Showing posts with label Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland. Show all posts

Saturday, March 6, 2010

"Alice in Wonderland" - REVIEW



I wish it was easier to play the blame game in situations like this. It's not because I hate Tim Burton's latest film, but rather because I find it a curious disappointment that could have benefited from, well, something. What that 'something' is, I'm not quite sure. Are the problems with the film solely from the script, or was there studio interference from Disney (who Burton once worked for as an animator, but left due to severe creative differences)? Regardless, Burton's latest adventure, in which he uses more special effects than ever before, is nothing to go mad about, even with a stellar cast.
Set 10 years after the original Disney cartoon, Burton's film opens with Alice Kingsley (Mia Wasikowska) attending a party of stuffy English upperclassmen, where she is propositioned for engagement by Hamish (The Fall's Leo Bill), a squeamish, insufferable figure. At the moment of the proposal, however, she sees a white rabbit, and out of curiosity, follows it, slips down the rabbit hole, and enters Underland (which she misheard as Wonderland). However, there are more than a few problems. First, Alice neither remembers the place, nor believes it, convinced that she's in a dream, and just needs to wait for it to end. Second, the habitants of Underland aren't entirely convinced that she's the Alice they're looking for. And third, the Red Queen (MVP Helena Bonham Carter) has taken over Underland.
The problems with the film start with the one of the problems among the characters. The fact that Alice is so thoroughly that she's dreaming during most of the film leaves the character in a passive state. The film would have benefited from Alice more engaged in an internal struggle of being reintroduced to a world which she absolutely cannot remember. For Alice to deny Underland as a real place for a few minutes would have been perfectly fine, but to drag it out over the majority of the film is a big issue. There's also the matter of the story structure. Events often seen too quickly thrown together, rarely given enough time to have any sort of charm or impact. Alice's stay at the Red Queen's castle as her "pet" is woefully short, and the transformations that occur there are too quick. The Mad Hatter's struggle with being chained to his desk while he makes hats for the Red Queen occurs out of nowhere. One minute he's there, trying to get out of being killed, the next, Alice finds him in his room where he goes into a rage about being chained; there isn't enough time for this sort of moment to carry any weight. Then there's Depp himself, who despite spectacular design and make-up, is almost too strange (yup, you heard that right). Going between wispy quirk-fest and angry Scottish brogue, the role is less entertaining in the latter form, which is strangely unappealing or intriguing. And then there are the names. I say this because there's a problem in "Alice" similar to one in 9, which Burton produced: characters speaking to each other with instant familiarity. The most notable instance is when Alice needs to escape to the White Queen's (Anne Hathaway, good, but given too little) castle. She gets help from a talking blood hound, who only 15 minutes ago was working for the Knave (Crispin Glover) in locating Alice/the Hatter. It begs the question, why would these two have reason to work together? When exactly did the blood hound change? Sure, he's only working for the Knave so that the Red Queen will set his family free, but we never see any of that determination, or even frustration with having to side with the enemy to save his family. And while there's a major plot hole involving how the Red Queen remembers Alice, the biggest offense is a prophesying device shortly after we enter Underland that kills all tension in the story. The big battle at the end, already underwhelming enough (Burton's forte isn't action scenes) is made less excited by nature of the fact that we know what has to happen.
As for the special effects, I'm somewhat mixed. They're totally gorgeous to look at, despite being completely cartoonish. The problem with them is that Burton's film doesn't just involved VFX characters like the white rabbit, but also real people, interacting with them. The clash between the real and computer-generated makes it harder to be totally sucked into Burton's lush vision.
Well, that's enough complaining; let's focus on the good things, shall we? First, there's the casting, which is spot on, even when roles (like Alice) aren't well written/constructed. Depp is strange, Rickman as the caterpillar is good for a dry laugh, and Hathaway gets to be quirkier than ever before as the elegant yet odd White Queen. However, the two stars of the film, and the two characters who always made me smile were Stephen Fry as the voice of the exquisitely designed Cheshire Cat, and the show-stealer of them all, Helena Bonham Carter as the Red Queen, with a digitally enlarged head.
First one who tracks down Helen Hunt gets a dollar. Go.

The character's design is hilarious, and so is Carter, who gets the best line. On the production front, the real stars are Colleen Atwood's gorgeous costumes; if there's one aspect of this film that deserves to be remembered during the next Oscar season, it's the wardrobe. Longtime Burton composer Danny Elfman's score is nice, but not among his best work (appropriate, since this is far from Burton's best work). It's just a shame that the good elements are so weighed down by the issues with the screenplay. But perhaps the biggest problem with the film is that Burton has followed up one of his best films (Sweeney Todd) with one of his worst.

Grade: C

Monday, February 22, 2010

Could "Alice in Wonderland" be in trouble?

The Red Queen disapproves of this bad buzz.

Please don't let this be true, please don't let this be true.

Source: HollywoodElsewhere

I'm told that certain British exhibitors and theatre managers who've seen Tim Burton's Alice In Wonderland feel it's "a true stinker of a movie...an unmitigated disaster," as one correspondent puts it. "It's no shock that Disney want to release this on DVD as soon as possible. Not sure what can save this though the promotion so far might guarantee it a great opening before poisonous word of mouth kills it."

To which I replied, "Wait...a stinker? Burton might be off his game, but I can't believe it's a disaster...c'mon. Burton is no chump, he knows what he's doing."

To which the exhibitor replied, "Saw a screening last week, Jeff. Will let you wait to judge it but the movie is a mess. No real plot to speak of and some terrible acting from the likes of Crispin Clover. Even some of the CGI is messy. Cinemas not wanting to show this due to early DVD terms from Disney might not [realize] how lucky they are long-term. There was also a screening last week for critics and that didn't go well either."

Vulture reported two days ago that AMC, America's second-largest theater chain, "is threatening to boycott Alice in Wonderland because of Disney's plan to shorten the film's theatrical run. Disney wants to keep Alice in theaters for twelve weeks rather than seventeen in order to capitalize on the DVD appeal of this family-friendly movie about pigs that serve as footrests.

"An AMC boycott would seriously harm the box-office returns for Alice, which would lose revenue from the company's more than 4,500 screens worldwide. And because of that, AMC and Disney are expected to work something out before the movie's March 5 release."

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

How does this make you feel?


Because personally, I think it's pretty epic, and worth posting just for its absolute awesomeness. I can't wait for March 5th. I never picked Helena Bonham Carter as a boot person, thought, and is it just me, or does her head almost seem too small? It's supposed to be three times larger than her normal head (maybe Ms. Carter simply has a small noggin?).

Thursday, January 14, 2010

First Quarter Preview: Slim pickings from January to March

Even though we're still a month and a half away from the end of Awards Season 09-10, we shouldn't forget that there are other movies coming out; movies from the current year. That said, January, February, and March don't offer a whole lot, even on the indie side of things (I'm done with giving Noah Baumbach chances, so I'm not wasting time in the theater on Greenberg). So what of interest is left? Not much. And by not much, I mean that one of the entries on this list is still technically a 2009 film. Please, pleeeeeeeease tell me that 2010 will pick up as the year goes on. That whining aside, here are seven (ish) reasons to go to the theater for something new, and not for whatever Oscar hopefuls are still on your checklist.

7. Last Night dir. Massy Tadjedin: March 19th [Limited]
What's it all about?: A husband and wife, while apart due to the husband being on a business trip, both flirt with temptation as the husband travels with an attractive co-worker and the wife accidentally meets up with a former flame.
Who's in it?: Keira Knightley, Sam Worthington, Eva Mendes, Guillaume Canet
Why?:
  • Interesting, character-driven premise
  • Young, attractive, and generally talented cast (the verdict's still out on Mendes)
Why Not?:
  • No trailer, no poster, no buzz.
  • Knightley and Worthington can be very good...or very bland.
6. Green Zone dir. Paul Greengrass: March 12th [Wide]
What's it all about?: After discovering faulty intelligence, a US Army officer goes rogue to find WMD's.
Who's in it?: Matt Damon, Greg Kinnear, Amy Ryan, Brendan Gleeson, Jason Isaacs
Why?:
  • Great cast led by the generally reliable Damon, who has proven himself as a quality leading man for action flicks.
  • Greengrass knows how to turn gritty action into thrilling cinema (Bourne 2 and 3).
  • Could be a nice substitute if Bourne 4 never materializes.
Why Not?:
  • The action-packed trailer is curiously uninteresting, despite the subject matter.
  • Could end up trivializing the war angle in favor of bigger, louder, action scenes.
5. The Wolfman dir. Joe Johnston: February 12th [Wide]
What's it all about?: [from Imdb] After returning to his ancestral home, an American is bitten and cursed by a werewolf.
Who's in it?: Benicio Del Toro, Emily Blunt, Anthony Hopkins, Hugo Weaving
Why?:
  • Has the potential to be a classy-yet-gory period horror flick.
  • Wonderful cast, and decent trailer showcasing the moody period ambiance.
  • Anthony Hopkins compared Blunt to a young Jodie Foster during/after filming.
Why Not?:
  • Re-shoots were ordered, and the film has already been pushed back a few times.
  • The design of the wolfman himself has been altered (from being on all fours to a more upright, bipedal form....or it might be the other way around).
  • Decent-to-mixed buzz from test screenings.
4. Alice in Wonderland dir. Tim Burton: March 5th [Wide]
What's it all about?: 10 years after she first went down the rabbit hole, Alice returns to Wonderland after finding out about her arranged marriage, only to find that the Red Queen has taken control.
Who's in it?: Johnny Depp, Mia Wasikowska, Helena Bonham Carter, Anne Hathaway, Michael Sheen, Alan Rickman, Christopher Lee
Why?:
  • Wonderful, wonderful cast, filling all of the right roles (Bonham Carter looks hysterical).
  • Not only is it not a direct remake, it's based off of parts of Lewis Carroll's books that weren't featured in the classic Disney cartoon version.
  • The mix of live action and CGI is beautiful, albeit cartoony.
  • Mia Wasikowska has proven her talent on the TV show "In Treatment".
  • Alice wearing battle armor. 'Nuff said.
Why Not?:
  • Is Johnny Depp's role too prominent? The title is ALICE in Wonderland, not The Mad Hatter in Wonderland, after all.
  • Will the CGI/live action blend somehow backfire?
  • It's yet another Burton film that isn't original. Seriously, when is he going to make another Edward Scissorhands-esque movie?
3. Clash of the Titans dir. Louis Leterrier: March 26th [Wide]
What's it all about?: A man born of a god, Perseus, must try to stop the minions of the underworld from breaking free to wreak havoc on the earth.
Who's in it?: Sam Worthington, Liam Neeson, Ralph Fiennes, Pete Postlethwaite, Gemma Artreton, Alexa Davalos, Danny Huston
Why?:
  • Rockin' trailer.
  • Finally, a halfway decent movie rooted in Greek mythology (special effects have come a long way since the original film was made).
  • The studio has enough faith in the film that it's actually being given MORE money to film extras scenes and add in more gods/monsters.
  • Sam Worthington officially takes his place as the new king of sci-fi/fantasy blockbusters.
  • Liam Neeson and Ralph Fiennes as feuding gods: Schindler vs. Goeth was nothing compared to Zeus vs. Hades.
Why Not?:
  • Louis Leterrier isn't the best director, even for action driven films; his Hulk reboot was brain dead when it wasn't in action mode.
  • Could the added gods/monsters result in an overcrowded film with forced appearances from famed mythological creatures?
  • Is Worthington going to deliver the same level of bland "tough leading man" schtick as in Avatar?
2. A Prophet (Un Prophete) dir. Jacques Audiard: February 12th [Limited]
What's it all about?: [from Imdb] A young Arab man is sent to a French prison where he becomes a mafia kingpin.
Who's in it?: Tahar Rahim, Niels Arestrup, Adel Bencherif
Why?:
  • The critically hailed drama, finally making its stateside debut, has earned comparisons to The Godfather.
  • Chilling trailer that promises a combination of character study and blazing guns.
  • Interesting setting/angle (French Muslims).
Why Not?:
  • It could end up being either just "good", or hugely overrated.
1. Shutter Island dir. Martin Scorcese: February 19th [Wide]
What's it all about?: Two federal marshals search for a murderess who somehow escaped a top security facility.
Who's in it?: Leonardo DiCaprio, Mark Ruffalo, Ben Kinglsey, Emily Mortimer, Michelle Williams, Patricia Clarkson, Jackie Earle Hayley, Max Von Sydow
Why?:
  • Great cast, great trailer, great director, great source material.
  • Dennis Lehane novels have a pretty successful track record as far as adaptations go.
  • It wasn't pushed back to finish editing or re-shoot; test screening results have been through the roof.
  • Martin Scorcese directing a psychological mystery/thriller/horror film? Count me in.
Why Not?:
  • The same screenwriter also wrote Oliver Stone's Alexander.
  • It's going to hurt a lot when you realize that the current Oscar season would have been so much more interesting if this film had been released back in October.
  • It's going to hurt even more if the film gets snubbed for next year's awards due to its terrible timing (two weeks before the Oscar ceremony).

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

"Alice in Wonderland" theatrical trailer!



At this point, I'd see it just for Helena Bonham Carter, who looks wickedly over-the-top in the best sense. It's certainly cartoony looking, yet very pretty. And besides, aren't you curious to see what happens when Alice puts on silver armor, wields a sword, and dives into combat?

Friday, July 17, 2009

New images from 2009 Comic Con: "Iron Man 2", "Alice...", "Zombieland", and "Kickass"





Source: Slashfilm.com

In a way, we've seen that "Iron Man 2" picture before, only in much lower quality. That "Alice" picture however...WOW.

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

New image and info from Burton's "...Wonderland"!



Source: Slashfilm.com and Empire Magazine

What makes this new image particularly interesting is the inclusion of a little furry friend, but more on that later. From the info I’ve been fed at least, The White Queen has a real name too, Mirana of Marmoreal and Alice visits her in a vast white marble castle. As pure as Hathaway makes her look, the White Queen is actually quite disgusting. I definitely wouldn’t eat one of her cupcakes, I can tell you that. Nonetheless, she is an ally to Alice in a strange and frightening world.


You may be aware that there is no White Queen in the Wonderland book, with her appearing in the guise of a chess piece in Through the Looking Glass. Further confirmation, then that this is not a straight-up adaptation of Wonderland, despite featuring mostly the same cast and several of the same scenes.

What’s so interesting about this Dormouse is that she’s… well, she’s a Dormouse. Not a cartoon Dormouse. There are several animal characters in the cast, and it would seem that they’re going to look rather like actual, real animals. I’ve been told that the Cheshire Cat is, in some respects unrealistic (I previously reported a description of him as “green and yellow and rather cuddly looking”) but I bet he’s also very feline at heart.

The Dormouse has been given the voice of Barbara Windsor, doyen of Walford’s Queen Vic and the Carry On camping site. Her name is, apparently, Malymkun and she gets to deliver an awful lot of the Stanley Unwin-esque nonsense words in the film too. Surprisingly, this wee mouse has apparently been given quite a good part.

Hopefully a lot more Alice business will be coming our way from Comic-Con. Some moving images would be nice.

Monday, June 22, 2009

EDIT: *two new pics* A true first look at Tim Burton's "Alice in Wonderland" (2010)!!!







All I can say is: WOW. The animation looks gorgeous, and the renderings of Depp and Bonham Carter are spectacularly weird. However, I am slightly confused, because I thought that Michael Sheen was playing the Chesire cat, instead of the White Rabbit. Either way, I can't wait to see what this film looks like in motion...

Source: Slashfilm.com

Walt Disney Pictures has released the first promotional photos from Tim Burton’s 3D re-imagining of Alice in Wonderland. Above you can see the first official photos ofJohnny Depp as a freakish-looking Mad Hatter, Helena Bona Carter as the Red Queen (”Off With Their Heads”), and Anne Hathaway as The White Queen, looking very pale. After the jump we’ve included newly confirmed details about the film’s plot (did you know its a kind of a sequel?) and new concept art that shows the White Rabbit(Michael Sheen), the egg-shaped Tweedledee and Tweedledum (Matt Lucas) and more.


The USA Today article (where the images premiered) confirms our previous report that the movie is actually a sequel in some ways. The film begins at a party where Alice, now 17, finds out that she is about to be proposed to in front of hundreds of snooty high society types. She makes a run for it, and of course, ends up following a white rabbit down a hole, back to Wonderland — a place where she visited a decade prior. The White Rabbit is convinced that he has the right girl but Alice doesn’t remember her past visit to Wonderland. The creatures of Wonderland are ready to revolt and are hoping/waiting for Alice to help them, but will she? Can she?


Other details revealed in the article include: The Red Queen has “a moat filled with bobbing noggins”, The White Queen is beautiful but eccentric, and floats around instead of walking, and that Depp employs an accent for the Hatter that producer Richard Zanuck can only describe as “indescribable”.

I’ve seen most of this art before at previous Disney industry events, and as I’ve stated in the past, I’m loving the Burton-styled look. I know some people will complain that this film looks too dark, but I actually wish some of it was darker. I’m not sure what to think about Depp of Carter’s digitally enhanced appearances. It will be interesting to see what they look like in motion. Head on over to USA Today to see non-cropped, much higher resolution versions of the above concept art. Tim Burton’s Alice in Wonderland will hit theaters on March 5th 2010.

Monday, October 27, 2008

Alan Rickman, Christopher Lee, and Michael Sheen (Tony Blair in The Queen) join Burton's "Alice in Wonderland"!!


Though Rickman and Lee were almost predictable choices, Sheen is a surprising (and inspired) pick for the Cheshire Cat.


The cast for Tim Burton's upcoming live action/CGI hybrid re-imagining of Lewis Carroll's classic, ALICE IN WONDERLAND, is growing by leaps and bounds. So far, we have Mia Wasikowska as the titular Alice, Jonny Depp as the Mad Hatter, Anne Hathaway as the White Queen, Helena Bonham Carter as the Red Queen, Crispin Glover as the Knave of Hearts, Matt Lucas as Tweedledum and Tweedledee and Michael Sheen in an unspecified role. Today, we can add three more names to that list, as well as reveal Sheen's role. According to Zdonk, Sheen has been cast as the Cheshire Cat and Alan Rickman has been cast as the Caterpillar. Further, according to "Christopher Lee Web", the Brit veteran has been cast in an unspecified role. Finally, THIS SITE is saying that young Eleanor Tomlinson has been cast as Alice's friend Fiona Chataway, who appears at the film's onset in a role written specifically for the movie. Whew! The film's set for release March 5th, 2010.

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Anne Hathaway and Helena Bonham Carter join Tim Burton's "Alice in Wonderland"(2010)!!


I guess I shouldn't be too surprised at HBC's inclusion, but it's great to know that two years from now I'll get to see her as the Queen of Hearts!

Source: The Telegraph

Burton has cast his actress partner, Helena Bonham Carter, as the Red Queen who cries: "Off with their heads!"

Hathaway, star of The Devil Wears Prada and The Princess Diaries, plays the more kindly monarch.

Johnny Depp has already signed up to play the Mad Hatter, with newcomer Mia Wasikowska as Alice. Little Britain stars Matt Lucas and David Walliams are to appear as Tweedle Dum and Tweedle Dee.

The film is a mix of live action and CGI, and filming is under way in Cornwall with a release date set for spring 2010.