In un pomeriggio d'estate la piccola Alice, sdraiata all'ombra di un albero, vede passare un coniglio bianco, che corre in fretta, lo insegue e precipita in una voragine che la porta alla sc... Leggi tuttoIn un pomeriggio d'estate la piccola Alice, sdraiata all'ombra di un albero, vede passare un coniglio bianco, che corre in fretta, lo insegue e precipita in una voragine che la porta alla scoperta del Paese delle Meraviglie.In un pomeriggio d'estate la piccola Alice, sdraiata all'ombra di un albero, vede passare un coniglio bianco, che corre in fretta, lo insegue e precipita in una voragine che la porta alla scoperta del Paese delle Meraviglie.
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Kathryn Beaumont
- Alice
- (voce)
Ed Wynn
- Mad Hatter
- (voce)
Richard Haydn
- Caterpillar
- (voce)
Jerry Colonna
- March Hare
- (voce)
J. Pat O'Malley
- Walrus
- (voce)
- (as Pat O'Malley)
- …
Bill Thompson
- White Rabbit
- (voce)
- …
Joseph Kearns
- Doorknob
- (voce)
Larry Grey
- Bill
- (voce)
- …
Dink Trout
- King of Hearts
- (voce)
Doris Lloyd
- The Rose
- (voce)
James MacDonald
- Dormouse
- (voce)
The Mellowmen Quartet
- Card Painters
- (voce)
- (as The Mellomen)
Don Barclay
- Other Cards
- (voce)
Lynn Bari
- Lily of the Vally
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensione in evidenza
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.
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.
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- QuizIn the Walrus and the Carpenter sequence, the R in the word "March" on the mother oyster's calendar flashes. This alludes to the old adage about only eating oysters in a month with an R in its name. That is because those months without an R (May, June, July, August) are the summer months in England, when oysters would not keep due to the heat, in the days before refrigeration.
- BlooperIn the opening credits, Lewis Carroll is spelled Lewis Carrol, missing the last letter L.
- Curiosità sui creditiThe RKO Radio Pictures logo appears on a banner held by two playing cards.
- Versioni alternativeThe 1954 TV screening on the Disneyland (1954) series was edited down to a one hour running time, and contained an introduction from Walt Disney at the start. This introduction appears on the Region 1 Masterpiece Edition of the film.
- ConnessioniEdited from Bambi (1942)
- Colonne sonoreVery Good Advice
(1951) (uncredited)
Lyrics by Bob Hilliard
Music by Sammy Fain
Performed by Kathryn Beaumont
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Sito ufficiale
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- Alicia en el país de las maravillas
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Aziende produttrici
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- Budget
- 3.000.000 USD (previsto)
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 865 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 15 minuti
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 1.37 : 1
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What was the official certification given to Alice nel paese delle meraviglie (1951) in Spain?
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