Showing posts with label 1985 irwin allen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1985 irwin allen. Show all posts

Sunday, 9 February 2020

Another look at 1985 Irwin Allen....


SPOILERS, SORRY

A few of my friends know this, but over last December I managed to rewatch the 1985 Irwin Allen 2 part adaptation. It was only my second watch, and the last time I saw it I must have been about 10. I saw it when the DVD was first released in the US, and have no real nostalgic memory of it, unlike a lot of people. 

On this rewatch, I found the Alice in Wonderland adaptation to be a real mixed bag. There are scenes which are directly from carroll's text, using all the dialogue. This is followed by scenes that don't use Carroll's words, these are normally scenes in  which new songs appear. This way of adapting is quite jarring. It thankfully goes out of the window in the Through the Looking Glass adaptation which is mostly all Carroll (with the exception of how the poem Jabberwocky is used... we'll get to that) 

E Clip0292 Natalie Gregory White Knight Alice in ...













Alice In Wonderland By John Tenniel - YouTube

PERFORMANCES

On rewatch I'm afraid to say I still don't like Natalie Gregory as Alice too much. Her Alice is 1000 miles away from Carroll's original. Gregory's Alice is just a normal, American child, and lacks the eccentricity of her book counterpart. Despite book Alice being 7 and a half, I think this version really overdoes the child qualities, as Alice seems less worldly wise in this version. I think this is to fit in with the growing up subplot but still... The poems Alice recites in the books are mainly missing, as are the little eccentric asides she has. I miss them.

 Alenka v říši divů (1985) [TV film] - Fotogalerie - FDb.cz


The performances are uneven in the Wonderland adaptation,  I love how condescending Alice's sister is in this version, completely not how she is in the novel but still very fun. I think an opportunity was missed at the end of part 1: imagine this sister waking Alice up. Jayne Meddows is an amazing queen of Hearts, who is fabulously cruel but the less said about Ringo Starr as the Mock Turtle the better. Imogene Coca is a mad cook, Red buttons a decent white rabbit. Some performances are just downright bizarre. Telly Savalas as the Cheshire Cat?? Song wise its a mix between dreadful (I never want to hear I hate dogs and cats again. Sorry) and good (There's no way home is sung brilliantly) and of course some of Carroll's poems are sung, the highlight being you are old father William. Tap dancing Sammy Davis Jr! 

On the other hand Through the Looking Glass contains an overall better standard of acting. as the Red Queen, Ann Gillian plays the role as controlling and childlike, and it surprisingly totally works. Dum and Dee as played by Eydie Gorme and steve Lawrence are extremely obnoxious in the best way possible, down to the song and dance routine of the walrus and the carpenter. Even the actors that choose to play their roles as hammy work this time around, Carol Channing as the White Queen being a crazy highlight. The songs are better here too, with more Carroll poems being adapted.  Best song here is probably We are Dancing. 

'Alice in Wonderland': 16 Actresses Who Played the Iconic ...

ADAPTATIONS

Tonally the Wonderland adaptation is a bit too bright (I found myself wondering why Alice was so desperate to go back home, there's no real threat in part 1 before the Queen of Hearts shows up) Carroll's proto surrealist twists and turns are played for comedy here. You miss the slight edge the book has. The feel isn't exactly helped by the fact the animal costumes are very bulky and cuddly. 

Alice & the White Knight - YouTube

Thankfully Through the Looking Glass matches more of its source material's tone, the overall adaptation conveying the oddness as well as the wonder in equal measure. Even the things that aren't Carroll slot in better. "We are Dancing" isn't "A sitting on a gate" but it serves the same function and conveys the same melancholy that that chapter has. 

Saturday Matinee

My only pick with the Looking Glass adaptation is that in order to fit the framework narrative these adaptations have (about Alice wanting to grow up) the Jabberwocky becomes a plot point. As in the Jabberwock appears and chases Alice whenever she feels intense fear. The worst scene utilising this is the Humpty Dumpty scene: where the Jabberwock turns up halfway through, immediately taking us away from Carroll's dialogue and story. 

ENDINGS

 I really liked upon rewatch was how part 1 ends. Or rather, the way it tricks the audience. As with the end of the first novel, Alice does wake up on the riverbank near her house.  She runs in, overjoyed that she is now home. To tie the two adaptations of Wonderland and Looking Glass together this version then pulls a moment that is truly odd. Alice isn't actually awake at all, and she is now trapped in looking glass house in yet another dream world. The jabberwock shows up. Cue credits.

I love the way this shifts. And its the darkest moment in a version which up to this point has been very light. It helps set the tone for part 2's more Carroll focused more darker adaptation.

Part 2's ending is.... less good. After defeating the Jabberwock Alice finally awakens and is told by her mother she's now old enough to have tea with the adults. 

Alice then imagines the residents of Wonderland and Looking glass World waving her goodbye from the mirror. This moment has always struck me as strange because the Queen of Hearts is among those waving Alice goodbye and singing good luck to her. Someone that 1 dream ago wanted to behead her... weird. 

OVERALL

A decent adaptation with a much better second half! 




Friday, 22 March 2019

ARCHIVE POST: Alice film Opinion: Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass (1985)

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I’ve never been quite sure on this film, to be honest. I know that a lot of people love it and some people can’t stand it. But I’m sort of in the middle on this one. There’s some really good parts and some not so good parts.

Part 1 adapts Alice in Wonderland and part 2 adapts through the Looking-Glass. The screenwriter also adds a subplot about Alice wanting to be older and to grow up, and introduces the idea of her adventures teaching her a lesson. Although this might sound awful it is actually well executed for the most part and blends in well with the stories. Carroll’s dialogue is often watered down a bit, but this is a hollywood-ized version of the Alice stories if you will, so its sort of expected and not too annoying.

However the songs are quite a different thing, like the performances of the actors, the songs are either really good, OK or terrible. Unfortunately the worst song “I hate Dogs and Cats” sung by the mouse, is the first one we hear. The songs do get better and are really good in the Looking-Glass adaptation.

In terms of actors, Natalie Gregory’s Alice takes a long time to get used to as she is not Carroll’s Alice but by the time we get to part 2 we’ve warmed to her more. The acting again ranges from the good (Sammy Davis Jr as the caterpillar, complete with tap dancing “You are old Father William” sequence, surely one of the highlights of the Wonderland adaptation, also Ann Gilllian as the Red Queen is great, one of the best parts of the Looking Glass adaptation) and the not so good (Ringo Starr as the Mock Turtle)

I like the fact that this film attempts to adapt both books back to back and fully. We actually get a fully fledged adaptation of Through the Looking-Glass here, which is really nice to see. On the flipside Carroll’s dialogue is often thrown out of the window in some scenes. 

For example when Alice talks to the gnat in the Looking-Glass act, he simply warns her not to go into the wood. I would have liked to have seen the conversation that’s in the novel about the looking-glass insects. But what is in here is very good, we get the Walrus and the Carpenter as well as You are old father william and The Lion and the Unicorn. Most of Carroll’s poems are here, if not all.

Overall, I have mixed feelings about this adaptation and despite its flaws, I really admire its overall ambition to dramatize more of Carroll’s stories.