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Alice au pays des merveilles

Titre original : Alice in Wonderland
  • Téléfilm
  • 1999
  • PG
  • 2h 8min
NOTE IMDb
6,3/10
9,3 k
MA NOTE
Whoopi Goldberg, Christopher Lloyd, Gene Wilder, Robbie Coltrane, Ben Kingsley, Tina Majorino, Miranda Richardson, Martin Short, Peter Ustinov, and George Wendt in Alice au pays des merveilles (1999)
Home Video Trailer from Artisan
Lire trailer1:07
1 Video
31 photos
AventureComédieFamilleFantaisie

Une aventure aussi extraordinaire quinoubliable ! Le chef d'oeuvre de Lewis Caroll devient réalité grâce à de superbes effets spéciaux et des paysages fantastiques... Avec Whoopi Goldberg (S... Tout lireUne aventure aussi extraordinaire quinoubliable ! Le chef d'oeuvre de Lewis Caroll devient réalité grâce à de superbes effets spéciaux et des paysages fantastiques... Avec Whoopi Goldberg (Sister Act) et Miranda Richardson (Harry Potter et la coupe de feu) !Une aventure aussi extraordinaire quinoubliable ! Le chef d'oeuvre de Lewis Caroll devient réalité grâce à de superbes effets spéciaux et des paysages fantastiques... Avec Whoopi Goldberg (Sister Act) et Miranda Richardson (Harry Potter et la coupe de feu) !

  • Réalisation
    • Nick Willing
  • Scénario
    • Lewis Carroll
    • Peter Barnes
  • Casting principal
    • Tina Majorino
    • Whoopi Goldberg
    • Robbie Coltrane
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,3/10
    9,3 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Nick Willing
    • Scénario
      • Lewis Carroll
      • Peter Barnes
    • Casting principal
      • Tina Majorino
      • Whoopi Goldberg
      • Robbie Coltrane
    • 90avis d'utilisateurs
    • 21avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompensé par 4 Primetime Emmys
      • 12 victoires et 14 nominations au total

    Vidéos1

    Alice In Wonderland
    Trailer 1:07
    Alice In Wonderland

    Photos31

    Voir l'affiche
    Voir l'affiche
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    + 25
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    Rôles principaux49

    Modifier
    Tina Majorino
    Tina Majorino
    • Alice
    Whoopi Goldberg
    Whoopi Goldberg
    • Cheshire Cat
    Robbie Coltrane
    Robbie Coltrane
    • Ned Tweedledum
    Ben Kingsley
    Ben Kingsley
    • Major Caterpillar
    Christopher Lloyd
    Christopher Lloyd
    • White Knight
    Pete Postlethwaite
    Pete Postlethwaite
    • Carpenter
    Miranda Richardson
    Miranda Richardson
    • Queen of Hearts…
    Martin Short
    Martin Short
    • Mad Hatter…
    Peter Ustinov
    Peter Ustinov
    • Walrus
    George Wendt
    George Wendt
    • Fred Tweedledee
    Gene Wilder
    Gene Wilder
    • Mock Turtle
    Ken Dodd
    Ken Dodd
    • Mr. Mouse
    Jason Flemyng
    Jason Flemyng
    • Sir Jack, the Knave of Hearts…
    Sheila Hancock
    Sheila Hancock
    • Cook
    Simon Russell Beale
    Simon Russell Beale
    • King Cedric of Hearts…
    Liz Smith
    Liz Smith
    • Miss Lory
    Elizabeth Spriggs
    Elizabeth Spriggs
    • Duchess
    Donald Sinden
    Donald Sinden
    • the voice of the Gryphon
    • (voix)
    • Réalisation
      • Nick Willing
    • Scénario
      • Lewis Carroll
      • Peter Barnes
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs90

    6,39.2K
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    Avis à la une

    7TheLittleSongbird

    Decent made for TV movie based on a great book

    I am not entirely sure whether this version is the best version of the book, as I grew up on the Disney film. The book is a real delight, it is admittedly oddball, but it is charming and visionary with memorable colourful characters. That is the same for Through the Looking Glass, I do prefer Alice in Wonderland as a book, but Through the Looking Glass does have a nice narrative and the characters still have their appeal.

    Back on target, this TV version is not bad at all. Actually it is decent. The length is rather excessive though making some scenes drag on a bit, and as sweet as it was the subplot about Alice being asked to sing at a party I had mixed feelings about. While it meant that Alice goes on a sort of journey in the film character-wise, it felt somewhat unnecessary. Plus in terms of performances, while I enjoyed the acting on the whole, Whoopi Goldberg as the Cheshire Cat disappointed me. She has the grin and her costume was wonderful, but she should have had more screen time.

    However, there is lots to enjoy here. For a TV movie, the visuals are pretty amazing. The sets are really colourful, the landscapes are vivid, the special effects are fairly impressive and the costumes are visionary. And I found the music surprisingly memorable, quite sweet really. I know people have complained of the screenplay being poor, personally I didn't find that. I enjoyed spotting the quotes lifted from the books and the actors seemed to having fun with it. Some of the added lines didn't quite work as well, but they were entertaining. Likewise with the merging of the two books, I for one didn't find that a problem. The director also does a good job making Wonderland as magical, as odd and as dreamlike as it should be, and some scenes were very well directed, especially the Mock Turtle sequence, the Caccus race, the Hatter's tea party, the Walrus and the Carpenter and of course the courtroom scene.

    The acting is also very enjoyable. Like Goldberg, Christopher Lloyd as the White Knight could've done with more screen time, but he does a very good job with what he has. Ben Kingsley is entertaining as Major Caterpillar, even if he did have some of the film's weakest dialogue, he delivers very well. Shiela Hancock, while she has been better, was fun as the Cook, a lot of shouting but hey she was fun. Tina Majorino I had no problem with as Alice, I sometimes find Alice in film adaptations bland but Majorino isn't bland, she is appealing and likable. Peter Ustinov is a perfect Walrus, likewise with Pete Postlethwaite as the Carpenter. Gene Wilder does fine also as the melancholy mock turtle, he started off a tad uncomfortable, no wonder with his costume as they are horrible to wear, but once he gets into the role he starts enjoying himself more. My favourite performances though were Miranda Richardson as a suitably shrill Queen of Hearts, Simon Russell Beale in a amusing turn as the King of Hearts and Martin Short as the somewhat eccentric Mad Hatter. Jason Flemying was also a riot as the Knave of Hearts as were Robbie Coltrane and George Wendt as Tweedledee and Tweedledum.

    Overall, flawed but perfectly decent made for TV adaptation. 7/10 Bethany Cox
    vox-sane

    The Best of Times, the Worst of Times

    Alice's adventures in Wonderland have always been easy to visualize, thanks to Tenniel's classic illustrations; but they have been difficult to realize. With computer technology at the state it's at at the turn of the twenty-first century, for the first time Tenniel can come to life in a way that doesn't look like animation.

    This is the best looking "Alice" ever. The backgrounds are consistently excellent. The passage from one episode to the other is suitably dreamlike. The computer-animated characters are superb.

    The cast is variable. Tina Majorina was a revelation as Alice. I had to check imdb to make sure she wasn't just someone like Reese Witherspoon, an older actress able to look ten years younger. Her performance was exquisite, even better than Fiona Fullerton's 1972 Alice.

    Martin Short was good as the Mad Hatter (everyone has a favorite Mad Hatter from days past, and mine was Robert Helpmann from 1972, who also played the child-catcher in "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang"). All the royalty were good. Problems in the cast were Gene Wilder; it might've been his most understated performance since his droll turn as Willie Wonka, but good as he was, he was nevertheless out of place and looked ridiculous and uncomfortable in his costume. Too, though Whoopi Goldberg wasn't bad as the Cheshire cat, the point of her performance was to show Whoopi Goldberg as the Cheshire cat rather than the cat itself.

    The "Looking Glass" intrusions weren't out of place. A miniseries doing "Wonderland" one night and "Looking Glass" the next might've been nice, but the best elements were taken from "LG" and the results don't look patched in. The cameos, again, are variable. Robbie Coltrane is an actor too little used and it's good to see him anywhere; and though I might've preferred to see him in a dual role, he worked well with George Wendt as Tweedledum and Tweedledee. Christopher Lloyd was perfectly cast as the White Knight, but the White Knight got short shrift and was hardly worth sticking in at all, other than -- once more -- to say, "Look, we got Christopher Lloyd in a thankless role!". "The Walrus and the Carpenter" was not at all distracting -- and with Peters Ustinov and Postlethwait one would almost wish for a whole movie just about them.

    The problems, however, do keep it from being the authoritative "Alice". For one thing, someone thought it would be clever to add lines. In most filmed novels this isn't so bad, since the dialogue in books serves a different purpose than the dialogue in movies. But Carroll's dialogue is so precise he might've been writing a play; and it's so well known that any extraneous line stands out like re-writings in "Hamlet". One gets the idea that the writers thought they were as clever as Carroll, and proved that the most notable thing about them was their collective ego.

    This led to particular difficulties with the caterpillar. Ben Kingsley was a good choice for the role and -- like everyone else in the movie -- was very good. But his part seemed altered enough to make one suspicious of the writers' intentions. The framing sequence wasn't bad (again, perhaps a whole movie with that cast in non-Wonderland parts would be wonderful), not as bad as Carroll purists would say, but was unnecessarily preachy, as if the story had to have a moral at the end.

    A number of roles in the "Alice" books should, when performed, have human performers: The Mad Hatter, the King and Queen and Jack of Hearts, the Duchess, Tweeledum and --dee, the White Knight, et. al. Some, since we have the technology, should be done by computer graphics, with famous voices, if need be. Star-studded "Alice" vehicles have appeared in the past: the top-heavy 1985 Natalie Gregory "Alice", for instance, where a famous actor's face had to be seen in every role; and the notable 1972 Fiona Fullerton bomb, where many of Britain's finest actors (including Peter Sellers and Ralph Richardson) made complete fools of themselves.

    Overall, this is the best Alice ever made (including Disney's). It has dreadful moments where famous actors are shoehorned into roles just to say they're there. It has peculiar elements from "Looking Glass" mixed in at odd angles, but such as they are they aren't terrible. And it has a beautifully talented Alice. For those who aren't dogmatic about their Carroll, this is the one to see if you're looking for an "Alice" to pass an afternoon. And children, who don't know any better than we opinionated adults, will be delighted.
    7mattbruns15

    As much as I like Disney this version is actually the best one

    I like this version the best out of all versions of Alice in Wonderland. Tina Majorino is rock start as Alice. This version has more action and has better action than both of the Disney versions. This is the version I recommend. If you like the Alice in Wonderland book and want to watch an Alice in Wonderland movie this is going to be your best choice. I think it's more entertaining than the Disney versions. It's longer and has enough time to have good acting and good action. I give this one a higher rating.
    8aimless-46

    Some Issues but Still the Best Alice Movie

    If you are reading this you are probably trying to decide if this 'Alice' adaptation is worth watching or you may have already watched it and are wondering about the reaction of other viewers.

    It is the most faithful (to the book) adaptation so far (faint praise as most efforts might as well have been original screenplays) and the sets, special effects, make-up and Muppets are light-years better than what others have tried.

    But all is not right with this version of 'Wonderland' so Carroll fans should not get their hopes up too high. The adaptation involves some subtraction and a lot of addition (or as the Mock Turtle would say some 'Ambition and Distraction'). Unfortunately what was added does not begin to compensate for what was left out, it only pads the running length.

    They added three scenes from 'Through the Looking Glass'. Stuck between the 'Lobster Quadrille' and the 'Who Stole the Tarts' chapters are: 'Tweedledum and Tweedledee', 'The Walrus and The Carpenter', and 'It's My Own Invention' with the White Knight. So the original story takes a not very entertaining detour-although the Walrus-Carpenter bits are fun and it is interesting to see a pre-Hagrid Robbie Coltrane as Tweedledum. Fortunately they group the three scenes together and it is not as disruptive as placing them separately at different points in the story.

    Historically, the model for the characters are the illustrations that Carroll commissioned John Tenniel to carve on wood blocks. Although Carroll based the personality of his title character on ten-year-old brunette Alice Liddell, Tenniel (with Carroll's concurrence) used another model and gave the illustrated Alice her features and her long blonde hair. Although the movie generally deferred to Tenniel's illustrations, they made a critical error in casting Tina Majorino as Alice. She was 13-14 during the filming and looks ludicrous in the role. She was also quite homely at that age and you are thankful that the director used mostly wide shots so you don't have her face filling the screen. Thankfully her acting is so flat that she does not call much attention to herself. But the overall effect would have been so much better if they had used a younger actress (could they have made it three years earlier and used a 10-11 year-old Kiera Knightley).

    The movie works in spite of a poor Alice, in large part because of the other major deviation from the Tenniel look. That would be casting Miranda Richardson as the Queen of Hearts. Instead of a fat and ugly queen we get a delicately beautiful one, and a hauntingly over-the-top performance. But it works because the performance is consistent with Carroll's idea of the queen as: 'a sort of embodiment of ungovernable passion-a blind and aimless Fury'.

    And in her surreal make-up you can't take your eyes off Richardson (you literally focus on her face and see nothing else that is in the frame). Her performance was so inspired that she has been playing fairy tale queens ever since.

    All the Muppet characters are excellent but for some reason they made Bill the Lizard a man instead of a muppet lizard. Did the producer owe someone a favor? Bill's scene at the Rabbits's House is the third best in the movie; only the croquet match and the trial are better.

    And they messed with Carroll's dialogue for no useful purpose or discernible logic. For example they kept all the 'Mock Turtle's' puns, which are hard to follow even in print, while deleting some of the best lines from Alice's scene with the 'Cheshire Cat'; and the tea-party dialogue (and editing) is a shambles. You can't always tell when an original line was omitted but you can tell when something was added by the hack they hired to do the adaptation-all are stupid and some so modern that they are like hearing an off-key note on a flute.

    Carroll's dialogue and Alice's thoughts are really the essence of the story.

    Someday a director will shoot this thing with mega-reaction shots of Alice (played by a pleasing looking 'young' actress) and with voiceovers of her thoughts-then we will have something that really communicates Alice's curiosity, courage, kindness, intelligence, dignity, and sense of justice. Most important is to communicate her simple wonder (the only wonder about Majorino is how she got the role). The reader was meant to identify with these qualities but only Disney's Alice effectively exhibited them. It's sad when it is easier to identify with the book and with a cartoon Alice than with any of the actresses who have played the role.

    Although some part of each chapter is included (Down the Rabbit-Hole, The Pool of Tears, The Caucus-Race, Little Bill, Advice from a Caterpillar, Pig and Pepper, A Mad Tea-Party, The Queen's Croquet-Ground, The Mock Turtle's Story, The Lobster Quadrille, Who Stole the Tarts, and Alice's Evidence), the bookend pieces of the story where Alice is not dreaming are missing. Instead there is a 'Wizard of Oz' kind of scene with the actors out of costume, playing guests at a garden party. This is done entirely to tie in with the writer's annoying artless addition of a preachy "the show must go on" theme which works to deflate each scene in which it is inserted.

    This is the only unforgivable change to the story. Wonderland was not a process of self-discovery or personal development, it was a gift to the real Alice (and to future children) and should always end with the thoughts of Alice's older sister after hearing the details of the dream: 'Lastly, she pictured to herself how this same little sister of hers would, in the after-time, be herself a grown woman, and how she would keep, through all the years, the simple and loving heart of her childhood; and how she would gather about her other little children, and make their eyes bright and eager with many a strange tale, perhaps even with the dream of Wonderland of long ago; and how she would feel with all their simple sorrows, and find a pleasure in all their simple joys, remembering her own child-life, and the happy summer days'. This is Carroll telling us why he made up the story.

    Bottom line it is the best of the Alice films, a little too long but still worth watching-especially for the Miranda Richardson scenes.
    claire51-2

    GREAT FILM

    I have seen the film it was shown over the easter weekend here and it's great i have seen many of the different versions when I was a child but this one is great the puppets and special effects in just two hours they managed to get two books in and it wasn't that much different to the version made in the 1970's except that one was musical,but it's just the same except for the new bits added on to the story.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Many of the scenes in this movie were directly copied from the illustrations of Sir John Tenniel, the original "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland" artist.
    • Gaffes
      When the Queen of Hearts decides to decapitate the cards who were painting the roses red, Alice hides them in her skirt to save them. However, they are never seen getting out, and no further reference is made to them in the film.
    • Citations

      Cheshire Cat: How do you like the game?

      Alice: They don't play very fair.

      Cheshire Cat: But nobody does if they think they can get away with it. That's a lesson you'll have to learn.

    • Versions alternatives
      In subsequent reruns, this film has been trimmed to 100 minutes so that it can be shown in two hours instead of three.
    • Connexions
      Edited into 2 Everything 2 Terrible 2: Tokyo Drift (2010)
    • Bandes originales
      Cherry Ripe
      Music by Charles Edward Horn

      Lyrics by Robert Herrick

      Performed by Tina Majorino

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    FAQ1

    • Chapter Headings, v1.00:

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 24 décembre 1999 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Royaume-Uni
      • Allemagne
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Alice in Wonderland
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Burnham Beeches, Buckinghamshire, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni
    • Sociétés de production
      • Babelsberg International Film Produktion
      • Hallmark Entertainment
      • NBC Studios
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 21 000 000 $US (estimé)
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 2h 8min(128 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Dolby Digital
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.33 : 1

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