raymond Bussieres)
- …
- Bit Part
- (uncredited)
- Edith Liddel
- (uncredited)
- Lorina Liddel
- (uncredited)
- Alice Liddell
- (singing voice)
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaCarol Marsh insisted on doing some of the most difficult sequences herself, when a double would have been permissible. Falling down the rabbit hole to Wonderland entailed a hair-raising thirty-foot drop into a net. A famous French trapeze artist, Mile Roselie, showed her how to make the fall, but Carol completed the scene with bruised knees, scratched legs and six ruined pairs of stockings. Carol found the most difficult scene was the one where she slides down an enormous table leg. It was an almost perpendicular drop, and Carol admits she was very frightened while doing it.
- GoofsIn the end credits Joyce Grenfell is listed as 'Joyce Gronfell'.
- Quotes
Opening Crawl: Nearly a century ago, a professor at Oxford, Charles Dodgson - better known as Lewis Carroll - wrote a simple story, a fascinating story, called "Alice in Wonderland". But, perhaps the story was not so simple, because you see that Lewis Carroll modelled his creatures of Wonderland on the foibles of real people. The Cheshire Cat, it is told, is really a Dean of Oxford; the Queen of Hearts, the Queen; the Mad Hatter, a tailor; the White Rabbits, the Chancellor; and so on.
- Crazy creditsCarol Marsh's on-screen credit reads, "and by arrangement with J. Arthur Rank: Carol Marsh as Alice".
- Alternate versionsThe original US running time was 83 minutes. Every US home video version has the US version running at 76 minutes or less due to missing print sections, depending on the US VHS or DVD release you have.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Animation Lookback: The Best of Stop Motion - The First Features (2014)
It was also filmed in Ansocolor, a process which has not travelled well if the print in the archives is anything to go by. Carol Marsh is an OK Alice, but looks older than she should be - the puppets are mainly hideous and would be frightening to children (especially the Mock Turtle, the Duchess, and the Mouse Alice encounters in the lake of tears). I did like the footmen-fish however and the combination of live action with puppet work, if a bit creaky, does have charm.
At the start of the film, we meet the dons of Oxford and the Queen (the Vice-Chancellor then becomes the White Rabbit, the Queen is the Queen of Hearts, with the same actors providing the voices). The switch into the 'Wonderland' story proper comes with a boat trip in which the stuttering Dodgson entertains the Liddel girls to compensate from them missing the visit of the Queen to Oxford.
There is much to enjoy in this film - the score is good, if a little saccharine, the puppets are memorable (although one or two, especially the Caterpillar, compare unfavourably with their Disney counterparts), and the story still has charm. There is also enough humour to entertain adult audiences while the main story enthrals their children. Recommended, if hard to track down these days.
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Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Alice Harikalar Diyarında
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 23 minutes
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1