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Works based on Alice in Wonderland

 
Wikipedia: Works based on Alice in Wonderland
 


Lewis Carroll's books Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass have been highly popular in their original forms, and have served as the basis for many subsequent works since they were published. They have been adapted directly into other media, their characters and situations have been appropriated into other works, and these elements have been referenced innumerable times as familiar elements of shared culture. Simple references to the two books are too numerous to list; this list of works based on Alice in Wonderland focuses on works based specifically and substantially on Carroll's two books about the character of Alice.

Contents

History

Carolyn Sigler[1] has shown that Carroll's two great fantasies inspired dozens of imitations, responses, and parodies during the remainder of the nineteenth century and the first part of the twentieth — so many that Carroll at one point began his own collection of Alice imitations. In 1887, one critic suggested that Carroll had plagiarized Tom Hood's From Nowhere to the North Pole (1875) when writing Alice — though the relationship was just the reverse: Hood's novel was one of the many Alice imitations.[2]

The primary wave of Alice-inspired works slackened after about 1920, though Carroll's influence on other writers has never fully waned; it can be seen in recent books like Maeve Kelly's Alice in Thunderland (1993) and Alison Haben's Dreamhouse (1995).

Medicine

The name of the neurological condition Alice in Wonderland syndrome, in which objects are perceived to be substantially larger or smaller than in actuality, is derived from passages in the book.

New Media

The Eindhoven University of Technology built the interactive ALICE installation based on the narrative 'Alice's Adventures in Wonderland'[3]. It addresses the western culture characteristics highlighted in the narrative. Six stages were selected and implemented as an interactive experience.

Literature

  • The novel, "The Whole," or "Duh Whole" (published by Simon & Schuster/Pocket Books/MTV Books), by John Reed,[4] features an MTV VJ following a psychedelic Black Rabbit into the depths of a hole that has appeared in the United States Heartland.[5]
  • Alice in Puzzle-Land: A Carrollian Tale for Children Under Eighty by Raymond Smullyan is a book of riddles featuring Carroll's characters as protagonists.
  • Finnegans Wake by James Joyce is famously influenced by Alice. The novel is about a dream, and includes such lines as: "Alicious, twinstreams twinestraines, through alluring glass or alas in jumboland?" and "...Wonderlawn's lost us for ever. Alis, alas, she broke the glass! Liddell lokker through the leafery, ours is mystery of pain."
  • Tad Williams' science fiction series Otherland is heavily influenced by Alice. There are sections involving a Red Queen, the chess-squares concept from Looking Glass, and evil men following the protagonists who take the form of Tweedledum and Tweedledee several times.
  • Vladimir Nabokov translated Alice into his native Russian as Аня в Стране Чудес (Anya in Wonderland). His novels include many Carrollian allusions, such as the spoof book titles that run through Ada, or Ardor. However, Nabokov told his student and annotator Alfred Appel that the infamous Lolita, with its paedophilic protagonist, makes no conscious allusions to Carroll (despite the novel's photography theme and Carroll's interest in the art form).
  • John Crowley's Little, Big has many Carrollian allusions.
  • Mordant's Need is a two-volume fantasy book series by Stephen R. Donaldson which tells the story of a woman named Terisa who travels from modern Earth to a medieval setting where there is a form of magic based on mirrors. Instead of reflecting images, mirrors are used to "translate" people and things between locations and realities. The author also bases much of the plot on a metaphor of the game of checkers (called "hop-board" in the story) instead of chess.
  • British writer Jeff Noon has inserted many Carrollian allusions into a series of cyberpunk novels, beginning with Vurt (1993), that are set in a fantasy-future Manchester. In the books, Noon applies a logical extension of the Wonderland and Looking-Glass World concepts into a virtual reality cyberverse that characters occasionally get lost in. One possible interpretation of the books is that everything happens in the dream of Alice, akin to the supposed "dream of the Red King" in Through the Looking-Glass. Noon also wrote Automated Alice, which he calls a "trequel" to the Alice books as well as being a continuation of the Vurt series. In this illustrated novella, Alice enters a grandfather clock and emerges in future Manchester, which has many bizarre denizens including an invisible cat named Quark and Celia, the Automated Alice.
  • Alice Liddell is a character in the Riverworld series of science fiction books by Philip José Farmer.
  • Sign of Chaos, written by Roger Zelazny as part of The Chronicles of Amber, features two chapters taking place in a manufactured Shadow designed to resemble Wonderland as part of a drug-induced hallucination.
  • Gilbert Adair wrote Alice Through the Needle's Eye a 1984 sequel to the Carroll's Alice books.
  • The Looking Glass Wars, and its follow-up novel, Seeing Redd, written by Frank Beddor depicts an alternative to Carroll's Alice, implying that Carroll in fact distorted the story of Princess Alyss Heart (AKA Alice Liddell) who had been sent to Earth when the evil Queen Redd conquered Wonderland. The series follows Alyss' exploits with familiar characters cast in new roles.
  • Alice in Quantumland, by Robert Gilmore, is an allegory of quantum mechanics told through the adventures of Alice's explorations of the world of modern physics, with quanta depicted as eccentric characters similar to those in Wonderland, and quantum laws as the nonsensical or counter-intuitive rules governing Carroll's world.
  • A New Alice in the Old Wonderland is an 1895 novel by Anna M. Richards.
  • Paul Auster's City of Glass contains a reference to Chapter IV: Humpty Dumpty of Through the Looking-Glass.
  • HaJaBaRaLa, a Bengali "nonsense story" by Sukumar Ray, features a little boy who enters into a fantasy world full of fantastic comic creatures.
  • Thomas Ligotti's 1985 short story "Alice's Last Adventure" is a present-day horror tale using Carroll-derived imagery.
  • Douglas Hofstadter's Gödel, Escher, Bach contains numerous references to Alice in Wonderland.
  • Carroll's work is a major subtext in Joyce Carol Oates's novel Wonderland.
  • The heroine of Boris Starling's Vodka (2004) is called Alice Liddell, symbolising not only her journey through the surreal shifting sands of post-Soviet Russian politics but also her battle against alcoholism (referenced by the bottle which appears to the original Alice saying 'drink me').
  • Neil Gaiman's Coraline has been compared to Alice in Wonderland because it has an alternate-reality based plot and the main character is a bored young girl.
  • Robert Doucette's "Why a Raven is like a Writing Desk: A Wonderland Mystery" (2006) is a short fable that attempts to answer the riddle from the Mad Tea-Party.
  • The title of teen novel Go Ask Alice is taken from the psychedelic song by Jefferson Airplane, "White Rabbit", which took major imagery from Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.
  • The first novel in the Echo Falls series by Peter Abrahams, called Down the Rabbit Hole, features main character Ingrid Levin-Hill starring in a stage production of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.
  • Andrzej Sapkowski's short story "Złote popołudnie" ("Golden Afternoon") retells the story of Alice from the point of view of the Cheshire Cat.
  • In the eleventh book of A Series of Unfortunate Events, one of the stanzas of the poem "The Walrus and the Carpenter" is worded in a coded message. There is also a beach named Briny Beach.
  • Little Mimzy Wells by Markiv Inias is influenced heavily by Caroll's works, and draws liberally from the themes present in said novels.
  • Night of the Jabberwock by Fredric Brown includes a character who is a member of a society that believes Lewis Carroll's books to be visions of an actual world.
  • Alice's Journey Beyond the Moon, by R. J. Carter (ISBN 1903889766, Telos Publishing), fictionally purports to be a second sequel. It is heavily footnoted, however, with valid biographical information on both Dodgson and Liddell.
  • The King in the Window by Adam Gopnik.
  • Davy and the Goblin; or, What Followed Reading "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland" (1884) by Charles E. Carryl.
  • Aliss is a novel by French Canadian writer Patrick Sénécal.
  • Uncle Albert and the Quantum Quest, a children's science book by Russell Stannard.
  • French philosopher Gilles Deleuze writes extensively on Alice in Wonderland and the paradoxes contained within it in The Logic of Sense (1969).

Art

  • In 1969, Salvador Dalí produced 12 illustrations based on Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.
  • In 1956 Charles Blackman heard an audio book of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, and painted a series of 46 paintings of Alice with other characters from the series.
  • The town of Warrington in Cheshire, the nearest town to the village of Daresbury where the Reverend Dodgson lived and worked, has several statues of figures from the story. The figures show the scene of the tea party, whilst allowing room for viewers to sit at the table with the characters. The church in Daresbury, likewise, memorialises the story in several stained glass windows.
  • The Surrey county town of Guildford also has several Alice in Wonderland statues throughout the town, the most notable in the castle grounds, showing a brass statue of Alice passing through a pane of glass, and the other at Millmead alongisde the River Wey of Alice and her sister sat on the grass looking at the White Rabbit running towards his hole.
  • Statues of Alice, the Mad Hatter and the March Hare can be seen in the southeastern part of Central Park in New York City.

Comics

  • Alice is a main character in Alan Moore and Melinda Gebbie's Lost Girls, which presents her as an adult, in erotic adventures with Dorothy of the Oz books, and Wendy of the Peter Pan story.
  • Hatter M. by Ben Templesmith is a comic book based around the character Hatter Madigan from the The Looking-Glass Wars by Frank Beddor.
  • The Mad Hatter is a recurring Batman villain, who has appeared in DC Comics since 1948. The Mad Hatter (Jervis Tetch) is quite insane, and is often portrayed as speaking only in quotes from Lewis Carroll’s books.[6] A similar villain called the White Rabbit is seen in Marvel Comics as an enemy of Spider-Man.
  • Rozen Maiden focuses on a set of magical dolls that fight one another to become "Alice", alleged to be a creature of perfect femininity, purity, and beauty. A white rabbit that guides the dolls through worlds is also prominently featured and the dolls themselves also refer to various characters Alice encounters in the story.
  • Kagihime Monogatari Eikyuu Alice Rondo, a manga that focuses on the completion of a third Alice novel called The Eternal Alice.
  • The manga Alice 19th by Yū Watase involves Alice's older sister being drawn into a darker Wonderland. Not to mention that at the beginning of the story, Alice encounters a white rabbit named Nyozeka.
  • Bizenghast is a manga-style American comic by M. Alice Legrow. It makes many references to Alice & is comparable to American McGee's Alice in that the lead female character is like Alice McGee & Edaniel resembles the Tower Records glowing green Cheshire Cat.
  • Arkham Asylum: A Serious House on Serious Earth, in an interview with the writer of the graphic novel, Grant Morrison, his take on Batman was described as "a remake of the Lewis Carroll classic Alice's Adventures in Wonderland", to which he replied "I'd read the Alice books and decided to put Batman into a similar situation - where he goes into a strange place, strange things happen to him and then he comes back out at the end, none the wiser." [7]
  • Alice in Sunderland - Carroll's connection with Sunderland, and the area's history, is documented in Bryan Talbot's 2007 graphic novel.[8]
  • In Godchild Volume 1, the entire first story has an Alice theme. For instance, the main title is "Mad Tea Party"; one of the main characters is named Alice, who has a dream in the beginning that the March Hare and Mad Hatter behead her at a tea party; the four girls (Victoria, Edith, Alice, and Lorina) hold tea parties they call "Golden Afternoons"; Edith, Lorina, and Alice are the names of the Lidell sisters, who (mainly Alice) were the inspiration for Alice's Adventures in Wonderland; the killer goes by the alias of the White Rabbit (he wears a white rabbit mask) and beheads his victims in the style of the Queen of Hearts; and the guest rooms in Victoria's home have paintings of Alice characters, which symbolize the theme of the room.
  • Pandora Hearts has several references to Alice in Wonderland. The main heroine is named Alice, and some of the chains are based on the characters, such as the Cheshire Cat, the White Rabbit, and the Dormouse. The Abyss also has a dark Wonderland-like feeling.
  • Return to Wonderland, where Wonderland is actually another name for Limbo and R'lyeh, is a series that reinterprets the Alice story[9] and has been followed by a sequel Beyond Wonderland.[10]
  • "Heart no Kuni no Alice", a manga based on the otome game of the same name, uses the story and characters from Carroll's books as its source. However, it recasts most of the characters into warring parties making it a more romantic, yet violent retelling of the story.
  • In volume three of the Shugo Chara! manga, Amu is pictured in a Gothic Alice-like dress with a cupcake in one hand (that says "Eat Me") and a bottle in the other (that says "Drink Me"), and Ikuto (as his character change/character tranformation is cat-themed) is sitting on a tree branch above her.
  • A manga prequel to the video game Devil May Cry 3 features Alice as a girl who seeks to gain the power of a demon so she can grow up and become beautiful. The White Rabbit also makes an appearance, posing as a client to lure Dante to his brother Vergil.

Animation

  • Neco z Alenky (Alice) A 1988 full-length stop motion animation by Czech Republic artist Jan Švankmajer.
  • In Garfield and Friends, there was a U.S. Acres episode called "Orson in Wonderland" and Orson T. Pig experiences being in the story Alice in Wonderland.
  • There was an episode of Animaniacs titled 'Mindy in Wonderland', which spoofed the novel and the Disney movie by having Buttons the dog chase Mindy down a rabbit hole, having humorous meetings with the famous characters.
  • Brandy & Mr. Whiskers is somewhat similar to the Alice books; the main heroine falls into the Amazon because of a white rabbit, and encounters creatures like bickering twins and a tyrannical dictator.
  • The anime series InuYasha follows the adventures of a young girl who is drawn into a fantasy world when she falls down an old well. Viz, the company who translated the series into English, translated the title of the third episode as, "Down the Rabbit Hole and Back Again" and the second movie was called The Castle Beyond the Looking Glass.
  • An anime short film based on Alice in Wonderland was made by Sanrio, starring Hello Kitty as Alice. Released as part of Hello Kitty & Friends.
  • The anime series Serial Experiments Lain tells the story of a girl who is drawn into the cyberspace "underground" of the Wired, and features a character named Arisu ("Alice") Mizuki (this character is a second use of one created by the scenarist, Chiaki Konaka, for the animation "Alice in Cyberland"). In the episode KIDS, Lain has an encounter with an avatar which directly parallels Lewis Carroll's Cheshire Cat with the exception that Lain rejects the Cheshire Cat's assistance, stating that she knows everything.
  • In the seventh season of The Simpsons, Lisa Simpson is almost lured into a library by Alice until she shows that the Mad Hatter has her at gunpoint in "Summer of 4 Ft. 2". In the fourteenth season, Maggie requests Moe to read Alice in Wonderland to her, where Moe uses references to the song White Rabbit, including White Rabbits and Chicks Poppin Mushroom Pills in Moe Baby Blues. In the same latter episode, Moe used parodied references like "Alice in Underpants" and "Putting on the Looking Glass".
  • Nippon Animation produced an anime of Alice in Wonderland in 1983 to 1984. This anime adopted an original story that Alice and her rabbit Benny take a trip to Wonderland and go home for each episode.
  • Kiddy Grade features two fraternal twins named Tweedledee and Tweedledum. They also pilot a ship known as the Cheshire Cat, which has powers similar to that of the Alice in Wonderland feline.
  • Batman: The Animated Series features the Mad Hatter from the Batman comics.
  • Alice SOS, where four kids go on an adventure to different worlds to rescue Alice after she has been kidnapped by a mysterious evil force.
  • Kagihime Monogatari Eikyuu Alice Rondo, an anime that focuses on the completion of a fictional sequel called The Eternal Alice.
  • Miyuki-chan in Wonderland, an anime, adapted from a manga by Clamp, is a sexy animated parody of Alice.
  • The George Shrinks episode "Becky in Wonderland" pays homage to the original novel.
  • A 1939 Betty Boop cartoon, Betty in Blunderland, pays homage to Alice's Adventures in Wonderland with Betty playing the role of Alice.
  • In episode 13 of the anime Ouran High School Host Club, titled "Haruhi in Wonderland"(不思議の国のハルヒ), Haruhi's dream about the day of her admission into Ouran becomes an Alice in Wonderland-esque fantasy.

Television

  • Lost (2004 - ) is heavily influenced by Alice in Wonderland and contains many references to Alice's world.
  • The Disney Channel series Adventures in Wonderland is based on the first book, featuring many of the major characters. Also, Alice enters Wonderland in each episode by walking through her mirror, a reference to the second book.
  • An episode of Star Trek entitled "Shore Leave" features a recreated white rabbit and Alice, brought to life by a computer which can make thoughts become reality.
  • This is Wonderland (2004 - 2006), a Canadian legal drama/comedy which follows the main character Alice De Raey as she encounters characters ranging from the truly desperate to the bizarre, is partly inspired by the characters of the Alice books.
  • Big Brother 8 borrowed from Alice In Wonderland for the decoration of the house; for example, one room has only abnormally large furniture while another has abnormally small furniture.
  • The Care Bears Adventure in Wonderland (1987) - Animated movie

Film

Not to be confused with actual adaptations of the Alice and Looking Glass books, these are films which are based on elements of the books.

  • Mrs. Miniver, the classic 1942 film, includes scenes in which the title character and her husband read and quote from Alice's Adventures in Wonderland while they and their two little children stay in their home's air-raid shelter during the Nazis' World War II bombing of Britain.
  • In 1959, Walt Disney released Donald in Mathmagic Land, which was partly influenced by Alice in Wonderland.
  • Kingdom of Crooked Mirrors, a 1964 Soviet fairy tale film which is loosely based on the style of Alice in Wonderland.
  • Alice in Wonderland: A Musical Porno, a 1976 pornographic film, is based directly upon Lewis Carroll's story.
  • Alicia En La España De Las Maravillas (1978, Jorge Feliu, Spain) features four Alices wandering through 40 years of Spanish history.
  • Dreamchild, the 1985 Gavin Millar film, in which a reporter attempts to uncover the 'true story' of the Alice tales from an 80 year-old woman who may or may not be Alice Liddle. Featuring grotesque, aged versions of the Alice characters (designed by Jim Henson's Creature shop), the film explores the relationships adults have with the fictional characters from their childhoods.
  • Labyrinth, a 1986 film directed by Jim Henson, counts the Alice books among its influences; it is the story of a young girl who must brave a strange fantasy realm populated by unusual talking creatures, in which she must solve a number of puzzles.
  • Alicia en el Pueblo de Maravillas (Cuba 1991), is a social comedy about bureaucratism.
  • The Matrix (1999). The protagonist Neo is told by his future mentor Morpheus to "follow the White Rabbit". Neo agrees to accompany visitors when he sees one of them sporting a white rabbit tattoo. The Wachowski brothers who directed the film have stated that Alice's Adventures in Wonderland is a running theme in their Matrix trilogy.
  • Resident Evil (film) (2002), has several references. The main character's name is Alice, and the journey she takes to the hive is almost symbolic of the rabbit hole. Also, the antagonist of the film is titled The Red Queen.
  • Tideland (2005) has a character, Jeliza-Rose, who is frequently reading and quoting from Alice's Adventures in Wonderland; additionally, rabbits and a rabbit hole make appearances with references to the books.
  • Pan's Labyrinth (2006) bears some similarity to Alice in its young female protagonist who enters an underground fantasy world in search of escape from the tensions of her home in 1940s Spain after the Spanish Civil War.
  • In the 2005 movie Where the Truth Lies, Kristin Adams plays the role of an actress who incarnate Alice in a play.
  • The Last Mimzy (2007) is based on "Mimsy were the Borogoves", the 1943 short story by Henry Kuttner and C. L. Moore (writing as Lewis Padgett), and which is a reference to the Jabberwocky poem which contains the phrase "all mimsy were the borogoves".
  • Phoebe in Wonderland (2008), starring Elle Fanning as a little girl whose role as Alice in a school play helps her deal with her Tourette syndrome.
  • Across The Universe (2008), Includes a reference to "falling down the rabbit hole".
  • Revenge of the Fallen (2009), A Decepticon disguised as a human apparently scanned an Alice in Wonderland animatronic.

Radio

Classical music and opera

Music inspired by, referencing, or incorporating texts from the Alice books include:

Popular music

  • Jefferson Airplane's song White Rabbit mentions Alice, the Dormouse, the hookah-smoking caterpillar, the White Knight, and the Red Queen. Written by Grace Slick it shows parallels between the story and the hallucinatory effects of psychedelic drugs.
  • On Aerosmith's 2001 album, Just Push Play, the song "SUNSHINE" talks about Alice and other characters of the book. In the music video, Steven Tyler is shown trying to protect a young, blond Alice in the woods, along with depictions of the Red Queen, the White Rabbit, among others.
  • The bands Alice in Chains and Alice in Videoland. Furthermore, Alice in Chains' 2006 Tour poster depicted young Alice being hanged by the Cheshire Cat's tail.
  • The Japanese rock band alice nine released an EP with the title Alice in Wonderland in 2005.
  • The thrash metal / speed metal band Annihilator released a number of albums inspired directly and indirectly by Alice in Wonderland, the most popular being Never, Neverland and Alice in Hell.
  • Virginia Astley has released a lot of Alice-related work, including her LP From Gardens Where We Feel Secure with sound effects recorded a few miles south of where Alice's adventures began; and songs like "Tree Top Club," "Nothing Is What It Seems," and "Over the Edge of the World".
  • The Beatles counted the Alice books among their many artistic influences, and this is referred to in various oblique ways. Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band features a sleeve montage designed by Peter Blake that includes an image of Lewis Carroll. Other Beatles songs with Carrollian imagery include "Cry Baby Cry," "Come Together," "Glass Onion," and "I Am The Walrus"—supposedly this walrus is the one from The Walrus and the Carpenter. The song "Helter Skelter" contains lyrics similar to some in "The Lobster Quadrille" in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.
  • DJ Yoji Biomehanika has a song named "Wonderland"
  • DJ Fresh has a song named "The Looking Glass" which features Jeremy Beadle reading an excerpt and the sound of breaking glass at the end.
  • The indie rock band Bright Eyes, on the album Digital Ash in a Digital Urn, has a song named "Down in a Rabbit Hole," which uses the phrase to describe the effects of drug abuse.
  • The popular Japanese band Buck-Tick released a song on 8-8-2007 entitled "Alice in Wonder-Underground". The PV includes a very macabre depiction of the story, with Alice chasing her rabbit, the band periodically becoming rabbits, and the lead vocalist Atsushi Sakurai dressed as the Mad Hatter.* .
  • Cradle of Filth's song, "Malice Through The Looking Glass"
  • The Crüxshadows have a spoken segment on their EP, Tears, which is titled "Jabberwocky".
  • Dokken made strong reference to the mad hatter and his rabbit friends in their song "Maddest Hatter" from their 1999 album, "Erase the Slate".
  • Donovan used some of Carroll's lyrics on his 1971 album, HMS Donovan.
  • The Erasure video for "Breath of Life" from the album Chorus has imagery from Through the Looking Glass and Andy Bell has stated in an interview that the song was inspired by Alice in Wonderland.
  • The first album by UK synth-pop duo Erasure was entitled Wonderland.
  • Forgive Durden's album Wonderland is heavily influenced by both Alice books.
  • Canadian Rock Musician Matthew Good's song "Failing The Rorschach Test" references Alice and a rabbit many times in the song by saying "Hey rabbit" and "Hey Alice".
  • GWAR has a longform video entitled Phallus in Wonderland.
  • Side 1 of Peter Hammill's 1976 LP Over ends with the song "Alice (Letting Go)", which has no connection to Carroll's Alice and which is about a lover of the same name who left him. However, the other side of the LP then opens with "This Side of the Looking Glass", an extremely stark song which plays with the title of the second "Alice" book and the lost lover's name.
  • Words and images from the Alice books acquire blatant psychedelic connotations in "White Rabbit" by Jefferson Airplane from their 1967 album Surrealistic Pillow. The song's lyrics[11] refer to pills that make you larger or smaller, for example.
  • Jewel released an album and single with the title Goodbye Alice in Wonderland.
  • Marilyn Manson's 2007 album is titled Eat Me, Drink Me, possibly referring to Alice in Wonderland as his new music and film works are stated as heavily influenced by Lewis Carroll among other things.
  • Lisa Mitchell's song "Alice in Wonderland" is based on Alice's experiences in Wonderland.
  • Stevie Nicks has a song titled "Alice" on her 1989 album The Other Side of the Mirror. Its lyrics mention Alice and the Mad Hatter.
  • Opeth's 1998 concept album My Arms, Your Hearse, starts off with the lyrics "It was me peering through the looking glass."
  • Neil Sedaka took Alice into the US Top 50 in 1963 with the single "Alice In Wonderland".
  • The video for the Tom Petty song "Don't Come Around Here No More" portrays Alice, the Mad Hatter, and other Wonderland elements. Producer Dave Stewart appears as the Caterpillar.
  • Symphony X's 1998 release, Twilight in Olympus, contains "Through the Looking Glass" – a 13-minute epic about the book.
  • The Thompson Twins released an instrumental track called "The Lewis Carol".
  • In the video for her single Bloomin'!, japanese singer Tomoko Kawase (alias Tommy February 6) is dressed as Alice, meets the White Rabbit and enters Wonderland by eating a cookie with "eat me" written on it.
  • Red Queen by Funker Vogt makes direct references to The Looking Glass, Alice and the Red Queen.
  • Tom Waits released an 2002 album entitled Alice, consisting of songs that were written for a stage adaptation of Alice.
  • "Rabbit Hole" by Year of the Rabbit
  • Marcy Playground's song "Sherry Fraser" contains the lyrics "the mad hatter he waited for Alice to come to tea again"
  • There was a rash of Alice-related material in the music industry in the 1980s, a fad mainly fueled by goth and indie rock musicians. Siouxsie & the Banshees, for instance, named their label Wonderland and released an album called Through The Looking Glass. The former London-based Batcave Club was renamed "Alice In Wonderland." The Sisters of Mercy had a hit single, "Alice," about the image of Carroll's heroine, which in turn led to a story called "Alice In The Floodlands".
  • Hard rock bands have used ideas from Alice In Wonderland, usually with a sense of parody. Both Nazareth and Paice Ashton & Lord released albums called Malice In Wonderland – the latter using one of Peter Blake's paintings for the sleeve.
  • Panic at the Disco's 2008 album, Pretty. Odd., features a song called "Mad as Rabbits", which lyricist Ryan Ross attributed to the book in an interview.
  • The Gwen Stefani video for "What You Waiting For?" from the album Love. Angel. Music. Baby. has imagery from Alice In Wonderland. Stefani portrays several characters from the books, including Alice, the White Queen and the Red Queen.
  • The indie rock band Noisettes has a song named "Malice In Wonderland".
  • The debut album Alice's Inferno by Spanish Gothic metal band Forever Slave is a concept album focusing on Alice's life after her parents' death.
  • "Still Doll" by Kanon Wakeshima, the ending theme of Vampire Knight, contains references to Alice in Wonderland. "Hi, Miss Alice. With glass eyes, what kind of a dream ere you able to have?" (Rough English translation)
  • The band Hypnogaja has a song titled "Looking Glass" which references Alice, the white rabbit, the Red Queen, and many other elements of the story.
  • The music clip Labyrinth by OOMPH! references many Alice memes, such as a liquid filled bottle labeled "Trink mich" ("drink me"), the Mad Hatter, a white rabbit and the Queen of Hearts.
  • In addition to having their 1979 album The Wall synchronized with the Disney animated movie adaption, some of Pink Floyd's early work were said to be influenced by Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass, and What Alice Found There, like "Country Song", since it has references to the Red Queen, White King and a smiling cat. Early member Syd Barrett also cited the books as one of the key inspirations for some of his early work.
  • French singer Ridan, in his 2009 single "Passe à ton voisin", talks about Alice : "La belle Alice nous a menti sur les merveilles de son pays"("Pretty Alice lied to us about the wonders of her land")
  • Two of Korn's albums, Take a Look in the Mirror and See You on the Other Side have album covers that sort of resemble the illustrations to the two books.
  • Malice Mizer's 1997 Sans Retour Voyage "Derniere" ~Encoure Une Fois~ concert video was an interpretation of Alice in Wonderland by the band.
  • Brian McFadden has recorded a track called Alice In Wonderland for his second album "Set In Stone" (2008). The song talks about a girl that reminds the singer of Alice because she is lost in Wonderland.

Computer and video games

  • Wonderland (1990), an illustrated text adventure by Magnetic Scrolls.
  • In the Bloody Roar series of fighting games, one of the main protagonists is a young Eurasian woman dressed in blue and white and called Alice, and whose zoanthropic transform is a white rabbit.
  • American McGee's Alice is a macabre computer game which chronologically takes place following the two Alice books.
  • Alice in Wonderland was adapted into a computer game by Windham Classics in 1985. It is presented as a platform game involving puzzle-solving and simplistic word parsers akin to a text adventure.
  • The Thief series, developed by Looking Glass Studios, contains references to the Alice world. Thief: The Dark Project has an early level that involves breaking into a huge mansion; as one goes deeper inside, it becomes "curiouser and curiouser" — resembling
  • In the RPG Shin Megami Tensei II release on Super Famicom in 1994, Alice is a major boss you can fight at the end of the game.
  • The RPG Kingdom Hearts includes Alice as a plot character. Also, Disney's version of Wonderland appears as one of the first worlds.
  • The Silent Hill series contain a few references of Wonderland, in an homage to its surreal world. The best example of this is in the first game, where a door puzzle at the Alchemilla Hospital involves coloured blocks imprinted with the Cheshire Cat, Mad Hatter, Mock Turtle and The Queen of Hearts.
  • Windham Classics' Alice In Wonderland adventure game for the Commodore 64. The game was remade later for Philips CD-I with clay animation graphics.
  • In the PC-98 game Mystic Square of the Touhou Project, one of the boss characters is named Alice. She is inspired by the story: the background music for the Extra Stage where she appears again is titled "Alice in Wonderland", and playing cards appear as enemies; the mid-boss is a King card soldier. Alice later returns in Perfect Cherry Blossom and other games of the series.
  • The Don Bluth arcade game Dragon's Lair II: Time Warp, features an Alice in Wonderland/ Through the Looking Glass inspired level.
  • The Otome game "Heart no Kuni no Alice" and its sequels "Clover no Kuni no Alice" and "Joker no Kuni no Alice" use a story and world based on Alice in Wonderland as well as many of its characters as protagonists. The titles of the games themselves are a play on the Japanese title of Alice in Wonderland; ふしぎの国のアリス (Fushigi no Kuni no Arisu)

Other games

External links

Notes

  1. ^ Sigler, Carolyn, ed. Alternative Alices: Visions and Revisions of Lewis Carroll's "Alice" Books. Lexington, KY, University Press of Kentucky, 1997.
  2. ^ Sigler, p. 206.
  3. ^ Hu, J., Bartneck, C., Salem, B., & Rauterberg, M. (2008). ALICE's Adventures in Cultural Computing. International Journal of Arts and Technology, 1(1), 102-118. | DOI: 10.1504/IJART.2008.019885 | html
  4. ^ Interview with John Reed, David Shankbone, Wikinews, October 18, 2007.
  5. ^ [1], Simon & Schuster
  6. ^ Brooker, Will (2004). Alice’s Adventures: Lewis Carroll in Popular Culture. Continuum International Publishing Group. pp. 152–153. ISBN 0826414338. 
  7. ^ Grant Morrison interview in Xstatic #1 (May '92)
  8. ^ Robertson, Ross (27 March 2007). "News focus: Alice in Pictureland". Sunderland Echo. http://www.sunderlandtoday.co.uk/ViewArticle.aspx?ArticleID=2181289&SectionID=1512. Retrieved on 2007-03-29. 
  9. ^ Raven Gregory on Return to Wonderland, Newsarama, January 24, 2007
  10. ^ Going Beyond Wonderland with Raven Gregory, Newsarama, April 11, 2008
  11. ^ http://www.songmeanings.net/lyric.php?lid=8697 "White Rabbit" song lyrics

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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Works based on Alice in Wonderland" Read more

 

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