Review: Alice in Wonderland
The
story of young Alice (voiced by Kathryn Beaumont), who follows the White Rabbit
down the rabbit hole and ends up in Wonderland, a most curious place indeed.
Although
I prefer “Pinocchio”, “Peter Pan”, “Robin Hood”, and “Snow
White and the Seven Dwarfs”, this 1951 Disney animated version of the
infamous and enduring Lewis Carroll classic is highly enjoyable stuff. This is
what Disney animation does best, not crap like “Fantasia” or “Treasure
Planet”. Classic stories well told. I liked the Tim Burton version from
2010, but if you’re gonna skip the book and watch the film (Don’t, though!
Reading is important), make it this one.
This
version hits all the main beats of the story, and all of the scenes with an
oversized Alice are particularly fun, and probably a challenge at the time from
an animation standpoint. I actually think the story works better than the
animation here, though the latter is fine. It’s a very pretty and colourful
film. It’s a cracker of a story to begin with, and although being Disney means
it’s probably a tad less weird than other versions, the story hasn’t been
ruined or anything, at least not the important bits (Carroll purists will
complain that the film is a hodgepodge of the two Alice stories, instead of
just the first one, though).
It’s
a shame about the awful singing (Kathryn Beaumont in particular can’t hold a
tune at all, though otherwise terrific), but even that fails to get in the way
of the family fun here. In fact, poor singing or not, the tunes themselves are
actually infectious…possibly ear-worm like. There’s lots of wonderful
characters here, even down to the cute talking flowers. What can I say, I love
pansies OK? What? What did I say? The caterpillar voiced by Richard Haydn is
possibly the trippiest thing in the film, and quite memorable. Weird as hell,
but memorable. I swear this story is about drugs, man…opiates specifically. It
has to be. The Mad Hatter’s tea party is quite possibly the most insane thing
in a very insane story. I mean, this is a story where we get a bird with a body
made out of a birdcage that houses another bird. Mind blown. Far and away the
most memorable characters are the White Rabbit (voiced by the inimitable Bill
Thompson), The Mad Hatter (voiced by an insane Ed Wynn, a million miles from “The
Diary of Anne Frank”) and particularly The Cheshire Cat (voiced by none
other than Winnie the Pooh, Sterling Holloway), who easily runs off with the
whole film. When I think of the Cheshire Cat, it’s this version of the character
I think of, and boy is he tripping on drugs, man. Also unforgettable for me are
the army of playing cards. I just love that idea, wonderfully realised
on-screen here.
Yes,
it works better for kids than adults, but that’s the way it was once upon a time.
When Disney tried to appeal to adults, we got “Fantasia”, and “Fantasia”
sucks. The film was directed by Clyde Geronimi (“Peter Pan”, “Cinderella”,
“Lady and the Tramp”), Wilfred Jackson (“Fantasia”, “Peter
Pan”), and Hamilton Luske (“Pinocchio”, “Fantasia”, “Peter
Pan”). It was scripted by a slew of writers; Winston Hibler (“Cinderella”,
“Peter Pan”), Ted Sears (“Cinderella”), Bill Peet (“Fantasia”,
“Cinderella”, “Peter Pan”), Erdman Penner (“Fantasia”, “Pinocchio”,
“Cinderella”, “Lady and the Tramp”), Joe Rinaldi (“Peter Pan”,
“Cinderella”), Milt Banta (“Peter Pan”), William Cottrell (“Pinocchio”),
Dick Kelsey (Art Designer on “Dumbo” and “Pinocchio”), Joe Grant
(“Dumbo”), Dick Huemer (“Dumbo”), Del Connell (“The Three
Caballeros”), Tom Oreb (“Make Mine Music”), and John Walbridge (“Make
Mine Music”).
Rating:
B
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