Say what you will about Tim Burton’s Alice in Wonderland, but its massive box office success kicked open the door for Disney to start strip-mining their animated classics for live-action updates like it was a gold rush, and subtlety had already left town. What began as a single “visionary reimagining” quickly became a corporate strategy. And here we are, still digging through the consequences.
Victorian London: a place where grief is quietly swallowed, individuality is politely discouraged, and apparently every young woman’s worst nightmare is being proposed to by a man named Hamish Ascot (Leo Bill). Alice Kingsleigh (Mia Wasikowska), still reeling from her father’s death and plagued by dreams that feel a little too specific to be random, finds herself cornered at a garden party that doubles as an ambush engagement. Just as her life threatens to calcify into a polite prison, she spots a waistcoat-wearing white rabbit checking his pocket watch like he’s late for a union meeting. Naturally, she follows him down a rabbit hole, because ignoring strange mammals has never been her strong suit. After a series of size-altering snacks that would make a nutritionist faint, she squeezes through a door into a world that looks like a fever dream curated by Hot Topic.
“So, this is what LSD is like.”
Welcome to Underland, a place where everyone immediately recognizes Alice except Alice herself, which is either charming or deeply unsettling, depending on your tolerance for destiny narratives. She meets a parade of vaguely familiar oddities: Tweedledum and Tweedledee (Matt Lucas pulling double duty), the jittery White Rabbit (Michael Sheen), a cryptic Caterpillar named Absolem (Alan Rickman), and a general sense that she’s wandered into a prophecy she forgot to RSVP to. Apparently, she’s destined to kill the Jabberwocky and overthrow the Red Queen (Helena Bonham Carter), which feels like a lot to drop on someone who just turned down a marriage proposal ten minutes ago. Before she can process any of this, she’s chased by the Bandersnatch and a squad of Red Knights led by the perpetually smirking Knave of Hearts (Crispin Glover). Everyone gets captured except Alice, because the plot still needs her.
Beware, Johnny Depp ahead!
Alice’s survival tour continues with a visit to the Mad Hatter (Johnny Depp), the March Hare (Paul Whitehouse), and the Dormouse (Barbara Windsor), whose tea party feels less like nonsense and more like chaos with a production budget. The Hatter fills her in on the Red Queen’s hostile takeover of Underland, because nothing says whimsical fantasy like a regime change. When the Red Knights crash the party, the Hatter sacrifices himself so Alice can escape, proving he’s either noble or just tired of Depp’s accent. She’s then guided by Bayard the Bloodhound (Timothy Spall) to infiltrate the Red Queen’s castle, where Alice adopts the deeply convincing alias of “Um.” Surprisingly, this works. She navigates palace intrigue, dodges unwanted advances from the Knave, and learns the Vorpal Sword is hidden in the Bandersnatch’s den, because of course it is.
Fantasy MacGuffin…check!
After a daring retrieval mission and a quick act of kindness involving returning the Bandersnatch’s stolen eye, Alice finally links up with the White Queen (Anne Hathaway), who operates her kingdom like a vegan witch with boundary issues. Meanwhile, Absolem goes full self-help guru and reminds Alice that she’s been here before, back when it was still called Wonderland and childhood trauma hadn’t set in. Armed with self-belief and a sword, Alice faces the Jabberwocky (Christopher Lee) in a climactic battle staged on a chessboard, because symbolism is free. She wins, naturally, decapitating the beast and ending the Red Queen’s reign. Order is restored, villains are exiled, and Alice is handed a vial of magical dragon blood that functions like a one-use exit button. She returns to the real world, rejects Hamish again (good call), and decides to become a trade entrepreneur heading to China, because nothing says personal growth like colonial-era business ventures. A butterfly Absolem lands on her shoulder, just in case you forgot the metaphor.
“I’ll be seeing you in the sequel.”
Stray Observations:
•
Alice spends half the movie insisting it’s a dream while actively
participating in a revolution. Commitment to denial is impressive.
• The entire prophecy hinges on Alice remembering something she forgot, which feels like a cosmic clerical error.
• The Red Queen keeps a court full of people with fake, enlarged heads, and no one questions the long-term neck damage.
• The Knave of Hearts thinks flirting during an execution threat is a winning strategy. Bold, if nothing else.
• The White Queen refuses to harm living creatures but has no issue outsourcing violence. Morality, but make it selective.
• The Hatter’s accent wanders more than Alice does.
•
The Jabberwocky is voiced by Christopher Lee, a man whose voice alone
deserves its own credit line, and the first thing Alice does is slice
off its tongue. Somewhere, a film historian just felt a disturbance in
the force.
• Alice defeats a monster she’s never fought before after one pep talk. Years of knight training are apparently overrated.
It’s nice when you’re handed a plus twelve plot contrivance.
The film’s origin story is almost more compelling than what ended up on screen. Screenwriter Linda Woolverton, going through a rough stretch of life that included personal loss and upheaval, latched onto a striking image: Alice at a crossroads, spotting the White Rabbit and choosing to follow him despite everything. It’s a genuinely powerful concept, rooted in uncertainty and the pull of destiny. Disney heard “fantasy epic with brand recognition” and greenlit it faster than you can say “merchandising.” Tim Burton was brought in as the obvious choice, because if you’re going to revisit Wonderland, you might as well hand the keys to someone who’s built a career out of making the strange feel oddly sincere.
“You can find us at your local Disney Store.”
Burton’s direction is exactly what you’d expect, for better and worse. Visually, it’s a feast of twisted whimsy, gothic flourishes, and digitally enhanced oddities that feel like they escaped from one of his sketchbooks. The world of Underland has texture and personality, even if it sometimes looks like it’s drowning in CGI polish. His style gives the film a distinct identity, but it also leans heavily into familiar territory. You’ve seen this brand of off-kilter before, just with different hats and paler faces. There’s imagination here, no question, but it occasionally feels like Burton is remixing himself rather than discovering something new.
Could Tim Burton be developing a big head, as well?
The cast is a mixed bag, which is putting it kindly. Mia Wasikowska makes for a perfectly serviceable Alice, grounding the film with a performance that doesn’t collapse under the weight of green screens and prophecy talk. Helena Bonham Carter goes all in as the Red Queen, delivering a delightfully unhinged performance that knows exactly how ridiculous it is. Anne Hathaway’s White Queen, on the other hand, floats through the film with an ethereal detachment that reads less as mystical and more as mildly sedated. Then there’s Johnny Depp as the Mad Hatter. At this point in his career, Depp seems convinced that every role benefits from a splash of Jack Sparrow, and here it turns into a distracting cocktail of accents and mannerisms. There’s a fine line between quirky and exhausting, and he spends most of the film tap-dancing over it.
The level of cringe is off the charts.
As an adaptation of Lewis Carroll’s work, the film takes a very loose approach, which is a polite way of saying it turns nonsense into a conventional hero’s journey. Carroll’s stories thrived on absurdity, wordplay, and a kind of narrative anarchy that refused to be pinned down. This version trades that in for prophecy, destiny, and a climactic sword fight. It’s not inherently a bad choice, but it does strip away much of what made the original material unique. Compared to Disney’s animated classic, which embraced the chaos and leaned into the surreal, Burton’s film feels oddly structured, like Wonderland has been forced to attend a screenwriting seminar and come out with a three-act arc.
This version of Wonderland has a lot more ennui.
In conclusion, Tim Burton’s Alice in Wonderland is a film caught between imagination and obligation. It wants to honour the spirit of Carroll’s work while also delivering a crowd-pleasing fantasy adventure, and the result is something that never fully commits to either. There are moments of visual brilliance and performances that understand the assignment, but they’re weighed down by a narrative that feels more dutiful than inspired. It’s not a disaster by any stretch, but it’s also not the definitive Wonderland it aims to be. What it undeniably is, though, is a turning point for Disney, proving that audiences would show up in droves for reimagined classics, even if the magic feels a little processed.















































