“Effective nonsense keeps one foot on the ground; fantasy needs a realistic background, a frame of familiar reference. A tour of Wonderland without the practical, very English little Alice to serve as norm would be tedious indeed. But the presence of Alice as norm, as the embodiment of Victorian practicality and industry, suggests that the Alice books may have satiric implications. (Matthews 109).…
Lewis Carroll wrote a story about a young girl ‘Alice’ who fell through a rabbit whole into a fantasy world inhabited by strange, humanlike creatures. Alice encounters lots of different humanlike creatures throughout her journey through the world of nonsense, poetry and mind-boggling logic, like, the talking flowers, the White Rabbit, the Mad Hatter, the Cheshire Cat, the Caterpillar, Tweedledee and Tweedledum, the Queen of Hearts, Jabberwocky and the White Queen. Alice’s adventures in Wonderland included shrinking, growing to the size of a giant, attending the Mad Hatter’s Tea Party, playing Croquet and attending the Queen of Hearts court.…
Alice in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll was first imagined in 1862 and is considered to be a literary classic. Lewis Carroll (Charles Dodgson) was a mathematician and Reverend of the Christ Church University. During a 5 mile boat ride with three young girls he made up the story to keep them entertained. One of the girls, named Alice, asked him to write the story down for her. He made her a book, complete with illustrations and from that Alice in Wonderland was born. Despite its simple beginnings and seemingly innocent meanings, four decades later the book began being challenged for multiple reasons, and joined the banned books list. When the first of these absurd interpretations surfaced, the world was a much different place with different “issues” of the day. It seems that with each interpretation the “issues” of the current time may have been reflected in the analysis' of this enchanting story.…
The opening sequence of Svenkmajer's film display Alice as someone discontent with childhood and need for a change much like the Alice in the original story. The frustration leads her to follow a path to enlightenment which results in her foundation of childhood crashing down. This aspect is signified at the beginning of the story when Alice knocks over toy blocks while spying on the rabbit in captivity. As Alice journey to follow the white rabbit she is lead to a drawer that has an item that cuts her in it. Instead of crying like normal children her age she makes the unlikely choice to lick her wound.…
Still Alice (Genova, 2009) is a captivating debut novel about a 50-year-old woman’s sudden decline into early onset Alzheimer’s disease. The book is written by first time author Lisa Genova, who holds a PH.D in neuroscience from Harvard University. She’s also an online columnist for the national Alzheimer’s association. Her other books include Left Neglected and Love Anthony. She lives with her husband and two children in Cape Cod.…
Wonderland, Tim Burton uses the protagonist Alice as a rebellious woman who fights for what…
In 1964 his interests turned to filmmaking. In this medium he felt that more would be possible technically, and that his work would reach a wider audience. After creating various award-winning short films like The Last Trick, his work underwent a decisive transition from Mannerism to Surrealism in 1968. As a surrealist Svankmajer would create many highly acclaimed films involving animation and live action.…
At the beginning of Jabberwocky, Svankmajer uses a powerful device: a full recital of the Jabberwocky poem from Lewis Carroll's Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There. He uses this poem, which mainly consists of nonsense words, to accompany the random and bizarre animation such as a wardrobe running in the forest. This technique provides emphasis of the surrealist genre to the viewers. Svankmajer's inclusion of the poem tells the audience that his dream was an extension of childhood and concerned his alter ego, which was about looking back at his childhood.…
In Tim Burton’s 2010 remake of ‘Alice in Wonderland’, the micro features that relate to his production style give the classic narrative a quirky and alternative edge. I have chosen to analyse the scene where Alice makes her entrance into ‘Wonderland’ and meets some of the main characters. In this scene the director uses lighting, editing and mise en scene to present the idea of an ‘alternative world’ that makes this film very fantasy and family based, but also shows a difference from the original 1951 film so that it is about to appeal to an older audience as well. This is done using the props, décor, costume and makeup because they show an aspect of interest and weirdness that is able to provoke a response from older children and teenagers alike. The film, although it is a modern remake is still set in the same time period as the original film and you are able to see the through the costume and make up that is used, however the editing and animations show the futurism that Burton has involved, adding to the quirky idea surrounding the film. Due to the fact this is not only the first time we are able to see wonderland, but also the first time Alice can remember seeing it, the atmosphere and mood is very interesting. When the camera pans out, revealing what exactly is shown behind the door, the audience are just as curious and intrigued by what we are show as is Alice, and this also provokes a response because we feel connected with the character by the sense of unknown, meaning we are pulled into the story line and film so we are able to find out more. In all films, Micro features are essential in every film, however in films that present a difference from normality they must not only be able to really show the audience the meaning of the original story line, but also draw them into the fascinating side of what has been adapted and changed for their…
By the time Surrealism emerged as a recognized artistic movement, several influential film genres had begun their push into a global cinematic conscience. Such genre-defining films as The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920) and Nosferatu (1922) for German Expressionism, and Battleship Potemkin (1925) for Soviet Montage, were all released within a few years of Andre Breton’s First Manifesto of Surrealism in 1924. But Surrealism itself would not see its first film with popular recognition until later in the decade with Un Chien Andalou (1929). It seems out of the ordinary that an emerging movement and a budding medium would have a such a gap in time before finding themselves commingled.…
Some suggest that Rick Blaine’s (Humphrey Bogart) popularity among college-age people grows out of his role as a classic existential hero. What is existentialism? What existential traits does Rick have? Are these appealing to you? Why would they have such appeal to the above-mentioned audience?…
The book Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll evokes many intriguing thoughts in the reader’s mind, delving into themes such as the loss of childhood innocence, dreams, death, and discouragement in life. Alice’s journey through a dream world begins when she follows a white rabbit she has spotted and ends up falling down the rabbit hole. Here, Alice discovers she has entered an ambiance divergent from her own- a world of the Mad Hatter and Cheshire Cat, and bottles and treats that beckon her to “Drink Me.” Or “Eat me.” The conflict arises when Alice attempts to apprehend the labyrinthine world she has gotten lost in, all the while enduring various physical and emotional changes. In this alternate universe Alice encounters a plethora of unusual characters such as the Queen of Hearts, a ruthless ruler of Wonderland who constantly shouts for her subjects to be beheaded. This story stands out because of the whimsical style of writing and engaging story line along with the complexity of the character development and alternate interpretations of the many symbolic happenings within the novel.…
Alice in Wonderland is a tale so rare that it not only provided our culture with an inexhaustible mine of artistic inspiration, but it continues to do so through every generation since the story was released in 1865. Despite the different takes on the tale throughout time, there has always been a fundamental elegance and innocence in the fashion that offset the underlying dark themes of the story. While examining the original tale of Alice in Wonderland by Lewis Carol, there was immediate captivation with the fantasy that Alice represents. More specifically, I was fascinated by the tea party scene where Alice innocence was first imperiled to the complexities that wonderland held. As people altered and remade the story that sense of fantasy lived immensely through the costume design, and as the years go by the costumes become increasingly exaggerated to the point where the costumes themselves come to life.…
This film confirms to the fantasy genre of fictions. At the beginning of the film, unlike Carroll’s book, Alice does not voluntarily fall into the rabbit-hole. It is…
Alice in Wonderland is an animated film produced in 1951 by Walt Disney. Just by breaking down the title of Alice in Wonderland one can assume this is a journey of dreams and imagination. The definition of dream is to see or imagine in sleep or in a vision. Alice "goes down the rabbit hole" a metaphor for taking hallucinogenic drugs into a land of dreams and imagination.…