minor muppetz
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jun 19, 2005
- Messages
- 16,073
- Reaction score
- 2,660
With the recent Alice in Wonderland movie out, I was wonderign what everybody's favorite versions of the Alice in Wonderland stories are.
Of course I figure many of us will mention the Brooke Shields episode of The Muppet Show (put that on my list), and maybe also Dreamchild, the Jim Henson Company's two-part movie based on the story, and Abby in Wonderland (I haven't seen any of those). But what else?
Though honestly, I haven't seen too many versions of the story, and the ones I have seen I haven't seen often. The only two I remember seeing are ironically the two that recently got reviewed at cinemassacre.com: The Disney version from 1951 and the 1985 two-part made-for-TV version.
I only remember watching the Disney version once, and I can't remember if I saw the whole thing. I have seen quite a few clips, in specials and Disney Sing-Along-Songs videos. My favorite character from that version is probably The Chesire Cat. I feel tempted to see it again, maybe even buying the DVD, but there are quite a few things I am more enthustiastic about getting (I know, I could just check it out from the library for free). WHile watchign some clips online I noticed that the walrus in the movie looks and dresses a lot like Tuskernini from Darkwing Duck.
The 1985 version, I only saw once, and only saw the first part. Last summer I went on wikipedia trying to figure out when it was made and relive details... I recall that it was a bit creepy, in addiiton to being filled with characters in bad costumes. Scenes I reemmber best are the first growing and shrinking scene, the scene where Alice grew while inside the White Rabbits house, the scene where the baby turned into a pig (talk about creepy! especially since the baby turned into a live pig), the scenes with the king and queen of hearts, and especially the very scary ending, with the Jabborwock showing up in Alice's house while, whiel her family is on the other side of the mirror and can't see or hear her.
That scene was scary for a number of reasons (and the Angry Video Game Nerd did a good job of explaining why). The rest of it was a bunch of goofy stuff with actors wearign badly-made costumes... and yet the Jabborwock was very realistic. I guess the scarriest things are most effective when they are least expected. When I recently saw the clip again it wasn't as scary as I remember, but it is creepy on first viewing. At the tiem I saw it I didn't realise it was a two-part thing... Maybe I wasn't old enough to be good at reading yet, or perhaps I didn't udnerstand the concept of "To be continued...", or maybe I was too scared to notice the "to be continued" credit.
After I saw that, I saw a special called The Best of Disney, and at one point peopel were listing things from movies thats cared them... One perosn said "the monster from Alice in Wonderland". But the jabborwock wasn't in the Disney version, though the Jabborwocky poem was. And I don't recall any monsters being scene... I wonder if that person was mixing up adaptations or what.
Of course I figure many of us will mention the Brooke Shields episode of The Muppet Show (put that on my list), and maybe also Dreamchild, the Jim Henson Company's two-part movie based on the story, and Abby in Wonderland (I haven't seen any of those). But what else?
Though honestly, I haven't seen too many versions of the story, and the ones I have seen I haven't seen often. The only two I remember seeing are ironically the two that recently got reviewed at cinemassacre.com: The Disney version from 1951 and the 1985 two-part made-for-TV version.
I only remember watching the Disney version once, and I can't remember if I saw the whole thing. I have seen quite a few clips, in specials and Disney Sing-Along-Songs videos. My favorite character from that version is probably The Chesire Cat. I feel tempted to see it again, maybe even buying the DVD, but there are quite a few things I am more enthustiastic about getting (I know, I could just check it out from the library for free). WHile watchign some clips online I noticed that the walrus in the movie looks and dresses a lot like Tuskernini from Darkwing Duck.
The 1985 version, I only saw once, and only saw the first part. Last summer I went on wikipedia trying to figure out when it was made and relive details... I recall that it was a bit creepy, in addiiton to being filled with characters in bad costumes. Scenes I reemmber best are the first growing and shrinking scene, the scene where Alice grew while inside the White Rabbits house, the scene where the baby turned into a pig (talk about creepy! especially since the baby turned into a live pig), the scenes with the king and queen of hearts, and especially the very scary ending, with the Jabborwock showing up in Alice's house while, whiel her family is on the other side of the mirror and can't see or hear her.
That scene was scary for a number of reasons (and the Angry Video Game Nerd did a good job of explaining why). The rest of it was a bunch of goofy stuff with actors wearign badly-made costumes... and yet the Jabborwock was very realistic. I guess the scarriest things are most effective when they are least expected. When I recently saw the clip again it wasn't as scary as I remember, but it is creepy on first viewing. At the tiem I saw it I didn't realise it was a two-part thing... Maybe I wasn't old enough to be good at reading yet, or perhaps I didn't udnerstand the concept of "To be continued...", or maybe I was too scared to notice the "to be continued" credit.
After I saw that, I saw a special called The Best of Disney, and at one point peopel were listing things from movies thats cared them... One perosn said "the monster from Alice in Wonderland". But the jabborwock wasn't in the Disney version, though the Jabborwocky poem was. And I don't recall any monsters being scene... I wonder if that person was mixing up adaptations or what.