![]() Alice's design is adorable, even her iconic outfit is extremely cute.Alice is the cutest and likable character in that unlike most other Disney female characters (especially the Disney Princesses), she is independent, not needing a love interest or male character of any other kind and able to stand up for herself as well as being curious and not overplayed.Unlike most of Disney's previous and following animated feature films, it's not that Americanized because it retains England as the setting and many of the characters keep their nationalities and are played by English actors including the title character (though some of the characters are voiced by American voice actors such as the White Rabbit and the Dodo being voiced by Bill Thompson, who is American, and give some of them American and British accents).Great performances, especially Kathryn Beaumont in both voiceover and rotoscoping.It's relatively faithful to the book even if it does borrow some elements from it's sequel book.Superb storyline that doesn't copy many elements of other films.The film is ahead of it's time in that said visuals would foreshadow the Counterculture era the following decade and psychedelic culture in general.The visuals in Wonderland are amazing as they are very trippy and surreal.Beautiful animation that still holds up really well, especially for 1950s and Disney standards.When Alice ends up in the court of the tyrannical Queen of Hearts (Verna Felton), she must stay on the ruler's good side - or risk losing her head. There she encounters an odd assortment of characters, including the grinning Cheshire Cat (Sterling Holloway) and the goofy Mad Hatter (Ed Wynn). When Alice (Kathryn Beaumont), a restless young British girl, falls down a rabbit hole, she enters a magical world. Lewis Carroll's beloved fantasy tale is brought to life in this Disney animated classic.
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