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‘Alice’ an enjoyable trip until third act
Diana Nollen
Mar. 4, 2010 7:39 pm
By Roger Ebert
Universal UClick
As a young reader, I found “Alice in Wonderland” creepy and rather distasteful.
Alice's adventures played like a series of encounters with characters whose purpose was to tease, puzzle and torment her. Few children would want to go to Wonderland, and none would want to stay.
The problem may be that I encountered the book too young and was put off by the alarming John Tenniel illustrations.
Tim Burton's new 3-D version of “Alice in Wonderland” answers my childish questions. This has never been a children's story.
“Alice” plays better as an adult hallucination, which is how Burton rather brilliantly interprets it until a pointless third act flies off the rails.
It was a wise idea by Burton and his screenwriter, Linda Woolverton, to devise a reason why Alice (Mia Wasikowska) is now a grown girl in her late teens, revisiting a Wonderland which remains much the same, as fantasy worlds must always do.
Burton is above all a brilliant visual artist and his film is a pleasure to regard. He brings to Carroll's characters an appearance as distinctive and original as Tenniel's classic illustrations. These are not retreads of familiar cartoon images. They're grotesques, as they should be, from the hydrocephalic forehead of the Red Queen (Helena Bonham Carter) to Tweedledee and Tweedledum (Matt Lucas), who seem to have been stepped on.
Wonderland itself is not limited to necessary props, such as a tree limb for the Cheshire Cat and a hookah for the caterpillar, but extends indefinitely as an alarming undergrowth beneath a lowering sky.
When we meet her again, Alice has decidedly mixed feelings about her original trip down the rabbit hole, but begins to recall Wonderland more favorably as she's threatened with an arranged marriage with Hamish Ascot (Leo Bill), a conceited twit. At the moment of truth in the wedding ceremony, she impulsively scampers away to follow another rabbit down another rabbit hole and finds below that she is actually remembered from her previous visit.
Burton shows us Wonderland as a perturbing place where the inhabitants exist for little apparent reason other than to be peculiar and obnoxious. The ringleader is the Mad Hatter, played by Johnny Depp, that rare actor who can treat the most bizarre characters with perfect gravity
This is a Wonderland that holds perils for Alice, played by Wasikowska with beauty and pluck. The Red Queen wishes her ill and the White Queen (Anne Hathaway) wishes her well, perhaps because both are formed according to the rules of Wonderland queens. To be sure, the insecure White Queen doesn't exhaust herself in making Alice welcome.
The Queens, the Mad Hatter, Alice, the Knave of Hearts (Crispin Glover) and presumably Tweedledee and Tweedledum are versions of humans; the others are animated, voiced with great zest by Stephen Fry (Cheshire), Alan Rickman (Absolem the caterpillar), Michael Sheen (White Rabbit), and Timothy Spall, Barbara Windsor and Christopher Lee.
The film is enchanting in its mordant way until, unfortunately, it arrives at its third act. Time after time I complain when a film develops an intriguing story and then dissolves it in routine and boring action. We've seen every conceivable battle sequence, every duel, all carnage, countless showdowns and all-too-long fights to the finish.
Why does “Alice in Wonderland” have to end with an action sequence? Characters not rich enough? Story run out? Or is it that executives, not trusting their artists and timid in the face of real stories, demand an action climax as insurance? Insurance of what? That the story will have a beginning and a middle but nothing so tedious as an ending?
FAST TAKERoger Ebert says: ***
What: “Alice in Wonderland”
Stars: Johnny Depp, Mia Wasikowska, Anne Hathaway, Helena Bonham Carter, Crispin Glover, Matt Lucas, Stephen Fry, Michael Sheen, Alan Rickman, Timothy Spall, Barbara Windsor, Christopher Lee
Where: Galaxy 16 Cine and Wynnsong 12 in Cedar Rapids; Coral Ridge 10 in Coralville; Sycamore 12 in Iowa City
Rated: PG
(Disney photo) Johnny Depp stars as The Mad Hatter in Tim Burton's new version and vision of “Alice in Wonderland.”