So I just came back from watching Tim Burton's Alice In Wonderland. Now I will say this up front: I love the cast. I mean how could you make a movie with Johnny Depp, Michael Sheen, Anne Hathaway, Stephen Fry, Alan Rickman, Christopher Lee, Timothy Spall, and Crispen Glover not be great?
Let me tell you how, get the worst script you can find and then tell the actors not to actually bring anything new to the characters. For the first time I can actually say that Tim Burton really did not direct this movie well. I think the whole "Oh look what we can do with CGI" phase is now over because of a guy called James Cameron made a movie that had the best CGI ever and everything will seem bad in comparison.
The acting in this movie was not bad exactly, but it was so safe. I mean Johnny Depp played basically the same character he played in Pirates of the Caribbean. He did well as Jack Sparrow because it was so out there and by the third movie the role was getting a little old and annoying. The Mad Hatter took about half a scene to get old and annoying. I have yet to see a version of Alice In Wonderland that I like, which is a little unsettling as I'm in a play version of the book. Also the way the dress sometimes shrunk and stretched with Alice while other times it did not. The Ending was also terrible.
The writing for the beginning of the movie was just terrible. All the characters just basically said what they were thinking and feeling. The scriptwriter didn't even try to make Alice's suitor sympathetic. In fact, the scriptwriter didn't try to make any of the "bad" characters sympathetic. The Red Queen got on my nerves really quickly and Knave was just kind of weird.
On the plus side Anne Hathaway was great as the White Queen and Mia Wasikowska was very good as Alice, she succeed where the previous actresses who have played Alice failed, she made her sympathetic and not annoying.
In short it was a boring, deeply strange, and safe movie. It was highly formulaic when you strip away the odd characters you have hero hates real world, finds weird one, discovers that he/she is the hero of a prophecy and meets a wise old man, he/she doesn't think that they can fulfill it, friend of hero is capture by villain, hero rescues friend, hero escapes to good guy's hideout, hero stills doesn't think that they can do it, mentor tells hero that they can and then dies, hero fights bad guys, hero wins, hero decides to leave the wonderful world where they have been staying and goes back to the far inferior real world solely because it is the "real world"(why can't the nice world be real and the bad world be fake, who decides that one is real and the other isn't?), Hero turns life around and becomes happy, peppy song plays over credits. Tim Burton, you done us wrong this time and what's with Alice not telling her sister that her sister's husband is having at least one affair? What message does that send to your daughter? And while I'm talking about your daughter and messages that are sent to her from this movie, why does Alice have to have a romantic relationship with the Mad Hatter, why do movie heroines always have to have romantic relationships? It's so messed up.
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7 comments:
Those are a lot of big names for just one movie. I take it Christopher Lee plays the "wise old man"? Your summary of the formula, as I'm sure you intended it to be, could be applied to SO many stories.
You're an actor, so of course you're going to be more critical to a movie, but my friends (who are not in any way involved in the production of stories)only said that it was an okay movie, but it wasn't worth it to see it in 3D.
However, I think I'll probably like this movie anyway, since (and I know you're about to brutally murder me for this) I've never seen any of the Alice movies or read any of the books. I did see the play many years ago, but I don't remember it at all, so I don't think that really counts.
Oh yeah, James Cameron, I heard of that guy, didn't he make like, what, $2 billion off that movie, um... oh yeah, Avatart or something like that :)
Nice review!
You need to come and see mine, Elf Army. I'll tell you when it is, as soon as I find out when it is.
I have to say.. I agree with this. I *really* didn't like the ending. And yes.. there was something very peculiar and disturbing about the relationship between Alice and the Mad Hatter. Odd.
In most parts i agree with Rock4ever. the ending was just terrible and the script was not very good either. But most of the movie was alright, and i thought they did a good job making the weirdest book ever into a understandable movie.
The movie didn't follow the book at all, that's how they made it understandable. The original book had no plot, it was just Alice wandering around. This movie gave it a plot, and one that sort of ripped off the book called "The Looking Glass Wars" which was way better than the film.
I have to agree with most of that. The dress thing was quite annoying. Why does one part shrink and not the other? And who decided which was which?!
The movie, as just a movie, was pretty good. The actors played it safe, yes, but still. As a sequel/reinterpretation of the book, it was horrible.
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