Alice in Wonderland (1903 film), silent motion picture
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (1910 film), silent motion picture
Alice in Wonderland (1915 film), silent motion picture
Alice in Wonderland (1931 film), motion picture
Alice in Wonderland (1933 film), motion picture
Alice in Wonderland (1949 film), part live action motion picture
Alice in Wonderland (1951 film), Disney animated film
Alice of Wonderland in Paris, 1966 animated movie
Alice in Wonderland (1966 film), made for TV film
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (1972 film), musical motion picture
Alice in Wonderland (1976 film), X-rated musical
Alisa v Zazerkale, 1981 animated film
Alice in Wonderland (1983 film), TV film based on Broadway play
Fushigi no Kuni no Alice, 1983 anime adaptation
Alice in Wonderland (1985 film), motion picture
Alice (1988 film), stop-motion adaptation by Jan Svenkmajer
Alice in Wonderland (1988 film), an animated film
Alice Through the Looking Glass (1998 film), a British film
Alice in Wonderland (1999 film), made for television film
Alice in Wonderland (2006 film), Malayalam-language film
Alice (2009 miniseries), a modern interpretation TV miniseries broadcast on Syfy
Alice in Wonderland (2010 film), Disney film directed by Tim Burton
Lewis Carroll wrote Alice in Wonderland long before LSD was invented, so obviously, he didn't intend there to be any connection between the two. However, in the 1960s Alice in Wonderland was embraced by the drug extolling counter culture. It has been suggested that the connection with LSD was first made in the by the psychiatrists who introduced the drug. The relationship between Alice and acid was popularised by Grace Slick, who performed the hit song 'White Rabbit' with Jefferson Airplane in the late 60s. The song was ostensibly about Alice in Wonderland but managed to sneak drug references into the mainstream, and secured radio airplay without causing an outcry. Ever since then, Alice has become irrevocably associated with drugs in the public imagination.
No, Alice in Wonderland is not about sexual fantasies. Alice in Wonderland is a book (and several movie adaptations) aimed at children, about a young girl who visits a strange and wondrous land and has adventures there. The book has been very popular ever since it was written, nearly one hundred and fifty years ago, and has been analysed and interpreted in all sorts of different ways by all sorts of different people ever since. In the early part of the twentieth century it was fashionable to subject the book to Freudian analysis. Freud is seen as the father of psychoanalysis, and against a backdrop of Victorian oppressiveness, became rather notorious for connecting almost everything to sex and sexual desire. So Freudian analyses of Alice in Wonderland tend to interpret the book from that perspective, and frequently conclude that the book is in fact an expression of repressed sexual desires. However, these interpretations are not definitive or absolute by any means, and are no more likely to be accurate than any other interpretation of the book.
There is a passage in Down the Rabbit-Hole in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland when Alice sees the beautiful garden through the little door and wishes she could get to it:Alice opened the door and found that it led into a small passage, not much larger than a rat-hole: she knelt down and looked along the passage into the loveliest garden you ever saw. How she longed to get out of that dark hall, and wander about among those beds of bright flowers and those cool fountains, but she could not even get her head though the doorway; `and even if my head would go through,' thought poor Alice, `it would be of very little use without my shoulders. Oh, how I wish I could shut up like a telescope! I think I could, if I only know how to begin.' For, you see, so many out-of-the-way things had happened lately, that Alice had begun to think that very few things indeed were really impossible.
Yes i have ever been to the market
Alice is never naked in the book or Disney's 1951 animated film, Alice in Wonderland.There is a story that in the 1951 Disney animation, there is a frame or two where Alice appears naked, but as far as VHS and DVD releases are concerned, this is completely untrue, and there is no evidence that it ever occurred in the prints of the film used when it was on general release either.But she is naked in Tim Burton's 2010 movie, Alice in Wonderland. You can't see her however, because she is behind a bush.+++This reveals how some parts of the film industry are so devoid of imagination they struggle to find original material so mangle existing stories! Nevertheless, the accusation of a nude child in a Disney film, even back in 1951, must have been someone's unhealthy fantasy.There was no nudity in the genuine novels, and it is extremely unlikely Lewis Carroll would even have dreamt of including it in a story about a child for children. The Victorians were probably not as prudish as often alleged, but were a lot more discreet than we are now, and the original illustrations for another children's novel, Charles Kingsley's The Water Babies, depicted its rock-pool residents discreetly nude. I found these drawings reproduced in a 1930s-published children's- story anthology my mother had kept, when it came to disposing of the book after her death, and it rather worried us!There is though, an aspect to Carroll's hobby of photography we would regard as wrong nowadays, especially under modern British law. It is no secret that he photographed the young Alice Liddell whom he had befriended and who inspired the two stories, both nude and dressed as a beggar, for reasons we will never know. A film version of the character, aged about 7 in the novel, being naked even if out of sight (?), is utterly absurd and pointless, and may or may not be typical 21C Hollywood - but I wonder if was a comment on Carroll's photography.
There doesn't appear to be any evidence that Alice's Adventures in Wonderland has ever been banned in school.
No.
No
Alice refers to it as the Quadrille. "Hamish? Do you ever tire of the Quadrille" "on the contrary, i find it invigorating" :D
Natalie Gregory retired from acting at a young age and has since chosen to live a private life away from the entertainment industry. She has not pursued a career in acting since her role as Alice in "Alice in Wonderland."
No, Whitman Publishing Company did not publish "Alice in Wonderland." The book was originally published by Macmillan in 1865. Whitman Publishing Company is known for producing children's books, including the Big Little Books series.
Lewis Carroll wrote Alice in Wonderland long before LSD was invented, so obviously, he didn't intend there to be any connection between the two. However, in the 1960s Alice in Wonderland was embraced by the drug extolling counter culture. It has been suggested that the connection with LSD was first made in the by the psychiatrists who introduced the drug. The relationship between Alice and acid was popularised by Grace Slick, who performed the hit song 'White Rabbit' with Jefferson Airplane in the late 60s. The song was ostensibly about Alice in Wonderland but managed to sneak drug references into the mainstream, and secured radio airplay without causing an outcry. Ever since then, Alice has become irrevocably associated with drugs in the public imagination.
The phrase "Curiouser and curiouser" is from the book "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland" by Lewis Carroll. It is said by Alice as she goes through a series of strange and nonsensical events in Wonderland.
when ever he wants to come out...
What Ever Happened to Alice - 2003 was released on: USA: 1 September 2003
No,xena is a fictional character that is make believe like Alice in wonderland , and harry potter and vol.1,2,3,4,5,6,7.
I recall an alice in wonderland that was like that