Your Favorite Scene?


What's your favorite scene? I have to say my favorite was when Alice meets the Mad Hatter and his friend at their tea party. Not only was it hilarious, but something about it spikes up my interest again. Not that the film wasn't interesting, but it starts to lose steam around the flower scene and Mr. Caterpillar's scene. I also love how random and crazy they are, it's such a trip watching them and Alice's reactions to them.

reply

Favourite scene, probably Tweedledee and Tweedledum telling Alice the Walrus and the Carpenter story. Really creeped me out as a kid and find it so wonderfully weird to this day.

Scenes I most vividly remember. Chasing the white rabbit, the caterpillar, the dog sweeping the line away with it's tail and the doorknob refusing to turn.

reply

I love the Tea Party, and I also really liked the singing flowers and the scene with the Caterpillar. It's so hard to choose! I guess I like the tea party the best.

reply

For me, the best scene in the film is the one that owes nothing to Carroll: the scene where Alice gets lost at night after the broom creature sweeps away her path. Really very moving.

reply

Painting The Roses Red song and Very Merry Unhappy Birthday

reply

It's "a very merry unbirthday."

reply

Caterpillar scene.




Never defend crap with 'It's just a movie'
http://www.youtube.com/user/BigGreenProds

reply

The Tea Party and the Queen of Hearts scenes

reply

The Mad Hatter tea party. 🎩☕

reply

The Mad Tea Party scene was my favorite.

reply

Oh my God, way too many. The voices and special Technicolor effects..(Disney's close buddy, choral and show pioneer Fred Waring, 1900-1984, himself a Walt Disney in many ways, did a unique (even Sterling Holloway in the live cut out tree) with most of the cast tfeatured with the Disney Alice movie.It's on YouTube).

Richard Haydn, Verna Felton, Ed Wynn (the role Johnny Depp reprised, for better or qworse0, Sterling Holloway,Bill Thompson, wow..all pof tthopse fit..

The Carterpillar (rticahrd Haydn) and Cheshire Cat (Sterling Hllowy and the color in those, just outstnading, the most..

I also like the Hanna-Barbera one from 1966, officially titled "The All-New Alice in Wonderland, or What's a Nice Kid Like You, Doin' in a place this Like". Reprising Kathryn Beaumont's "Alice' was Janet Waldo (Judy Jetson and earlier radio's Corliss Archer, and Josie, and Pebbles Flintstones as a teen in "Flintstones", Season 4, Ep.2, "Groom Gloom") , Sterling Holloway, as his Hanna-Barbera counterpart, was the great Sammy Davis Dr. (one of many celebrities with my birthday, December 8th), Bill Thompson as th White Rabbit was replaced by Howard Morris in Hanna-Barbera's modernized take,
and Ed Wynn at Disney have way to Harvey Korman for the Mad Hatter. For good, fashinista measur,e the great and fabulous Hedda Hopper, then near life's end, and a colorful long time Old-Time Hollywood gossip columnist (the Nikki Swift.com of her time), and sometime actress, brought her life to a colorful end as Hedda Hatter, and also, Bill Dana brought his unfairly maligned, and soon after retired Jose Jimenez as the white Knigth (IDana deserved more credit than he got.) Many of the characters weren';t in Disney's film,. but except for the Hedda Hopper walk-on/caritcate as Hedda Hatter,all of the Hanna-Barbera movie characters exisited in the two Lewis Carroll books. Disney's Alice, to be sure, also derived from both.

reply