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Alice in Wonderland

  • TV Movie
  • 1966
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 12m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
1.1K
YOUR RATING
Anne-Marie Mallik in Alice in Wonderland (1966)
Alice In Wonderland: Drink Me
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Watch Alice In Wonderland: Drink Me
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ComedyDramaFamilyFantasy

A girl named Alice falls down a rabbit-hole and wanders into the strange Wonderland.A girl named Alice falls down a rabbit-hole and wanders into the strange Wonderland.A girl named Alice falls down a rabbit-hole and wanders into the strange Wonderland.

  • Director
    • Jonathan Miller
  • Writers
    • Lewis Carroll
    • Jonathan Miller
  • Stars
    • Anne-Marie Mallik
    • Freda Dowie
    • Jo Maxwell Muller
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    1.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jonathan Miller
    • Writers
      • Lewis Carroll
      • Jonathan Miller
    • Stars
      • Anne-Marie Mallik
      • Freda Dowie
      • Jo Maxwell Muller
    • 42User reviews
    • 20Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos2

    Alice In Wonderland: Drink Me
    Clip 2:05
    Alice In Wonderland: Drink Me
    Alice In Wonderland (BBC) Ravi Behind The Scenes
    Clip 2:37
    Alice In Wonderland (BBC) Ravi Behind The Scenes
    Alice In Wonderland (BBC) Ravi Behind The Scenes
    Clip 2:37
    Alice In Wonderland (BBC) Ravi Behind The Scenes

    Photos35

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    Top cast28

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    Anne-Marie Mallik
    Anne-Marie Mallik
    • Alice
    Freda Dowie
    Freda Dowie
    • Nurse
    Jo Maxwell Muller
    • Alice's Sister
    • (as Jo Maxwell-Muller)
    Wilfrid Brambell
    Wilfrid Brambell
    • White Rabbit
    Alan Bennett
    Alan Bennett
    • Mouse
    Finlay Currie
    Finlay Currie
    • Dodo
    Geoffrey Dunn
    • Lory
    Mark Allington
    • Duck
    Nicholas Evans
    • Eaglet
    Julian Jebb
    • Young Crab
    Michael Redgrave
    Michael Redgrave
    • Caterpillar
    • (as Sir Michael Redgrave)
    John Bird
    John Bird
    • Frog Footman
    Anthony Trent
    • Fish Footman
    • (as Tony Trent)
    • …
    Leo McKern
    Leo McKern
    • Duchess
    Avril Elgar
    • Peppercook
    Peter Cook
    Peter Cook
    • Mad Hatter
    Michael Gough
    Michael Gough
    • March Hare
    Wilfrid Lawson
    Wilfrid Lawson
    • Dormouse
    • (as Wilfred Lawson)
    • Director
      • Jonathan Miller
    • Writers
      • Lewis Carroll
      • Jonathan Miller
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews42

    6.71.1K
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    Featured reviews

    krzykra

    Curiouser and Wonderfully Curiouser!

    Alice in Wonderland is one of the most astounding works of literature. It has therefore inspired many entertainers to do many different variations of Wonderland and its sequel, Through the Looking Glass.

    Jonathan Miller's BBC version is extremely different from most adaptations of Alice, especially the Disney version (which is not really the most accurate portrayal of Lewis Carroll's logically illogical world). Miller evokes a rather haunting and surrealistic Victorian dreamworld filled with stuffy grown-ups numbly adhering to propriety and social etiquette. Alice is lost in this landscape, trying to find herself and trying to understand the process of growing up.

    This variation is clearly more suitable for adults, since the mood is darker and none of the characters have any makeup at all. But the cast is excellent, with appearances by such legends as Sir Michael Redgrave, Sir John Gielgud, and Peter Sellers. Anne-Marie Mallik portrays a more sullen Alice but is perfect for this version of Wonderland.

    A unique and artistic production- a must for Alice fans who like to see Lewis Carroll in all forms!
    genekim

    Alternative 'Alice'

    Beautifully filmed in a satiny black & white reminiscent of old photographs, this 1966 BBC adaptation of "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland" may displease purists for its less than conventional, as well as decidedly minimalist, approach. It's not a traditional rendering of Lewis Carroll, and doesn't pretend to be; there are no phantasmagoric sets or actors encased in over-sized costumes or big musical numbers or fancy photographic effects. The Alice of this production is a taciturn, stony-faced girl who is neither frightened nor fascinated by her experiences in Wonderland, which is mostly made up of the interiors and exteriors of old English mansions and houses. But in its unorthodox way, it brings Carroll's text to life in a way I don't recall experiencing in other adaptations of the Alice books.

    It's apparent that in creating this alternative Alice, producer-director Jonathan Miller expects you to be already familiar with its source; he's evidently assuming you will recognize what he's chosen to leave in as well as leave out, as well as his re-imagined settings. Only a few of the actors are made to look anything like the characters in the Tenniel drawings, such as Leo McKern as the Duchess or Peter Cook as the Mad Hatter; you're basically on your own when it comes to spotting the White Rabbit or Caterpillar or Frog Footman, all of whom are dressed "normally" in period costumes. (Presenting the Carrollian characters as real people isn't a new idea; I recall a TV adaptation of Alice starring Kate Burton in which Humpty Dumpty was portrayed by an elderly man in a rocking chair.)

    By tossing out entire scenes, characters and exchanges that were in the book, Miller gives us a sparer, edgier retelling of the Wonderland story, but doesn't stray too far from the original. Why such a sullen, passive Alice? My guess is, this is supposed to be an Alice who fully realizes that she's in a dream and treats her surroundings accordingly.

    And so this Alice (played by a charming Anne-Marie Mallik) sits looking bored and disinterested during the Mad Tea Party. Other productions customarily play this scene with all kinds of manic energy, but in this film, the tea party is deliberately drawn out with long, open rhythms reminiscent of an Antonioni or Resnais film. (Alice's Adventures in Marienbad, anyone?) And seemingly for the first time, while I was listening to the Mad Hatter, the March Hare and the Dormouse prattle away, their nonsense started to make wonderful sense. It's easy enough for an actor to recite lines like, "What day of the month is it?," but here, the performers sound like they really mean what they say (and say what they mean).

    That same emphasis on dialogue is apparent in the beach scene with the Mock Turtle, played by Sir John Gielgud, and the Gryphon, played by Malcolm Muggeridge. The Mock Turtle's words never sounded so delightful to me before, and thank goodness Gielgud didn't have to deliver them through some huge Mock Turtle mask. This scene also provides one of the movie's most striking images, of the Mock Turtle, the Gryphon and Alice walking barefoot along the shore, with Gielgud softly singing the "Lobster Quadrille" a cappella.

    For those seeking a more conventional book-to-film translation of "Alice," I would suggest the 1972 British movie musical starring Fiona Fullerton, complete with elaborate sets and costumes and velvety color photography and songs. Although it was slammed by the relatively few reviewers who saw it, I thought it nicely conveyed a dreamlike quality of its own, especially in its transitions - I found it much more enjoyable than the 1933 Paramount movie or the 1951 Disney animated feature.

    But if you think you've had your fill of Alice movies and TV shows, then I urge you to try this one - I think it makes Lewis Carroll sound fresh all over again. (There's very interesting musical accompaniment by Ravi Shankar.) And for a wonderfully acted movie about the real- life Alice Liddell Hargreaves and Lewis Carroll, I urge you to see "Dreamchild" - but that's another review.
    7nowego

    A Different Play on the Alice in Wonderland Story

    A fascinatingly, surreal and psychedelic version of the Alice in Wonderland story. Shot in a Gothic black and white style, the cinematography is very well done and still holds up 50 years later.

    The cast is very very good, particularly Anne-Marie Malik in her one and only role of Alice. She's petulant and outspoken, but also very reserved and examining. She's adorable, and her delivery of lines add to the dreamlike quality of the movie. She makes the whole movie worth watching.

    Filmed as a TV play it's surprisingly well made, thank the BBC for that, they do some exceptional work.

    Jonathan Miller's Alice in Wonderland is worth viewing if you can find it.
    8Spondonman

    Lazing on a sunny afternoon in the summertime in 1862/1966

    First time I saw this was on December 28th 1966 which was its first broadcast on BBC1, the next time was exactly 42 years later on a pristine BFI DVD. I was worried my childhood memories might be shattered by discovering it was simply a trippy '60's cop-out, but I needn't have been. Sure, it's a product of its time same as everything is, but it was and remains a unique filming of the classic tale by Lewis Carroll and imho the best version made so far.

    Young Alice is transported by dream one sunny summer day to Wonderland where many adventures befall her. Whether Carroll was attracted or not to little girls ("I like all children, except boys") and whether that explains why his diaries had some ripped out pages at key moments is something we'll never know for sure now - I think he was merely a repressed idealist – but he created a timeless story for children of all ages. His 90 page painstakingly hand written original edition which he gave to Alice in 1864 as "a Christmas gift to a dear child in memory of a summer day" is currently online from the British Museum and well worth a read.

    Jonathan Miller's erudite sharp focus black and white production assumed that it was really meant for satirical adults, however it still managed to impress this particular 7 year old and especially his 5 year old wife to be and their counterparts 42 years later. Favourite bits: Michael Redgrave as the Caterpillar and John Geilgud as the Mock Turtle; Alice's walk with Duchess Leo McKern down the path through the woods followed by the camera crew weaving in and out of the trees and forward and backward; almost every scene has something of note though. Maybe I could have done with a bit more of Ravi Shankar's exceptional tunes but no worries. It's a pity John Bird's and Peter Sellers' post Goon Show improvisations were left in - it's no good Miller saying it was in the spirit of Carroll when their obvious inspiration was Spike Milligan, just one eg from 1954's Dreaded Batter Pudding Hurler Of Bexhill On Sea: "Suddenly! Nothing happened! But it happened suddenly mark you!" And I still wonder how much the production influenced the Beatles with their image for 1967? Apparently the finished film was considered too long by the BBC and 30 minutes were chopped off. Off with their heads - all those potential Pinteresque moments lost!

    This is something to treasure: an arty BBC film that was genuinely arty, entertaining and still eminently watchable generations later. It almost managed to capture the illusive illusionary qualities of dreams and those seemingly beautifully languid sunny days of the '60's – both 19th and 20th century.
    vox-sane

    Bizarre

    Working with a shoestring budget director Jonathan Miller was able to persuade an impressive cast (Peter Sellers, Sir Michael Redgrave, Sir John Gielgud, Peter Cook, Alan Bennett, Michael Gough, Wilfred Brambell, Wilfred Lawson, Leo McKern, Malcolm Muggeridge, Finlay Currie) to make cameo appearances in his BBC production of "Alice in Wonderland". The results are mixed, with some bright spots (especially the few improvisations Miller left in).

    Miller dresses his cast like Victorians, rather than making them look like animals (after all, he says in his commentary, the typical way of doing Alice is to take big stars and then cover them up with animal heads so you can't see who they are).

    He takes the book literally. For instance, the Hatter and the March Hare are mad in a real way rather than the typically overblown cartoonish way. Peter Cook's Hatter is soft-spoken, laughing and agreeable, his lines always sounding like non sequiturs; while Michael Gough's March Hare is defensive, suspicious, and genuinely troubling.

    The best scene, which probably best captures what Miller was working for, was Muggeridge's Gryphon and Gielgud's Mock Turtle. The fey White Rabbit of Wilfred Brambell ("A Hard Day's Night") is a delight. Peter Sellers, appearing all too briefly, has an amusing bit of business (Miller in his commentary doesn't like it but it suits the scene admirably and in this case Sellers the slapstick authority knew what he was doing better than the director -- the scene cries out for what he does). Michael Redgrave is phenomenal in his all-too-brief turn as the caterpillar, but the scene is damaged by truncating the poem "You are Old, Father William" to the point that it makes no sense on any level. Peter Cook's Hatter is engaging at first but his one-note madness is quickly tiresome. More interesting at the tea party is Wilfred Lawson's Door Mouse (watch his hands -- he knows his business); and Michael Gough ("Batman"), who has an aura of danger.

    The pros in the cast all do their best, and no fault can be found with the big-name stars who are doing good work for peanuts.

    Miller's concept of Alice is the primary reason the film ultimately doesn't work. The girl he chose as Alice has a very interesting face, and is wonderfully untraditional. Sometimes her delivery (heard half in voice-over and half in dialog) shows promise. But Miller, probably to accentuate the dreamlike fixation, has her walk through the movie like a somnambulist, not becoming involved. The little emoting he does allow is almost always to show Alice's rudeness. For the most part her facial expression is fixed and unengaged, and this is Miller's fault.

    The cutting from scene to scene is abrupt. Part of this is probably Miller's continued obsession with the working of dreams, and partly because a lot of transitional material was cut out at the request of the bigwigs to make the show move faster. And because Miller is quite literal with Carroll, he makes the mad tea party actually have the monotonous languor of people trapped in a long afternoon tea that will never stop -- and it becomes tedious.

    Oddly, on the DVD, far better than the movie is the director's audio track. Jonathan Miller gives a full 80 minute's description of what he tried to do (and what price limitations left him able to do); and when the movie is seen in that light, it makes a lot more sense. Sometimes Miller explains why things were done, sometimes he desperately tries to justify what was done. In all cases, his commentary is interesting and he never falls into the trap of describing what's going on, but always why it's going on.

    The movie looks good, and individual turns by actors are superb, but the whole is less than the sum of its parts.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Most of this movie was shot with a 9mm camera lens.
    • Goofs
      In the scenes with the Mock Turtle, his legs are crossed in all the long shots, but in close-up shots, his legs are in a completely different position; without there being enough time to have changed them from one shot and another.
    • Crazy credits
      The end credits use Lewis Carroll's original ink drawings from his handwritten manuscript (called 'Alice's Adventures Under Ground') now in the British Library.
    • Connections
      Featured in The Worlds of Fantasy: The Child Within (2008)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 28, 1966 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Official site
      • BBC Programme Site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Alice Harikalar Diyarında
    • Filming locations
      • Rousham House and Gardens, Rousham, Bicester, Oxfordshire, England, UK(External Scenes)
    • Production company
      • British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 12m(72 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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