![]() ![]() ![]() There are occasional sequences that have been replicated from the book – Alice taking a journey on a train that takes to the air the meetings with the White Knight, Humpty Dumpty, Tweedledum and Tweedledee (who are now two argumentative joggers) and the Jabberwocky and the Snark (who are now standard moronic and cuddly children’s movie monsters). There is the central idea from Through the Looking Glass of Alice travelling through a mirror and finding herself in a land modelled on a chessboard and having to make her way across to the other side to be crowned a queen. ![]() The film has only a passing resemblance to the books. It does demonstrate one thing – that Lewis Carroll (who has the ignominy of being credited as Lewis Carrol on the credits) would never have been accepted in today’s children’s tv environment. Indeed, the film is less an adaptation of Through the Looking Glass than it is a version of Lewis Carroll that has been reconstructed to modern children’s movie formula. This adaptation, from veteran tv writer Jameson Brewer, does the crass and inconceivable thing – it modernises and Americanises Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. This little-known animated film is an adaptation of Lewis Carroll’s Through the Looking Glass (1871), which was of course a sequel to Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (1865). ![]()
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