In my opinion the new one is better because he is more than a lunatic. He has feelings and has made a best friend in Alice.
The age of the Hatter is never given, so we don't know how old he is. We do know however, that he is portrayed as being an adult with a skilled job.
There is nothing in the text of the original Alice books to suggest that the Hatter is a crazy murderer.However, the character who appears in the Batman comics is a murderer and, if his time spent in the Arkham Asylum is anything to go by, is also very crazy.The Mad Hatter was probably a reference to an old saying "mad as a hatter", which was a reference itself, to the 'madness' that hat makers were prone to, at the time. Some of the chemicals involved in making certain kinds of hats were intoxicating and could have narcotic-like effects on the people in contact with it.
Mercury. Hatters in the old days used to use it quite a bit, thus the term "Mad Hatter."
Answerhttp://www.lyricsdomain.com/20/tom_waits/diamonds_gold.html Answer Also, mad as a March hare. Crazy, demented, as in She is throwing out all his clothes; she's mad as a hatter. This expression, dating from the early 1800s, alludes to exposure to the chemicals formerly used in making felt hats, which caused tremors and other nervous symptoms. The variant, dating from the 14th century, alludes to the crazy behavior of hares during rutting season, mistakenly thought to be only in March.mad-as-a-hatter1. Demented or crazy.http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/mad_as_a_hatterbe as mad as a hatterto be crazy.http://idioms.thefreedictionary.com/mad+as+a+hatterA hatter in 19th century England was a professional who made and fixed hats, and hatters used a glue which over time caused them to act crazy (mad). A person who acts as if they are crazy (mad) is "mad as a hatter." Example: "Wow- did you see that guy on the corner?" Answer: "Yeah, he was as mad as a hatter." Lewis Carroll, in his popular children's book Alice In Wonderland, used the image of "mad as a hatter" to create the character that he called The Mad Hatter. Example: "Everybody in my family knew that our uncle was as mad as a hatter."http://www.goenglish.com/MadAsAHatter.aspAnswer The chemical ingredients used by hatters included mercury which caused the symptoms outlined above. Mercury poisoning is undergoing a resurgence as poor miners working at the fringes of gold mines (or reworking old mines) use mercury metal in the extraction process.
Alice in Wonderland, it is a VERY old book published in 1865, before the time of Batman.
No. In the original book and most movie adaptations Alice is only a child, so the subject of marriage never arises. In the new film released in 2010, starring Mia Wasikowska as a nineteen year old Alice, she chooses NOT get married.
She is 14
Andrew Lee Potts, who played Hatter, is thirty years old. His date of birth is 29 October 1979.
The earliest documented use of the phrase "mad as a hatter" appears in Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, January-June 1829. It appears in a section of the magazine headed Noctes Ambrocianæ. No. XL1V:TICKLER (aside to SHEPHERD.): He's raving.SHEPHERD (to TICKLER.): Dementit.ODOHERTY (to both.): Mad as a hatter. Hand me a segar.So the term is at least one hundred and eighty years old.It is believed to have come about because hatters in the eighteenth and nineteenth century frequently suffered from mercury poisoning. Mercury is a chemical which used to be used in the production of felt hats. It is extremely toxic and can cause symptoms which appear to be similar to 'madness'.Hatters in Danbury, Conneticut, USA are known to have suffered the ill effects of mercury poisoning, the symptoms of which were known locally as "the Danbury shakes." It is also claimed that the Danbury hatmakers were known as "the mad hatters," but evidence is unavailable as to whether this predates the appearance of the phrase in Blackwood's.Apparently in New Zealand the name "hatter" was given to miners /prospectors who work alone. It was thought that they frequently went mad from the solitude of their claim away in the bush although it is more likely that they were named "hatters" after the phrase, rather than the phrase being named after them.There also is a theory that the phrase is a corruption of the term 'as mad as an adder', which is roughly equivalent to 'as angry as a rattle-snake'.The phrase has of course been immortalised by the Hatter in Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, who was named "the Mad Hatter" in Disney's 1951 adaptation.
Ummm... No he is from Alice in wonderland lol
a new better computer is an new one
new things are better than old depending on what your talking about.