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{{Infobox CVG|title= Alice In Wonderland (Special Edition) {{Infobox CVG|title= Alice In Wonderland (Special Edition)
|image: AIWDVDSPECLEDTON.PNG|Alice In Wonderland (Special Edition) DVD cover art]] |image: ]
|directors= |directors=
|publisher= Disney |publisher= Disney

Revision as of 04:47, 26 November 2005

Video game
Alice In Wonderland (Special Edition)
Publisher(s)Disney
Director(s)
Producer(s)
Composer(s)
File:Movie alice in wonderland flowers.jpg
Alice sings "All in the Golden Afternoon" with a garden of flowers in this scene from Walt Disney's 1951 animated feature Alice in Wonderland.

Alice in Wonderland is the thirteenth animated feature in the Disney animated features canon. It was produced by Walt Disney Productions and originally released to theaters on July 28, 1951 by RKO Radio Pictures. Lewis Carroll's surreal books Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass have been frequently adapted for film; this adaptation solved the problems of the setting by using animation. The screenplay was written by Aldous Huxley (uncredited ) among other writers , and the film uses the voices of Kathryn Beaumont as Alice and Ed Wynn as the Mad Hatter. Still under the supervision of Walt Disney himself, this film and its animation are often regarded as some of the finest work in Disney studio history, despite the lackluster, even hostile, reviews it originally received, especially in the UK.

Walt Disney had been interested in the novels and had tried adapting the first of the Alice books during the late 1930s and early 1940s, yet World War II caused the project to be shelved. After the war, Disney thought of making Alice in Wonderland as a mix of live action and animation (as in Disney's early Alice shorts, which featured a live-action Alice in an animated setting, or the feature Song of the South), yet this idea eventually grew into a fully animated musical. Upon its release, the film was panned by critics and failed at the box office. Disney later said he despised the film, and it was not reissued theatrically the way that other Disney films were. It was the first Disney animated feature to be shown on television, as a Disneyland TV show episode.

However, the surreal elements in the film sparked a revival of the film in the psychedelic generation, which led to theatrical reissues in 1974 and 1981.

The psychedelic association was furthered by synchronization enthusiasts who found simliarities in run time and themes between the film and the Pink_Floyd album The_Wall.

It was released on video in 1981 and 1986, staying in general release ever since. It was released on DVD in Region 2 in 1999 and in Region 1 in 2000, and on a fully restored two disc edition in 2004.

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