Alice in Wonderland or What's a Nice Kid Like You Doing in a Place Like This?
- Fernsehfilm
- 1966
- 1 Std.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,3/10
183
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuAlice needs to do her homework but she ends up in televisionland where she meets characters from Alice in Wonderland and some Hanna-Barbera cartoons.Alice needs to do her homework but she ends up in televisionland where she meets characters from Alice in Wonderland and some Hanna-Barbera cartoons.Alice needs to do her homework but she ends up in televisionland where she meets characters from Alice in Wonderland and some Hanna-Barbera cartoons.
- Für 1 Primetime Emmy nominiert
- 1 Nominierung insgesamt
Sammy Davis Jr.
- The Cheshire Cat
- (Synchronisation)
- (as Sammy Davis)
Zsa Zsa Gabor
- The Queen of Hearts
- (Synchronisation)
Bill Dana
- The White Knight
- (Synchronisation)
Howard Morris
- The White Rabbit
- (Synchronisation)
Janet Waldo
- Alice
- (Synchronisation)
Hedda Hopper
- Hedda, the Mad Hatter
- (Synchronisation)
Alan Reed
- The Talking Caterpillar (Fred Flintstone)
- (Synchronisation)
Mel Blanc
- The Talking Caterpillar
- (Synchronisation)
- …
Harvey Korman
- The Mad Hatter
- (Synchronisation)
Allan Melvin
- Alice's Father
- (Synchronisation)
- …
Daws Butler
- The King of Hearts
- (Synchronisation)
- …
Doris Drew
- Alice
- (Gesang)
- (as Doris Drew Allen)
Don Messick
- The Dormouse
- (Synchronisation)
- …
Empfohlene Bewertungen
"What's a nice girl like you
Doing in a place like this?
What's a nice girl like you
Doing in a place like this?
Oh, I've got a feeling,
You won't like it here.
The potato chips are soggy
And they water the beer.
So what's a nice girl like you
Doing in a place like this?"
Doing in a place like this?
What's a nice girl like you
Doing in a place like this?
Oh, I've got a feeling,
You won't like it here.
The potato chips are soggy
And they water the beer.
So what's a nice girl like you
Doing in a place like this?"
I just wanted to share something.i really enjoyed the Toon tracker ABC Hanna Barbera Alice in Wonderland or What's a Nice kid like you doing in a place like this"originally aired on March 30,1966 sponsored by Rexall drug store and Coca-cola company.The Rexall commercials were included with Alice and the white rabbit.Sadly the coca-cola commercials were omitted.Back on November 19,1967,the Debbie Reynolds special on ABC was cancelled and was replaced by Alice in Wonderland once again.I am actually trying to do a research of when the cartoon special was re-aired on November 19,1967 sponsored by McDonald's corporation.Would anyone have the version of when Alice falls through the TV set and lands on the ground where the announcer sponsored the show by McDonalds.I would love to see that extremely rare 5 minute version.Can anyone help me out?Please let me know.
Despite the widely held opinion that the material is unfilmable, Lewis Carroll's fantasy/nonsense classics Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (1865) and Through the Looking Glass and What Alice Found There (1871) have frequently been dramatized for films and television. While few of these productions have successfully translated Carroll's verbal and intellectual experimentation into cinema, several are of superior quality and hold an under-appreciated place in the history of the fantastic film.
Alice's Adventures in Videoland have been uneven in quality; there has been a tendency toward parody and experimentation, and several fine productions have been broadcast.
Walt Disney's animated feature Alice in Wonderland (1951) has been criticized as unfaithful and disrespectful to the Carroll classic. Even less for the purist is Hanna-Barbera's prime-time television special Alice in Wonderland or What's a Nice Kid Like You Doing in a Place Like This? (1966). This hour-long animated musical is a good-natured burlesque whose colorful visuals, wacky script by comic Bill Dana (aka "Jose Jiminez"), and pleasant, tuneful score by Charles Strouse (of "Annie," "Applause" and "Bye Bye Birdie") result in a happy light entertainment.
Alice, a typical mid-1960's suburban American teenager (in hip-boots and mini-skirt), bumps her head while doing a book report on "Alice in Wonderland". She thereafter chases her dog, Fluff, into her TV set, falling into an astonishingly vulgar Wonderland.
Highlights include a guest appearance by cartoon characters Fred Flintstone and Barney Rubble as a two-headed Caterpillar, doing the vaudeville-style "They'll Never Split Us Apart"; a Mad Tea Party with the Mad Hatter's wife, Hedda Hatter (voiced by Hollywood gossip columnist Hedda Hopper); Bill Dana's diminutive White Knight; Zsa Zsa Gabor's Queen of Hearts ("Off viss zerr heads, dahlink"); and a zany croquet game which degenerates into a frantic amalgam including football, cricket, surfing and Monopoly.
Most memorable is Sammy Davis, Jr.'s performance (as the beatnik Cheshire Cat) of the terrific theme song, "What's a Nice Kid Like You Doing in a Place Like This?", which was a hit novelty single in 1966.
The show is a superior example of the Hanna-Barbera studio's limited animation (not to mention limited imagination) during the heyday of "Yogi Bear", "The Jetsons" and "Jonny Quest", and as such is recommended to all cartoon fans and to those students of Lewis Carroll's "Alice" books who can take a little irreverent spoofing of the classic icon.
Alice's Adventures in Videoland have been uneven in quality; there has been a tendency toward parody and experimentation, and several fine productions have been broadcast.
Walt Disney's animated feature Alice in Wonderland (1951) has been criticized as unfaithful and disrespectful to the Carroll classic. Even less for the purist is Hanna-Barbera's prime-time television special Alice in Wonderland or What's a Nice Kid Like You Doing in a Place Like This? (1966). This hour-long animated musical is a good-natured burlesque whose colorful visuals, wacky script by comic Bill Dana (aka "Jose Jiminez"), and pleasant, tuneful score by Charles Strouse (of "Annie," "Applause" and "Bye Bye Birdie") result in a happy light entertainment.
Alice, a typical mid-1960's suburban American teenager (in hip-boots and mini-skirt), bumps her head while doing a book report on "Alice in Wonderland". She thereafter chases her dog, Fluff, into her TV set, falling into an astonishingly vulgar Wonderland.
Highlights include a guest appearance by cartoon characters Fred Flintstone and Barney Rubble as a two-headed Caterpillar, doing the vaudeville-style "They'll Never Split Us Apart"; a Mad Tea Party with the Mad Hatter's wife, Hedda Hatter (voiced by Hollywood gossip columnist Hedda Hopper); Bill Dana's diminutive White Knight; Zsa Zsa Gabor's Queen of Hearts ("Off viss zerr heads, dahlink"); and a zany croquet game which degenerates into a frantic amalgam including football, cricket, surfing and Monopoly.
Most memorable is Sammy Davis, Jr.'s performance (as the beatnik Cheshire Cat) of the terrific theme song, "What's a Nice Kid Like You Doing in a Place Like This?", which was a hit novelty single in 1966.
The show is a superior example of the Hanna-Barbera studio's limited animation (not to mention limited imagination) during the heyday of "Yogi Bear", "The Jetsons" and "Jonny Quest", and as such is recommended to all cartoon fans and to those students of Lewis Carroll's "Alice" books who can take a little irreverent spoofing of the classic icon.
This reworking of Lewis Carroll's Alice books, an hour-long (with commercial breaks) TV special by the Hanna-Barbera animation studio, known for their limited animation in TV series such as "The Flintstones," is amusingly clever in parts. The Alice here is told she must finish reading the Alice books for school before she's allowed to watch TV. While interacting with her dog, Fluff, however, she becomes concussed--entering a dream state whereby she follows Fluff through the family TV screen, down the hole of the boob tube, to Wonderland where she meets the game-playing rabbit and other creatures based on Carroll's narratives. A sign informs Alice, "Welcome to Wonderland" and, humorously, "This place is all right in my book -Lewis Carroll."
Fred and Barney from "The Flintstones" appear as actors in the role of the Caterpillar, which almost seems like a joke on the frequency of motion-picture stars appearing in odd roles in Alice movies ever since Paramount's star-studded production in 1933, which disguised, among others, Cary Grant as the Mock Turtle, W.C. Fields as Humpty Dumpty and Gary Cooper as the White Knight. If that weren't cheeky enough, the program ends with Alice breaking the fourth wall to wink through the real TV screen at us, the viewers. Unfortunately, the show also replaces most of Carroll's witty nonsense with songs that, with one exception, are tedious. It imitates the 1951 Disney theatrically-released cartoon, too, by concluding with Alice being homesick. On the other hand, I enjoyed the "Humphrey" (as in Bogart) Dumpty, who's a "hardboiled" "bad egg" locked in jail. Best of all, however, is Sammy Davis Jr. lending his voice to a cool (Cheshire) cat and singing the one catchy tune here, "What's a Nice Kid Like You Doing in a Place Like This?"
Fred and Barney from "The Flintstones" appear as actors in the role of the Caterpillar, which almost seems like a joke on the frequency of motion-picture stars appearing in odd roles in Alice movies ever since Paramount's star-studded production in 1933, which disguised, among others, Cary Grant as the Mock Turtle, W.C. Fields as Humpty Dumpty and Gary Cooper as the White Knight. If that weren't cheeky enough, the program ends with Alice breaking the fourth wall to wink through the real TV screen at us, the viewers. Unfortunately, the show also replaces most of Carroll's witty nonsense with songs that, with one exception, are tedious. It imitates the 1951 Disney theatrically-released cartoon, too, by concluding with Alice being homesick. On the other hand, I enjoyed the "Humphrey" (as in Bogart) Dumpty, who's a "hardboiled" "bad egg" locked in jail. Best of all, however, is Sammy Davis Jr. lending his voice to a cool (Cheshire) cat and singing the one catchy tune here, "What's a Nice Kid Like You Doing in a Place Like This?"
For years I had been asking people if they remembered a cartoon of Alice in Wonderland where Alice went through her TV set, fell down a "computerized" shaft on the other side, and met the white rabbit. They all politely told me I was nuts. Then, a couple of days ago, I happened to catch this on CN's Boomerang channel, and did a Snoopydance out of sheer vindication. I really *did* see this when I was a kid!
Admittedly, there's nothing that stands out about this typical Hanna-Barbara fare -- the most interesting bits (to a child of the time) would have been seeing Fred and Barney as the Caterpillar, and Alice having the same voice as Josie (of Pussycat fame). Still, the framework story is different: our Alice is assigned to read the book "Alice in Wonderland," then falls, hits her head, and dreams up this whole adventure through the TV set. In that sense, it's more like "The Wizard of Oz" than AIW.
Today's children would probably be bored by this show, since it hasn't aged particularly well, and runs for an entire hour. Also, the title song has a line about "watering down the beer" that wouldn't be used today. If you're in the mood for nostalgia, though, see if you can catch it on a Boomerang rerun.
Admittedly, there's nothing that stands out about this typical Hanna-Barbara fare -- the most interesting bits (to a child of the time) would have been seeing Fred and Barney as the Caterpillar, and Alice having the same voice as Josie (of Pussycat fame). Still, the framework story is different: our Alice is assigned to read the book "Alice in Wonderland," then falls, hits her head, and dreams up this whole adventure through the TV set. In that sense, it's more like "The Wizard of Oz" than AIW.
Today's children would probably be bored by this show, since it hasn't aged particularly well, and runs for an entire hour. Also, the title song has a line about "watering down the beer" that wouldn't be used today. If you're in the mood for nostalgia, though, see if you can catch it on a Boomerang rerun.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesSammy Davis Jr., who provided the voice of the Cheshire Cat in this animated version of "Alice", would later appear as the Caterpillar in Alice im Wunderland (1985).
- VerbindungenFeatured in Rock Odyssey (1987)
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