This movie is actually what got me interested in reading Alice in Wonderland. My sister had read it sometime ago, and after watching this film, I was truly intrigued. First off, the movie is a combination of both 'Alice's Adventures In Wonderland' and 'Through the Looking Glass and What Alice Found There'. That's why you see a change in the movie from playing cards to a chess board. They kept a lot of the things the same from what I saw in the movie and from what I've read so far. It's really cool to see what the movie was like live action and then to imagine it. You could almost feel like you're in Wonderland yourself. I truly love it, and plan on buying it as soon as possible. You should too if you did not see it. It's a fantastic movie.
Monday, May 31, 2010
Alice in Wonderland: Japan Style
Let me just say this. This picture is beautiful. The story being based in England, it's really refreshing to see that everybody has their own vision of Alice. In America, Alice is a blonde haired, blue eyes little girl. That's the picture of pure innocence to us, but maybe Japan has a different idea. Maybe their idea of young and inncocent short black hair. The fact that the book has such an impact on our world's children is truly amazing. How a book made 145 years ago is still quite popular today is quite amazing.
Brown Univeristy's take on Alice in Wonderland
I truly agree with how the author puts their thoughts on what certain things mean in Wonderland. Like, how she asks towards the bottom, "How would the books original title, 'Alice's Adventures Underground,' affect your interpretation of Wonderland?" When I think underground, I tend to think of coal mines and really dirty places. It doesn't bring the wonder and excitement as Wonderland does. I think that's why it's called Wonderland, because it is full of wonder. To read the article, here's the link to it.
http://www.victorianweb.org/authors/carroll/decola8.htm
http://www.victorianweb.org/authors/carroll/decola8.htm
If you have never read the book...
I can tell you for sure it's a good read. There are parts where it really makes you wonder why it's consider a child's book, since there is some drug use in it, but all in all it's a great read. Don't have a library near you? Well, there's an online book that you can read it on. I would really suggest reading it, because you can form an opinion on whether or not the movies do a good job on following the story.
Here's the link.
http://bygosh.com/AIW/C01/AIWC01.htm
It even has illustrations!
Here's the link.
http://bygosh.com/AIW/C01/AIWC01.htm
It even has illustrations!
I was reading this review by James Schellenburg and completely felt the same way about his feelings for the story of Alice. It's always interesting to read and imagine a crazy world that Alice had walked through. When you're a child, all the unimaginable happens and it makes you want to be a part of the book. As an adult, it gives you that feeling of being a kid again.
Here's the link to his review.
www.challengingdestiny.com/reviews/alice.htm
Here's the link to his review.
www.challengingdestiny.com/reviews/alice.htm
Friday, May 28, 2010
The Hatter
In the book, there is a tea party going on with a hatter, a mouse, and a rabbit who have all seem to have gone mad. The hatter has always been my favorite, asking Alice "How is a raven like a writing desk?". I was first introduced to the Hatter as the Mad Hatter in Disney's 'Alice in Wonderland'. I thought he was very interesting and funny because he was just all over the place. I also had recently watched Tim Burton's rendition of 'Alice in Wonderland' and quite frankly, I loved it. Tim Burton's version had both stories, 'Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass and What Alice Found There'. The Mad Hatter was portrayed by Johnny Depp and he did a tremendous job playing him.
A great website to check out information on The Hatter, other characters and more fun is Lenny's Alice in Wonderland. They have the story origins, quotes and so much more.
http://www.alice-in-wonderland.net/
A great website to check out information on The Hatter, other characters and more fun is Lenny's Alice in Wonderland. They have the story origins, quotes and so much more.
http://www.alice-in-wonderland.net/
Monday, May 24, 2010
Chapter 3: A Caucus Race and A Long Tale
In this particular chapter, there was something that struck me as interesting, applying to now and probably forever when it comes to human nature.
'"The race is over!" and they all crowded 'round it, panting and asking, "But who has won?"'
To me, the adult life is like a race. A race to be ahead of everybody else, to be successful. Your whole life you are supposed to work toward whatever you want, whether it to be rich or live comfortably. Everybody else is competition to your goal, making you strive that harder. Once your life is nearing an end, that race is beginning to end, no more goals to strive for. So when you look back on your life, and everybody else who's in the same boat you are, it can be wondered who won out of that group? Who succeeded the most? The question could never be really answered, because everybody has a different po,int of view. I think the author was trying to portray it as fun to children, and make adults think about the big race they run everyday. The book isn't just a children's book, but should be a book to make you think about what exactly is being said.
To me, the adult life is like a race. A race to be ahead of everybody else, to be successful. Your whole life you are supposed to work toward whatever you want, whether it to be rich or live comfortably. Everybody else is competition to your goal, making you strive that harder. Once your life is nearing an end, that race is beginning to end, no more goals to strive for. So when you look back on your life, and everybody else who's in the same boat you are, it can be wondered who won out of that group? Who succeeded the most? The question could never be really answered, because everybody has a different po,int of view. I think the author was trying to portray it as fun to children, and make adults think about the big race they run everyday. The book isn't just a children's book, but should be a book to make you think about what exactly is being said.
Wednesday, May 12, 2010
Chapter 2: The Pool of Tears
Since Alice had eaten the cake that had said 'Eat me', Alice grew about 9 feet tall so she could reach the key. Now that she could reach it, she could go into the door she was curious about, only she was way to big to fit in. She soon began to cry, making a pool on the ground 4 inches deep. Soon enough, she sees the rabbit making a fuss about his Duchess, and how upset she will be with him. He soon throws down a set of white gloves and a fan. Alice picks up both objects, talking to herself about nonsense until she realizes that the fan was helping her shrink. She then throws down the fan so she won't disappear into nothing. Yet again, Alice left the key on the table top and was now swimming and trying to figure out how to get into the garden she saw. A mouse swims by her, and Alice tries talking to her, and offends her twice with cats and dogs. Nonetheless, the mouse and Alice soon swim their way to shore where they meet a duck, a dodo, a leary, an eaglet and many other interesting creatures.
While reading this chapter, I began to wonder what the key to open up the door to the beautiful garden on the other side meant. I was wondering if perhaps the author was trying to portray his own feelings of longing for happiness. Alice felt distraught because she was growing and shrinking, but not grabbing the key to unlock the door. Sometimes people don't grasp on every oppurtunity handed to them, therefore maybe regret in their future. Possible oppurtunities could be what the key stands for, and the door is a happy future. The book never says if she opened the door, only that she swam to shore with the mouse, so I am not sure if she ever reaches the garden, but that she is saved from another being. If she had stayed in the pool, she would have eventually drowned. So the mouse, in my opinion, symbolizes a purpose or a being to pull somebody out of a path to their demise. Maybe the author never reached his garden, but a simple mouse in his life may have pulled him from a bad path getting worse.
Chapter 1: Down the Rabbit Hole
In this chapter, Alice is starting to doze off as her sister reads a book when she sees a rabbit run by, flipping out that he is going to be to be late, checking his pocket watch and running off. Alice immediately had started to follow the rabbit, coming across a rabbit hole. She falls down the hole, and keeps falling for quite a period of time and falls into a hallway with many doors, a table and a key. She takes the key to try and get into a door, but the only door that the key fits is a tiny door that she can't get through. She soon then finds a bottle that reads "Drink me". As she drinks it, she shrinks to the size that she would be able to fit through the door, but she left the key on the table. She then finds a cake that says "Eat me". She eats the whole cake a grows quite a great deal, so she would be able to reach the key.
In the beginning of the chapter, it says that she is dozing off while her sister is reading to her. That tells me that the author finds that books with no fun or exciting adventures really appeal to him, like Alice. The rabbit running off, fearing he is going to be late makes me think of how people are today. Always rushing off and completely stressed out because there are so many things to do in one day. Now, since the book was published in 1865, I have no idea what the adult life was like back then, but I can imagine that the rabbit was possibly symbolizing human beings and their tendencies to stress themselves out.
The rabbit hole symbolizes the depth of a child's imagination. When I was little, my imagination stretched out far and wide, always pretending and having fun. The fact that children can pretty much make a game out of anything is pretty fascinating to me. The rabbit hole seems to go one forever and ever, seeing cupboards, china, and even groceries (Orange Marmalade). No adult, young or old, really imagines anything like that. Typically, they want facts, not fiction. It goes back to the rabbit, adults don't have time to imagine things, nor do they want to. They overstress themselves, as children smile and have fun with their imagination.
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