Alice.in.wonderland.2010
In conclusion, Tim Burton’s Alice in Wonderland (2010) is a compelling cultural artifact precisely because of its failures of fidelity. It replaces Carroll’s playful nihilism with a burdensome theology of destiny; it swaps linguistic anarchy for psychological realism; and it transforms a girl who questions the Queen of Hearts’ authority into a young woman who embraces a prophecy to behead a monster. The film’s immense popularity suggests that audiences in the post-millennial era crave a different kind of heroine—not one who wanders lost, but one who marches forward with a sword and a corporate partnership. Yet, in its eagerness to make Alice “empowered,” the film inadvertently asks a troubling question: if you need an ancient scroll and a suicidal milliner to tell you who you are, are you truly free? Burton’s Wonderland is a beautiful, melancholic place where even rebellion comes pre-scripted, and where the only impossible thing left is the luxury of getting truly, purposelessly lost.
Aspect | Detail --- | --- | Tim Burton Screenwriter | Linda Woolverton Composer | Danny Elfman Cinematographer | Dariusz Wolski Production Companies | Walt Disney Pictures, Roth Films, The Zanuck Company, Team Todd Distributor | Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures Running Time | 108 minutes alice.in.wonderland.2010