Alice in Wonderland (Picture 2)
Monday, May 16, 2011image dimensions : 550 x 578
Alice in Wonderland (Picture 2). Alice in Wonderland cartoon images gallery 2. Alice in Wonderland cartoon pictures collection 2. Like Snow White & the Seven Dwarfs, Disney's feature-length cartoon, Alice in Wonderland, released July 28, 1951, was based on a classic story, already familiar to children of all ages. Like Bambi, the story it was based on had a definite origin with a single author, as opposed to a traditional story that was just handed down for so many generations that its origin is lost in the mist of time. As with Cinderella, however, Disney chose a story old enough to be in the public domain, which obviated any problems that might otherwise have stemmed from copyright conflicts. But just like Winnie the Pooh, the fact that all necessary authorizations (in this case, none) had been made didn't prevent a storm of criticism based on the fact that it was altered and "disneyfied" far beyond levels the critics considered acceptable, including but far from limited to butchery of the traditional accompanying artwork, in this case by Sir John Tenniel. Alice in Wonderland (Picture 2). Alice in Wonderland cartoon images gallery 2. Alice in Wonderland cartoon pictures collection 2. Even Disney himself criticized it, but not for its departure from the original. He considered it to lack sympathetic characters, such as Alice herself (unrelated to the Alice from early in Disney's career), who wasn't very likable in Lewis Carroll's 1865 story, either, or in its 1872 sequel. There's also the problem of condensing the entire Alice corpus into a 75-minute movie, always difficult when converting prose to film but especially so when the prose work is large and complex, laden with nuances that intrigue adults every bit as much as they do children; and the filmmaker, for all his virtues, is not known for the subtlety of his nuances. It may be that the problems with Disney's Alice in Wonderland stem mostly from the fact that Disney and Carroll were both creative geniuses whose works strongly represent their own sensibilities, and any given story generally has room for only one. Nor was Disney the only one who criticized its faithful aspects. It was generally thought at the time that it departed too much from realism, something Disney cartoons (as opposed to, say, those of Tex Avery) tended not to do. But earlier adaptations of Alice into performance media were often thought necessarily deficient because of the unfortunate circumstance of being rendered by live actors, and therefore unable to do full justice to the story's surrealism. This general attitude, that Alice in Wonderland should have been more realistic, may have been responsible for the film's lukewarm reception at the box office. It wasn't until the late 1960s, while Fantasia was finding acceptance by a less reality-bound newer generation, that it began to show a large profit. Alice in Wonderland (Picture 2). Alice in Wonderland cartoon images gallery 2. Alice in Wonderland cartoon pictures collection 2.
Labels: Alice in Wonderland
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