No, they're similar though aren't they? The cat in Alice in Wonderland was the Cheshire cat.. it was purple, could talk and disappear. The evil stepmother's cat couldn't do that.
Yes, they are both in the fantasy genre.
Alice in wonderland are a few things not to loose change is not eating or drinking things that you do not know Feeling very impatiently not to fall asleep and maybe not the same as I said before and to not drink something so they do not know
The book, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland came first. It was originally published in 1865. The Wonderful Wizard of Ozwas published thirty-five years later in 1900.However, the famous movie, The Wizard of Oz predates Disney's animated Alice in Wonderland. The Wizard of Oz was released in 1939 and Alice in Wonderland was released in 1951.
No, Mad Hatter in the new Alice in Wonderland movie is played by Johnny Depp
Both the 1951 animated Disney movie and the 2010 Tim Burton film are based on two books by Lewis Carroll; 'Alice's Adventures in Wonderland' and 'Through the Looking-Glass and What Alice Found There' Confusingly, these books are also sometimes jointly referred to as 'Alice in Wonderland', and, even more confusingly, sometimes just the first book, 'Alice's Adventures in Wonderland' is referred to as 'Alice in Wonderland'.
When Alice visits Wonderland she is seven years old. She is the same age when she leaves Wonderland as when she went in, she just fell asleep and ended up in Wonderland in her dream.
No, the girl in The Golden Compass is Dakota Blue Richards and the girl in Alice in Wonderland is Mia Wasikowska.
In the Tim Burton version, she goes to Underland. In most of the other versions, Alice goes to Wonderland, which is still the same place as Underland.
It's the same. Think of Alice in Wonderland - Alice au pays des merveilles.
No, they're two different stories.
No. Alice in Wonderland (actually "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland") was written in 1865 by Lewis Carroll (the nom-de-plume of Charles Lutwidge Dodgson). Robinson Crusoe was written in 1719 by Daniel Defoe.
Its about a girl named Alice who went to wonderland and came back to London and said it was just a dream and still had that same weird dream
Yes, he sure is!
Yes, they are both in the fantasy genre.
Alice in wonderland are a few things not to loose change is not eating or drinking things that you do not know Feeling very impatiently not to fall asleep and maybe not the same as I said before and to not drink something so they do not know
In Lewis Carroll's book, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Alice sits down at the tea party uninvited, despite being told that there is "no room" by the March Hare and the Hatter. She does the same in the 1951 Disney version, and the White Rabbit also turns up, but it isn't clear whether or not he has been invited.
No, 'Alice in Wonderland' by Lewis Carroll is not a series. It is a standalone novel originally published in 1865. The story follows Alice's adventures in a fantastical world after falling down a rabbit hole.