
She meets Tweedle Dee and Tweedle Dum, two fat brothers who take particular delight in reciting poems and songs. Alice spots the White Rabbit and follows him into a secluded glade in the middle of a thick forest. A group of animals, led by a dodo, engages in a caucus race (a race without a real ending or winner) to get dry. She and the bottle both travel through the doorknob's keyhole mouth and out to the sea formed from Alice's tears. Alice suddenly shrinks and becomes so small that she fits inside the bottle. The Doorknob points out that the "DRINK ME" bottle still has some fluid inside, so Alice stops crying and sips some the best she can at her height. This time when Alice starts eating the cake, she suddenly expands until her head and legs are cramped in the hallway.Īlice begins to weep hysterically that her massive tears flood the room, which splash like huge puddles. Doorknob appeared the key on the table with his magic for an unknown purpose, making Alice feel very stress and upset why he do such a thing, and the box of cookies also has materialized out of nowhere). Frustrated, Alice is told by the Doorknob that a cake marked with the words "EAT ME" will help her reach the key that's mysteriously appeared on the now giant glass table (Mr. Alice drinks the bottle's contents and starts shrinking until she becomes the right size, but the Doorknob reveals that he's locked.

The Doorknob tells her that drinking from a bottle marked "Drink me" will help her (she is startled to find that the bottle and the table it is sitting on have appeared out of nowhere). She lands upside down with her dress deflating and follows the rabbit into a large hallway with a tiny door at the other end barely big enough for Alice's head. Without anything else to do, Alice decides to admire the decorations and knick-knacks adorning the walls of the rabbit hole. Amazed at what just happened, her dress inflates and Alice continues to float down the rabbit hole wondering what would happen to her. Unable to do anything about the situation she was in, Alice slows down her fall. As Alice crawls deep inside, the rabbit hole dips suddenly down, causing her to fall into it. He frantically exclaims how late he is, which sparks Alice's curiosity and causes her to follow him down a rabbit hole. Suddenly Alice sees a white rabbit wearing spectacles, a red waistcoat and carrying a large, golden pocket watch. Wandering off without her sister noticing, Alice lays down on a riverbank wishing that she had a world of her own. Alice is listening to her sister read aloud from a history book, to which Alice vocally expresses her boredom. The film opens on a golden summer day in the park in England.


By the 1980s, the initial consensus proved to be outdated. It gained popularity in the 1970s due to the "drug" culture fandom at the time, it was released in 1974, and then again in 1981. Even many people behind the film, including Walt Disney himself, were unhappy with the final result, though it did receive an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Score. Made under the supervision of Walt Disney himself, this film and its animation are often regarded as some of the finest work in Disney studio history, despite the lackluster, even hostile, reviews it originally received, especially in the UK. The film features the voices of Kathryn Beaumont as Alice (also the voice of Wendy Darling in the later Disney feature film, Peter Pan) and Ed Wynn as the Mad Hatter.
#ALICE IN WONDERLAND CARTOON DANDYLION MOVIE#
Lewis Carroll's books Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass had only a few adaptations before this movie this adaptation solved the problems of the setting by using animation (the next adaptation wouldn't come until 1972, two decades later). Source Alice in Wonderland is the 13th animated feature film produced by Walt Disney Productions in the Disney Animated Canon and was released to theaters on Jby RKO Radio Pictures. $2.4 million (Estimated) External links Official website
