Release CalendarTop 250 MoviesMost Popular MoviesBrowse Movies by GenreTop Box OfficeShowtimes & TicketsMovie NewsIndia Movie Spotlight
    What's on TV & StreamingTop 250 TV ShowsMost Popular TV ShowsBrowse TV Shows by GenreTV News
    What to WatchLatest TrailersIMDb OriginalsIMDb PicksIMDb SpotlightFamily Entertainment GuideIMDb Podcasts
    OscarsCannes Film FestivalStar WarsAsian Pacific American Heritage MonthSummer Watch GuideSTARmeter AwardsAwards CentralFestival CentralAll Events
    Born TodayMost Popular CelebsCelebrity News
    Help CenterContributor ZonePolls
For Industry Professionals
  • Language
  • Fully supported
  • English (United States)
    Partially supported
  • Français (Canada)
  • Français (France)
  • Deutsch (Deutschland)
  • हिंदी (भारत)
  • Italiano (Italia)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Español (España)
  • Español (México)
Watchlist
Sign In
  • Fully supported
  • English (United States)
    Partially supported
  • Français (Canada)
  • Français (France)
  • Deutsch (Deutschland)
  • हिंदी (भारत)
  • Italiano (Italia)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Español (España)
  • Español (México)
Use app
Back
  • Cast & crew
  • User reviews
  • Trivia
  • FAQ
IMDbPro
Mel Blanc, Sterling Holloway, Heather Angel, Kathryn Beaumont, Lucille Bliss, Jerry Colonna, Pinto Colvig, Verna Felton, Larry Grey, Richard Haydn, Joseph Kearns, Bill Lee, Queenie Leonard, Doris Lloyd, Tommy Luske, James MacDonald, Marni Nixon, J. Pat O'Malley, Thurl Ravenscroft, Max Smith, Bill Thompson, Dink Trout, Ed Wynn, Norma Zimmer, The Mellowmen Quartet, and Bob Hamlin in Alice in Wonderland (1951)

User reviews

Alice in Wonderland

256 reviews

Pretty Good Adaptation With Enjoyable Characters and Scenes

For material that does not lend itself very easily to cinema, this is a pretty good adaptation of "Alice in Wonderland" with some enjoyable characters and sequences. It succeeds, at least in a basic way, in capturing part of the manic but imaginative nature of Lewis Carroll's story.

Much of the language, poetry, and ideas that make the original story so captivating cannot really be conveyed very easily in a movie, and so it would be nearly impossible for any cinema version of Alice to be completely satisfying to those who love the book. Instead, this version simply tries to make the characters come to life, and to use the animation to recreate the feel, if not the depth, of Alice's experience.

The animation drives most of the movie, and at times it is pretty imaginative. Some of the voices work very well, too, with the likes of Ed Wynn and Sterling Holloway fitting the animated characters quite well.

Carroll's stories are so enchanting and creative that it is no surprise that there have been so many efforts through the years to capture the magic of the Alice stories on film. None of the cinema versions has yet come close to matching the books, yet the material itself has made most of them worth watching. In this one, the overall production has a definite Disney style to it, which makes it different from the original, but as a movie it works pretty well.
  • Snow Leopard
  • Dec 29, 2004
  • Permalink
8/10

A well-made journey through nonsense

Alice one day while bored by the riverbank sees a white rabbit wearing a waistcoat and carrying a pocket watch. Out of curiosity Alice follows the rabbit down a rabbit eventually winding up in Wonderland a place of utter ridiculousness inhabited by characters who are stupid, crazy, or both.

Released in 1951, Alice In Wonderland adapted from the books Alice in Wonderland and Alice Through the Looking Glass by Lewis Caroll had been a long gestating project as far back to the day's of Disney's Laugh O Gram studios in the 20s where the works loosely inspired Disney's early Alice Comedies. Attempts had been made by Disney to adapt the story to feature length with a preliminary outlines produced prior to the release of Snow White that were ultimately scrapped due to mitigating circumstances. While adaptations of Alice in Wonderland have been made before and since the 1951 Disney film, few, if any, of them have been as well regarded with the Disney version being the most fully realized version of the literary nonsense of Lewis Caroll.

Much like the source material, the story in Alice in Wonderland is less a straightforward narrative and more an excuse to showcase surreal imagery counter balanced against the normality and grounding of Alice who serves as our straight man to nonsense and insanity of Wonderland and its crazed inhabitants. Kathryn Beaumont voices the titular Alice and serves as an effective audience proxy whose down to earth no-nonsense delivery and insatiable curiosity makes her both an effective story engine to move the journey along as well as give the audience a grounding agent to give meaning, purpose, and weight to the surreal encounters of her journey.

Artistically speaking this is Disney's animation at its most unrestrained. Much like Three Caballeros Alice in Wonderland never sits still always keeping itself moving forward to the next bizarre head scratching tangent animated with the intensity of a technicolor fever dream. Unlike Three Caballeros however, the movie wisely gives us a grounding element with Alice and gives breaks in between the more outlandish tangents so the movie never gets exhausting. The animation used to bring Wonderland to life is very striking as Wonderland itself is very dark with many scenes having pitch black or dark black drops that work in contrasting against the purposefully more colorful and energized inhabitants. Every character and encounter stands out be it the petty, jealous, bad tempered Red Queen, the giddy gleeful mania of Mad Hatter and March Hare, or the seeming omnipotent Chesire Cat who's as powerful as he is crazy. Every encounter Alice faces leaves an impression with even the smallest (quite literally in some cases) leaving an impact.

Alice in Wonderland is a classic example of Disney animation and nonsensical story telling perfectly combined into an unforgettable experience. While not Disney's first attempt at feature length narrative nonsense, it's without question the best example of it produced on this scale up to this point and makes welcome viewing for any animation enthusiast.
  • IonicBreezeMachine
  • Sep 3, 2021
  • Permalink
8/10

It's a mad, mad, mad, mad wonderland.

  • mark.waltz
  • Jan 20, 2021
  • Permalink

Some brilliant animation in semi-successful adaptation of classic novel...

Let's face it, there are moments in ALICE IN WONDERLAND that are absolutely dazzling, imaginative and as artistic as anything the Disney artists were capable of doing. And yet, for all its achievement in the art of animation, this Disney film has always drawn mixed notices. Perhaps part of the problem is there is seldom a letup in the zany goings-on--seldom a chance to draw a breath and rest between each overly imaginative episode. Then too, it's the episodic quality of the whole story structure that upsets some as well as the frantic cartoon movements of its weird characters.

Faults and all, it's still a colorful event--probably one of the richest uses of color Disney ever attempted and with some wonderful styling in its background art. For me, a highlight of the film is the singing/talking flower sequence ("Golden Afternoon") with its haughty flowers discussing Alice as if she was some kind of other worldly creature with funny looking stems. (It reminded me of the snooty elephants laughing and speaking with contempt of the new baby elephant in Dumbo).

Other bits are equally brilliant--the shuffling army of cards in the Queen of Hearts episode; the baby oysters clothed in blue bonnets and pink dresses for the Walrus and the Carpenter; the droll humor in the Tweedledum/Tweedledee sequence; the smoking Caterpillar becoming irate when his three inches of height becomes the subject of conversation; and of course, the Mad Tea Party, full of hilarious slapstick and immensely aided by the voice talents of Bill Thompson (White Rabbit), Jerry Colonna (March Hare) and Ed Wynn (Mad Hatter). No less impressive is Verna Felton as the raucous voice of the Queen of Hearts in some of the film's funniest moments. With her army of cards, she plays a wicked game of croquet with flamingoes as mallets, hedgehog as a ball and cards as hoops, all the while displaying a lethal temper.

Despite some brilliant animation, pleasant songs and gorgeous art work, it's just another example of how difficult it is ("impassable" to quote Carroll) to translate this particular tale to the screen and still remain faithful to the original. Others (many other versions, in fact) have failed--but Disney at least provides a sprightly, if frantic, version that has appeal for adults and children.

Perhaps because its surrealism matched the hippy culture of psychedelia, ALICE enjoyed a welcome theatrical return engagement in the '60s and has become more respected in recent years (an American-made British fantasy popular even in the U.K.) as one of the studio's finest efforts.

Ironically, one of its most delightful characters--the doorknob--never appeared in the book but was applauded everywhere as an inspired bit of business.
  • Doylenf
  • Jan 26, 2004
  • Permalink
7/10

Strangely magical almost overly ridiculous ...

Strangely magical almost overly ridiculous animated version of the classic story. It's obvious that some deep ideas are rooted in the craziness which makes this thought-provoking despite it's silliness. What's better an orderly world, or one turned upside down for a little girl? That's the question that seems to run throughout the story and we're left to answer it for her.
  • dwpollar
  • Mar 11, 2001
  • Permalink
10/10

My favourite of all the Disney animated movies and worth a look for any Disney fans.

For a lot of people on this site, this is either one of thew best Disney movies or one of the worst. There is about 40 animated Disney movies and my personal favourite will always be the mad world of Wonderland. I don't actually know why but to me this is what i always thought about as a child, a mad world where simply nothing made sense. It goes like dynamite at only seventy two minutes and in that they have an array of entertaining characters and fourteen entertaining songs. To me it is the genius of Disney creating an entertaining look at a child's world. I think it is because of the Jungle Book that this is not as popular as some of the Disney Classics but you can't help but smile when you watch the Queen of hearts and the Mad Hatter being their own creative self's in the wonder of this amazingly clever gem
  • greatbritain1989
  • May 7, 2005
  • Permalink
7/10

One of the most imaginative and creative animated Disney classics

The 13th animated Disney classic is, without a doubt, one of the most original, distinctive, imaginative and creative movies Disney ever made. It isn't a perfect movie but it sure makes the difference.

Through the years the successive re-releases of this movie saved it, giving it the deserved credit and success, but when this initially came out in 1951 it was a failure and largely criticized.

I heard that Walt Disney didn't like very much the character Alice because in his opinion she was cold. I don't see why Walt Disney had that opinion about her. There's nothing cold about her. I think she's a nice little girl. When she falls in despair, it's easy to feel sorry for her.

Some parts of this movie are a bit weak, but that's not a major flaw. My least favorite character is obviously the Queen of Hearts. I don't like her at all. I guess nobody likes her, because she is meant to be hateable.

But apart that this movie is full of awesome characters: the Cheshire Cat, the Dormouse, the Mad Hatter, the March Hare, the Caterpillar, the White Rabbit, the army of cards, Alice, Alice's sister, Dinah, the Doorknob and even strange creatures like a dog-broom, duck-horns, bird-mirrors, bird-cages, bird-pencils, etc...

The creativity of this movie is not only on its peculiar characters, but also on its extravagant details: sceneries, gardens, places, original designs, etc...

What also makes this movie so different is the personality of the characters: they're all mad, but hilarious (except the explosive Queen of Hearts, of course) and they do the craziest and silliest things. That makes them so funny. The silly humor of this movie is very classic, which is another big attribute.

Only in "Alice in Wonderland" you can see hilarious things such as the unbirthday tea party celebrated by the Mad Hatter, the March Hare and the cute Dormouse.

Where else you can see such an enigmatic and cool character like the Cheshire Cat, a mad character with great sense of humor and the power of becoming invisible? Only in "Alice in Wonderland", of course.

Dinah (Alice's kitten) is one of the cutest Disney animals. She was drawn to be cute and adorable, like Figaro and others. The way she movies her little paws is so lovely and so is the way she chases Alice. To see kittens like Dinah and Figaro makes you wish to have a cat like that.

Richard Haydn is hilarious as the Caterpillar, a character who speaks in a very calm way, but with a voice that seems to come from his nose and a short temper.

The great Sterling Holloway has one of his most spectacular performances ever as the voice of the amazing Cheshire Cat.

The unforgettable Ed Wynn gives such an energetic performance as the voice of the Mad Hatter and Jerry Colonna is great as the March Hare's voice.

Bill Thompson is cool as the White Rabbit's voice. But I must say that Kathryn Beaumont is wonderful as Alice's voice, James MacDonald is fabulous as the Dormouse's voice, Joseph Kearns is funny as the Doorknob's voice and Heather Angel is awesome as the voice of Alice's sister. They're all great Disney legends.
  • Atreyu_II
  • Jun 27, 2007
  • Permalink
9/10

A wonderful Disney adaptation of Lewis Carroll's classic novels.

I was a little worried when I went to watch the film version of Alice In Wonderland, because I just read the novel and Disney has a tendency to dumb down the material that they make into their films with goofball romantic nonsense and cutesy talking animals. While I did get more than the traditional share of talking animals with this film (as well as a variety of other inanimate objects), the film stayed more faithful to the original story than is generally expected from a Disney film. On the other hand, this WAS made in 1951, which makes me wonder what a more modern adaptation would look like.

I read Alice In Wonderland and Through The Looking Glass for English 180 (Children's Literature) at the University of California, Davis, so needless to say, I read it with more of a literary appreciation than is generally applied to children's books. I was pleased to see so many of the characters from the second novel in this version of Alice In Wonderland (such as the Cheshire Cat, the talking flowers in the garden, and Tweedle-Dee and Tweedle-Dum), although I must admit that I was slightly disappointed to see that Through The Looking Glass has been assimilated into this version of Alice In Wonderland rather than adapted into its own film, which I think is an honor that it certainly deserves.

As far as being a full length feature (although rather short at roughly 75 minutes), however, I think that this movie does justice to both stories, converting them into a single story rather smoothly, and only leaving out things that will only really be missed by people who know the novels enough to be disappointed that certain things were not included. I, for example, would have loved to see the whole chess story in Through The Looking Glass included in the film (there certainly was time for it), where Alice travels through Wonderland on her quest to become a Queen herself, but I am more than happy with how this film turned out.

One of the only things that I noticed about this film that did not match up to the quality of the novels is that the books have so much more in them for adults than the movie does. There are so many tricks with language pulled in the books, such as in the conversations with Tweedle-Dee and Tweedle-Dum as well as several other characters, that it really makes you think about the English language as a game with which an endless variety of tricks can be played. In the film, this is hugely downplayed, even if only because it is done visually and the language tricks pass by so fast that kids are almost certain to miss them and even the most attentive of adults will have a hard time keeping up with them.

As a whole, however, Alice In Wonderland is so wildly entertaining that the loss of some of the literary substance does not detract from it as a terrific tale of adventure and discovery, certain to be enjoyed by people of all ages. I have heard plenty of rumors that Lewis Carroll was on any of a variety of drugs while he wrote the novels (and plenty of rumors that he wasn't on any drugs at all), but there are certainly some things in the books and in the movie that could have only been conjured up by the most, um, eccentric of imaginations. We may never know for sure, but at least we have some wonderful entertainment.

Read the books to your kids.
  • Anonymous_Maxine
  • Jan 19, 2003
  • Permalink
7/10

Colorful Characters & Story, But Would Kids Be Entertained With It Today?

This was a colorful take on the famous story, both in animation and in story content. Overall, it was a fun movie with interesting, strange characters following each other as "Alice" chases after a rabbit in "Wonderland" (although that name is never mentioned in the film.).

The songs in here are nothing noteworthy, but at least they didn't go on too long. For a short film - 75 minutes - it's good "escapist" fare and not a bad way to spend an hour-and-a quarter. Any longer than that, for classic animated films, would be too long, because they didn't have the humor and slam-bang action scenes modern animated films possess.

I would imagine kids of today would be bored by this, compared to what faster-paced stuff they see now....but that's no criticism of this movie, just about attention spans have shortened.
  • ccthemovieman-1
  • Feb 4, 2007
  • Permalink
9/10

Maybe not as 'charming' as most Disney films...

...and certainly "Pinocchio" had a more popular and memorable song score, but for my money I'd pick "Alice In Wonderland" as one of Walt Disney's top achievements in animation. From Lewis Carroll's story, and filled with knock-out colors (pinks and blues and reds on inky blacks), this episodic tale would not have worked so well if the direction hadn't been so graceful, setting a light, jovial mood, and the songs so tongue-trippingly clever. Alice herself (voiced by Kathryn Beaumont) is lovely and funny, the supporting characters appropriately manic, and the quiet moments gently even out the craziness (as with the Tulgey Wood/"Very Good Advice" sequence). Disney certainly runs hot ("Pinocchio", "Bambi") and cold ("The Sword and the Stone"), but this fantastic journey into nonsense, from a practically-unfilmable book, is endlessly interesting from a visual standpoint. ***1/2 from ****
  • moonspinner55
  • Jan 27, 2001
  • Permalink
6/10

Visually superb failure

The best thing about Lewis Carroll's Alice books, by far, is the poetry. As books they really aren't so great as they are made out to be; but ... Jabberwocky! You Are Old, Father William! Humpty Dumpty's poem about the fish! These are masterpieces.

The poetry can't make it to the screen and Disney's attempts to work in bits of "The Walrus and the Carpenter", "Jabberwocky", "How Doth the Little Crocodile", and perhaps others that don't leap to mind at the moment, as song lyrics and chanted pieces of verse, is contrived. When the Caterpillar says, in effect, "I will now recite a poem" ... why, it's just asking us to fall asleep.

There has never been a good screen adaptation of the Alice books and there can't be. This may be the pick of the bunch. (Not, I admit, that I have tortured myself by watching every one of them to make sure.) Carroll's atmosphere is gone but it has been replaced with a different atmosphere, that of the Disney studios entering the 1950s and deciding that backgrounds must now look surpassingly strange. Disney did wonders making the setting dreamlike and claustrophobic - as Tenniel did in a highly different way. Indeed Disney does necessary work that Tenniel was inclined to neglect.

After a while, though, our nerve-endings become raw as one village eccentric after another is being paraded in front of us; and Alice's incessant monologue doesn't help. I defy you to be caught up in the story. It can't be done. To watch this you need to be determined to grimly forge ahead and attend to the images - for they really are memorable images.
  • Spleen
  • Jul 22, 1999
  • Permalink
10/10

Twizard Rating: 95

Walt Disney's Alice in Wonderland is in a category all of its own. Disney's spectacular vision and range is showcased in his 13th animated feature. With a little help from the Lewis Carroll series for which it was adapted from, this film's surrealism makes for a completely unique entry in the Disney pantheon. It's like the black sheep. To this day, they haven't made another one like it.

The story isn't one in the linear sense, but more of a compendium of unrelated series of events. But they all lead to a common goal.

Alice, herself, has some radical ideals when it comes to the world around her, and faces hostility from the adults in her life. But she learns her imagination is mild in comparison to the oddities of Wonderland. She ventures off to this magical world, only to discover she isn't very welcome. She has a terrible time and no one wants her to be there. And at moments, she finds herself questioning the silliness of the realm, appropriating her mindset to that of her closed-minded mother back home.

The depth of Alice is deeper than most realize. It's subtle, but her attitude is brilliant commentary on contrasting our own independent philosophies with those that we're raised on.

Surprisingly, the film is not as dated as you would think. Some of the humor holds up well compared to today's standards.

Considering the very short runtime, the songs are in abundance and create a high ratio to the non-singing scenes. And naturally, there are one or two weaker tunes, but most of them are ear-worm classics.

At 75 minutes, we spend enough time in Wonderland to warrant a complete story. Or collection of events. Alice in Wonderland is meant to be episodic. And it's very dark and deranged at times, too. While many people find that those things make the movie harder to warm up to, it's actually part of what makes it one of my favorite Disney films from the Walt era. An underrated piece of cinema.

Twizard Rating: 95

Read more at www.TheTwizard.com
  • goolizap
  • May 15, 2016
  • Permalink
7/10

Visually beautiful, the film is very good, but it has a story that will not please everyone, due to its lack of logic.

Saying that all old Disney movies are classics is like saying that all cars are classics just because they are old... anyway, whether it's a classic or not, this Disney movie deserves our attention: it entertains quite well and gives children an innocent and funny story.

I will not dwell on the analysis of the story: anyone who knows the work of Lewis Carroll (the film focuses on "Alice in Wonderland" but will get some elements from "Through the Looking Glass") will surely identify the story and its characters, some of them as immortal as the Mad Hatter, the March Hare or the Cheshire Cat. They are iconic and recognizable even by those who have never read Carroll's books and stories.

The film is beautifully animated, with vivid and elegant colors, and a limpid, crisp and very well executed look, for which contributed the skillful hands of hundreds of designers from Walt Disney's studio. The film was made at a time when the studio did its best graphic work and the quality is visible. The songs are another important part of the movie, and there are several important and noteworthy songs here. Personally, I really like listening to "A World of My Own" or the march "Painting the Roses Red". The film counts with the impeccable collaboration of many voice actors, of which I want to highlight Kathryn Beaumont, Ed Wynn, Sterling Holloway and Verna Felton.

Despite everything, I think the film was pretty much forgotten for a long time, and it didn't have the success that it could have had: in fact, the crazy and illogical story that it presents can both attract or repel the audience... it's not a story for everyone to enjoy, as palatable and cute as "Cinderella" or "Peter Pan", films that are much easier to sell. Paradoxically, the recent appearance of live action films centered on Alice's tale may, in a way, have revived the interest of more recent audiences in Carroll's work and, consequently, in this animated film.
  • filipemanuelneto
  • Jan 14, 2022
  • Permalink
7/10

Nobody does it better than Disney!

If there's one thing that most people remember about Alice In Wonderland then it must be this version of the film!

Alice In Wonderland is just great, and this Disney version is the one thing that sticks in my mind. The animation may not be a landmark and it isn't very true to the original story (it's a shame that not everything is included) but it's been given that certain Disney magic which just grips you! It's the kind of story that can only really be shown by animation.

So strong is the Disney version of the film that one day I told a friend that I was getting something for my sister to do with Alice In Wonderland. She replied 'Is your sister really into Disney?'.

The one thing I really love though is how someone can just write a whole load of complete and utter rubbish, mix it together by calling it 'wonderland', turn up the curiosity and have it enjoyed my millions of people around the world! I still watch it at times as it's so enjoyable seeing this complete fantasy world where anything could happen! It's just a shame that Alice's adventure ends so quickly!

My rating - 7 out of 10
  • Shingle
  • Dec 30, 1999
  • Permalink
10/10

one of a handful of Disney films that work very well for totally different crowds

Alice in Wonderland is, as well as what the one-line summary suggests, is one of the more abstracted kind of animated films the Disney studio has ever released. And it needs this edge for what the material requires. Here is a film that means different times throughout a life, for some people. As a kid it's a wondrous, madcap adventure with as much sincerity and polite little moments with Alice as it contains vision after vision where varied forms of caricatured anarchy and odd transformations in the guise of fables.

As an older teen, it comes off more as seeming like a 'drug' movie, and of course Carroll's original story has become not just a phrase for 'through the looking glass' in society, but as part of metaphors for the drug community ("White Rabbit" is one of those classic, strange 60's songs that still works today). For what Carrol intended when he wrote the book - for his child friend named Alice - it's taken on other, surrealistic connotations over the centuries. With various allusions to such substances like the big-and-small pills, the caterpillar with the pipe, the hare and hatter with their 'tea', and the Cheshire Cat going in through the out door, it's not too hard to picture it as being a precursor to the 60s.

But, of course, there is also that very innocent approach that the Disney films had of that early period. Alice is as innocent and day-dreaming as Snow White, though with a little more interest due to her having to be a formidable enough guide through this imaginative world. And there are little, surreal fables that are laced in that, again, capture the absurd poetic tone of Carroll's work. The segment with the Walrus and the Carpenter is a very good example of this, and is one of the funniest segments not only of the film but maybe of any Disney feature of the period. And stretching out after going into taking the ideas and images from the book into animated form, the abstractions become rather incredible for their time.

As a kid as well as now I loved seeing the large Alice start to cry to the point of creating a dangerous sea of it right by the snobbish doorknob. The Cheshire Cat is one of those insane concoctions that is delightful in its unhinged abandon. The Queen of Hearts sequences towards the end are, for me, the only ones that are more closer to the 'traditional' Disney films where the looser, crazier nature that went on before with the March Hare and Mad Hatter took place (one of my all-time favorite Disney scenes by the way- that little mouse deserved some sort of prize).

Overall, this is quite a treat to revisit years later- yes, even in a non-induced kind of state- with cheerful songs, and a neat balance of delirious humor and silly imagination. In short, a film like this probably couldn't be made today, at least by Disney.
  • Quinoa1984
  • Jun 19, 2006
  • Permalink
7/10

Disney's most vivid and surreal work

Lewis Carroll's classic fantasy novel got the Disney makeover back in the early 50s as one of the early Disney animated features. It certainly isn't a dead-on accurate representation of the novel, but if like me you've never read the original story then there is a lot to get out of this version. All the unique characters are played up to their fullest potential and the use of animation gives to film added amounts of creative that are utilised well. Alice is not as popular as the other Disney films from that time and, though it is understandable, that is somewhat unfair on the film.

Alice is an easily bored and overly curious girl who one afternoon sees a White Rabbit in a hurry and follows him down a rabbit hole. It is no ordinary hole though as Alice quickly discovers that she is in Wonderland were everything is not as it seems. At first Alice wants to know why the Rabbit is in a hurry but after meeting many of the strange people who inhabit Wonderland she just wants to go home, but only after meeting the deranged Queen of Hearts. The story of the movie works very much in a road-trip style. Alice meets a character, something unusual occurs and then she moves on. Normally this gets repetitive, but here I find that it works very well. It makes sense that Alice meets someone new as she moves further along and the encounters are always a ton of fun. There is a lack of development, yet it doesn't affect the film too much due to this stop-start format.

What really makes the film are the colourful and interesting characters. Alice herself is a very likable heroine and is played in a nicely realistic fashion, she is kind and thoughtful but has her limits and can get annoyed. It would be easy for her to get lost in the madness, but the excellent design and Kathryn Beaumont's enthusiastic voice acting add to the role immensely. Disney regular Bill Thompson perfectly voices the always hurried White Rabbit, who we are dying to know the reasons for him being so 'late'. The Cheshire Cat is a lot of fun thanks to the fact that his intentions always change, he is the right amounts of slightly creepy and weirdly funny. Sterling 'Winnie the Pooh' Holloway adds an eerie quality to the role. The eloquent Caterpillar is very enjoyable too.

The Mad Hatter and March Hare are my favourite characters. There is such a wacky sense of humour and incredible enjoy brought to the screen when they are around. The fact that their Tea Party involves 'un-birthdays' and smashing up watches kind of says it all. Ed Wynn and Jerry Colonna clearly put their all into the voices too. The Queen of Hearts is another funny Disney villain. She shouts almost everything she says and blows her top if everything isn't as it should be. This of course leads to a lot of funny tantrums and destruction.

I think a strong reason why the film wasn't well received is because of how crazy and slightly sinister the characters, except Alice, actually are. Yet I feel that this gives the film some uniqueness in similar vein to Pinocchio, in which most of the characters were menacing. All you have to do is look at the characters actions, the Cheshire Cat toys with Alice, the Hatter & Hare effectively shun her, the Caterpillar gets angry at her very easily and the Queen just wants to cut off heads. I think this explains why certain people gravitate away from Alice, the fact there is only one real protagonist may help to explain it. But as said I personally like this as I think it offers something different to the usual Disney features.

The animation is excellent as you'd expect and the unique features of Wonderland are given added vibrancy, in some areas it is possibly the richest usage of colour in any Disney feature. It's interesting to note that a lot of the backgrounds are dark, this is a great effect as the colours almost leap off the screen when they are presented. It makes very little detail standout more and the character designs themselves all look fantastic. The animation in general some of Disney's most surreal and it is noteworthy for that reason alone. The music is very good too. Each character seems to have their own little tune and they are all pleasant to listen to, whilst songs like 'I'm Late' are amusing pieces that add to the film.

Seeing as the film is only 75 Minutes long there is a lot of substance to it. Though it moves in quick manner, enough time is spent with the characters to understand them and the fact that it manages to pack in so many personalities is impressive in itself. One aspect that is iffy is that the film can seem a bit rushed in certain areas, but when you consider how much is going and trying to be fit in that becomes less of a concern. I'm also unsure how much replay value the film has, as it is certainly more of an engaging film if you watch it every so often.

Overall I do really enjoy Disney's version of Alice in Wonderland, it remains the best version of the story to this day. Its strengths are extremely well done. The characters themselves are really memorable as well as out of the ordinary and the animation is amongst the richest that Disney has ever put to screen. I still think that Alice in Wonderland is still a little under-appreciated compared to its contemporaries, like Cinderella, and that may be for its unusual tone. Yet I think that the bizarre tone and crazed characters give it the unique edge. Alice is enjoyable on the surface and an achievement beneath as well.
  • C22Man
  • Feb 3, 2014
  • Permalink
9/10

Through the Rabbit Hole

When I was six, I had my tonsils out. The anaesthetist used ether and I hallucinated. My mother had bought me two comic books. One was Krazy Kat and the other the Disney "Alice in Wonderland." If you wanted something to set you up for delirium try those on for size. When I finally saw the movie, I was reminded of those subconscious images. This is an excellent animated film. I love its hard edge and portrayal of Lewis Carol's characters. It also features some wonderful songs. The Queen of Hearts is maniacal and the Mad Hatter diabolical. All the images of random craziness are in here, brought to life with artistic skill, making them unforgettable images.
  • Hitchcoc
  • Dec 2, 2016
  • Permalink
7/10

Very good surreal trip

Alice in Wonderland is at the same both very untypical for a Disney film, yet at the same time exactly what Disney does well. What do I mean by that? Well, in a word, Alice in Wonderland is surreal. It follows no logic but its own, is not really a fairytale by any stretch of the word, is actually somewhat mean-spirited in tone and Alice as the main character doesn't really follow the Disney formula we've come to know.

And yet, it functions so well precisely because it's a Disney film. The animation is gorgeous, reflecting the feel and mood of Wonderland perfectly with crooked angles, painfully bright colours and contrasts, fluid motion and some fantastic character designs. The music scenes are also done very well, though most of them are not just short, but really short. But, most importantly, Disney does weird magnificently, especially in those first few decades when Walt Disney himself was still alive. And this is his crowning achievement in that regard. It's fast, loose, bat guano insane, always changing rules, always ready to burst into a non sequitur, each less logical than the one before.

And if that's your thing, then this is the perfect movie to check out. It doesn't have the grandeur and charm of the true Disney classics, but it has some of the most memorable characters in the whole Disney canon and as a whole is a fantastic romp unlike anything you're likely to see otherwise.
  • Vartiainen
  • Jul 11, 2015
  • Permalink
10/10

The best Disney cartoon, by far

Among all the Disney cartoons I have seen (and I think I've probably seen them all, until "Taram...", in 1983), "Alice in Wonderland" remains my favorite one. Of course, it has a lot of differences, comparing to the wonderful book from Lewis Carroll, but Walt Disney managed to give a strange object, without a real classical story (with a starting and an ending), which gives this film a funny "experimental side"... And I particularly love the beautiful colors in this film. It simply makes you want to follow Alice, who follows herself the White Rabbit, in the wonderland. Maybe "Alice in Wonderland" is more an "adult cartoon".
  • thedreaming
  • Jul 31, 2005
  • Permalink
7/10

The Wonderland, a psychoanalytic symbol

Alice in wonderland can be seen as a parody, a satire of the English society in which Lewis Carrol lived, the Victorian society. In this sense, the wonderland appears as the a place where the girl can express herself freely, without taking into consideration the Victorian morals, values and manners. This social parody is quite obvious in the queen's discourse, she emphasizes the fact that all the ways are her ways, a fact available in England, all the territories are considered to be the queen's territories. The queen and her servants are nothing more than some card figures. On the other hand, we can take the movie and the book and analyse it from the psychoanalytic point of view. The wonderland is the mad world of the dream, where the subconscious interferes. The psychoanalytic elements are abounding in this movie: we have the doors, the keys the mushroom as a phallic symbol, the dream as a way of suppressing desires.
  • madalina_roca
  • Dec 13, 2007
  • Permalink
10/10

"There's only one way to stop a mad watch!" A wildly inventive animated visual feast for the eyes and one of my all time favourite Disney classics.

I always loved this movie, it's so charmingly weird and cool, I've still never seen anything else quite like it. It's the first version of the Alice in Wonderland story that I ever saw so as far as the tale goes, this movie is my jam! There's so much oddball yet lovable charm to this picture and it's got so many scenes moments and characters that forever stuck quite strongly in my young mind, like the rather grim rhyming nonsensical tale of the Walrus and the Carpenter, the pompous caterpillar's elocution lesson and multicoloured hookah pipe smoke, the freakout of the sleepy doormouse, the sea of tea right near the end, when the Cheshire Cat unravels himself and leaves just his grinning teeth - my favourite spectacle though is the enchanting heart motif of the Queen's hedge maze and of her multitudes of meticulously animated card soldiers, I just love the way they scatter and fold as they move, having the physics of real playing cards, it's a phenomenal feat of animation just how amazing they look! The entire film is a lovely visual marvel to watch, and you can spot something new you like every time. It's truly bizarre and nonlinear but it's also for me enthralling and fascinating to watch, which is what makes it also magical. It moves itself along at such a breezy yet nonstop pace, except for the moving sequence where Alice gets herself lost in a more spooky corner of Wonderland and all the colour and music becomes muted and she despairs in a lonely spotlight for a moment. That's a very moody and saddening scene, it's made me teary-eyed before, she's so alone in that moment. I love it though because everything else in the movie is build around the frivolous whimsy but that part is all about the emotion of her situation, it's so curious how the strange creatures that are silently watching her from the shadows begin to vanish as she comes to the realisation that a land of wonders may not be what she wanted after all and that maybe she should learn to take the adult advice that she's given once in a while... Brilliantly done scene, I think it adds a lot to the movie all on its own. I love the carefree Cheshire Cat and how he's mischievous and kind of ominous at the same time, and his utter disregard for the Queen's rules made for one pricelessly funny scene! I love about this movie I also love the monstrous Queen who's clearly a few cards short of a deck, She's simply epic and the voice actress gave a hysterically thunderous performance! She's the scariest thing in Wonderland and brings the impetus that makes it so that Alice has to make it back to reality. I actually do like the way that several of the residents of colourful Wonderland are quite aggressively mean jerks towards sweet inquisitive Alice, particularly the snobby flowers who are all beautiful but unfortunately have downright stinky personalities! Poor Alice can't ever take enjoyment from the wonder all around her because she's being yelled at and manhandled every two minutes! Whole lotta downers on her little 'trip.' So did you ever see an Alice? If not then you really should because if you don't care for it from a story standpoint it still has tons of artistic touches and visual flair poured into it that it's still awesome to get into to this day, and I see no reason why it will ever lose that. I will always love this beautifully surreal dreamlike adventure, to me it's one classic that positively has it all. "And the King."
  • Foreverisacastironmess123
  • Nov 12, 2019
  • Permalink
7/10

I haven't seen this movie in decades but still holds up

I decided to grab this movie to show to my 9yr old daughter. I barely remembered the trials and tribulations, or at least the finer details until rewatching this one.

I was really surprised by how well this story holds up and is one of the Disney greats... before the fall so to speak.

It is highly entertaining and one of the few that I find is interesting and entertaining enough for all ages. It's very colorfully animated and their are coo coo bonkers characters all over the place making it mesmerizing to watch.

I would recommend this one to anyone, don't let the age fool you this one still packs an entertainment punch.
  • Mcduff3601
  • Apr 22, 2024
  • Permalink
3/10

Why do so many people like this movie?

***SPOILERS***

I've never written a review for a movie before on this site, but I felt I should for this one.

I'll admit, I used to like this movie when I was a kid, but when I grew older, I realized I was liking it less, and now I can say that I don't like this movie, and don't understand why so many people love it.

Why don't I like it? Well, because it's just so mean-spirited in tone and spends pretty much its entire run time treating Alice like garbage for no reason, over and over again, in an attempt to teach that you should be careful what you wish for. Now, teaching that I don't have a problem with. It's just that there have been countless other projects (films or shows) that teach that same moral, and they were not nearly as cruel as this movie was.

The thing is, pretty much everything in this movie seems to conspire to torture Alice, either physically or emotionally, or both. Pretty much every character is a total jerk, to Alice and to each other: the Mad Hatter and March Hare play around pretty cruelly with her, the flowers kick her out of their garden, rather meanly, when they think she's a weed (even though they have a dandelion, which IS a weed, in their garden, those hypocrites), the Caterpillar is also rather unpleasant, having a temper that makes his scenes painful to watch (am I supposed to be laughing at Alice choking on smoke? Well, I'm not!), and the Queen of Hearts has the worst temper of the whole film, and even wants Alice dead, for no real reason.

But then there's the Cheshire Cat, who seemed to go out of his way to make things worse for Alice, as it's his fault she ends up on trial, and it's also his fault that everyone in Wonderland tries to kill her! I'm not exaggerating when I say that this is the Cheshire Cat at his worst!

But one of the biggest issues I have with this is that I feel like the movie is putting the Wonderlanders in the right for how they behaved. At the very least, it didn't put them in the wrong, which was a big mistake on the part of Disney. Worse, when Alice tells the Queen off for her behavior near the end, you find it justified, considering how she was treated by everybody. But even Disney had to mess that up by having her shrink again, which lands her in trouble because she was standing up for what was right.

What makes all this worse is that Alice did absolutely nothing to deserve the torment given to her throughout her journey. All she wanted was to do something more interesting than listen to boring history lessons. And for this she gets punished, because wanting to do something more interesting than listen to lessons automatically makes you bad, apparently. It also seems to be teaching some morals children shouldn't learn, like, as someone else pointed out, dream worlds aren't happy and fantastical , but rather cruel and mean- spirited. (I know most of the film was a dream, but that kind of made it worse because that seems to teach that dream worlds are mad.) Also that it's OK to treat others badly if they're different from you or if you find it fun, and that you will only regret it if you stand up for what's right.

I will admit, I do like some things about this film, like the animation is great as always (this is Disney, so what can I say?), I like almost all the songs in the film, as they're fun to listen to and well-written, and the beginning and very ending are pretty nice. I also did like a few characters, like of course Alice, but I also like the White Rabbit, the Dodo, the Dormouse, and the Doorknob, and I also find Tweedledee and Tweedledum kind of funny. These are my reasons for not giving the film only one star. If it wasn't for these elements, I probably would have given this film a 1. So yeah, I gave this three stars because there are some good things in it, but to me, the bad things far outweigh those.

So bottom line, I don't like this film. I actually find it one of the worst Disney films of all time, and probably THE worst Disney film made while Walt Disney was still alive. I just don't get why it's so loved, especially since there are other projects out there that too are mean-spirited, but not nearly as much as this one is, and yet those get attacked while this gets a free pass. In fact, I don't think I ever will understand it. I just know that this is definitely not something I'd ever watch again if I was offered things I like. I guess I'll have to wait to see a truly great animated adaptation of the great book "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland" (yes, I like the book; at least it's not as cruel as this movie), because, to me, this one was just bad.
  • creamfilling16
  • Jul 10, 2016
  • Permalink

One of the Classics from a golden Age

I have always liked this film, being a true blue Disney fan I consider it on of the great ones. I like the animation from the fifties. I have read the books and they frightened me more than this film, I know some of the reviewers feel the opposite. I feel that the Disney artists had a touch of what Wonderland is like and just had fun with this one. It is true there is no great feats here but when I have had a stressful day I like to put the brain in neutral and just enjoy the dazzling colors. The silliness is great and the cast brilliant. Alice was one of Mr. Disney's least favorite characters, he thought she was too cold. But when you are surrounded by a bunch of loonies that don't care for you I think you might be cold too. On a scale of 1 to 10 I would rate this an 8.
  • Dvarner1947
  • Jul 29, 2002
  • Permalink

More from this title

More to explore

Recently viewed

Please enable browser cookies to use this feature. Learn more.
Get the IMDb app
Sign in for more accessSign in for more access
Follow IMDb on social
Get the IMDb app
For Android and iOS
Get the IMDb app
  • Help
  • Site Index
  • IMDbPro
  • Box Office Mojo
  • License IMDb Data
  • Press Room
  • Advertising
  • Jobs
  • Conditions of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Your Ads Privacy Choices
IMDb, an Amazon company

© 1990-2025 by IMDb.com, Inc.