: Rather than a direct adaptation, the movie acts as a sequel where a 19-year-old Alice returns to "Underland" with no memory of her first visit.
When Tim Burton’s Alice in Wonderland premiered in March 2010, it did not simply arrive in theaters; it tumbled down the rabbit hole with a $200 million budget and the weight of two distinct legacies on its shoulders. On one side stood Lewis Carroll’s beloved 1865 novel, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland , a masterpiece of Victorian nonsense literature. On the other stood Disney’s own 1951 animated classic, a surreal, jazzy fever dream that had haunted children’s imaginations for decades. alice.in.wonderland.2010
Stepping into the Gothic Whimsy of 2010 Underland. 🧵🕯️ : Rather than a direct adaptation, the movie
The film’s central theme is distilled in the conversation between Alice and the Mad Hatter: On the other stood Disney’s own 1951 animated
Whether you view it as a flawed gem or a beautiful disaster, one thing is certain: In the annals of digital-age fairy tales, remains a curious, fascinating, and wonderfully mad artifact.
This leads to the film’s most glaring ideological contradiction, embodied in the character of the Mad Hatter (Johnny Depp). The Hatter is fractured, suffering from “muchness” loss, and his sanity is explicitly tied to Alice’s belief in herself. “You were not meant to be here,” he tells her. “That is why you’re going to save us.” The Hatter exists not as a philosophical foil but as an emotional anchor, a manic-pixie-dream-prophet whose pain motivates Alice’s final confrontation. The climax—Alice decapitating the Jabberwocky with a swift sword stroke—is visually thrilling but thematically hollow. Victory comes not from wit, subversion, or negotiation, but from violence and the rejection of doubt. When Alice declares, “I almost believed in as many as six impossible things before breakfast,” the line is delivered as a manifesto of self-help positivism rather than a celebration of absurdist thought. Carroll’s nonsense has been converted into motivational slogans.