
Alice
1988 • Adventure, Animation, Fantasy
A quiet young English girl named Alice finds herself in an alternate version of her own reality after chasing a white rabbit. She becomes surrounded by living inanimate objects and stuffed dead animals, and must find a way out of this nightmare - no matter how twisted or odd that way must be. A memorably bizarre screen version of Lewis Carroll’s novel "Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland".
Runtime: 1h 26m
Why you should read the novels
Before pressing play on the Alice (1988) movie, discover the brilliant imagination of Lewis Carroll in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass. The novels overflow with playful logic, layered wordplay, and unforgettable characters that no adaptation can fully capture. Reading the originals reveals a witty, philosophical journey that rewards every page.
Carroll’s prose invites you to participate—puzzles, paradoxes, poems, and riddles spark curiosity and delight in ways film can only hint at. You’ll hear the jokes as they were written, follow the exact twists of Wonderland’s logic, and appreciate the rhythm and music of the language that made these classics endure for generations.
For lovers of classic fantasy literature, the books provide deeper context, richer world-building, and the full arc of Alice’s growth across both adventures. If you want the definitive Alice experience—complete, clever, and endlessly quotable—read the originals before or instead of watching the movie.
Adaptation differences
Alice (1988), Jan Švankmajer’s adaptation, transforms the books’ linguistic wit into a tactile, unsettling visual language—animated bones, taxidermy, and decaying toys replace Carroll’s bright whimsy. Where the novels lean on puns, poems, and logical paradoxes, the film foregrounds texture, sound, and dreamlike montage, shifting the emphasis from verbal play to material strangeness.
Carroll’s Wonderland sprawls across gardens, courts, forests, and chessboards; Švankmajer compresses the action into a claustrophobic interior world of drawers, desks, jars, and hidden compartments. Episodes are fragmented, re-ordered, or abbreviated, favoring a continuous nightmare flow over the books’ clear chapter boundaries and narrative beats.
Characterization changes dramatically. The White Rabbit becomes a leaking taxidermy specimen, and many figures appear as rough puppets or assembled objects—grotesque, fragile, and menacing. Dialogue is pared back; a single guiding voice and repeated framing lines (“said the…”) reduce the distinct vocal personalities found in the novels, trading Carroll’s sparkling repartee for eerie minimalism.
Themes and tone also diverge. The books balance satire and innocence, ending with gentle awakening and reflection; the film concludes on an ambiguous, ominous note that suggests a darker cycle of power and predation. Moral clarity, word games, and social commentary in the novels give way to psychological unease, corporeal imagery, and the anxiety of entrapment—clear signals that this adaptation reimagines rather than reproduces Carroll’s intent.
Alice inspired from
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
by Lewis Carroll
Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There
by Lewis Carroll