Dusterian wrote:EricJ, I think things like "why is a raven like a writing desk?" were not about putting importance on the thing itself (since he said "I have no idea" or whatever when asked if he knew), but on the characters. I think it was more about him trying to get closer to Alice, as well as show some emotion. Didn't seem to do much, but I think that's what they were trying to do.
As one reviewer pointed out, the Hatter isn't supposed to "wonder" if he's mad, he IS mad...In Wonderland,
everyone is, and that's normal. In the book, it's Alice who has the frustration in carrying on a logically flowing conversation, but that's what she gets for trying to bringing sanity to a local tea party.
Here, Tim and Linda's "empowered" female-pandering has Alice as the wise character who straightens out
everyone's problems, which comes off as some of the most egotistic condescension to the original source material possible.
(And as this approach comes off as rather snotty, the character comes off as rather snotty, and, in fact, a little
bored with her destiny: "Have I woken up from my dream YET?
")
But, to show how much they're
not condescending to the book, T&L have to show off as many geek-trivia lines as possible that they remember (like the Raven riddle, or "Frabjous day", or "muchness") even if they don't quite seem to remember how exactly they were used.
Which is the same charge as is often leveled at Joe Dante pretending to do neo-Bugs Bunny movies, and driving off the real fans by looking like the most obnoxious fraud poseur imaginable.
I now think the 1951 Disney version is the best, at least of the ones I know and have seen. And one thing - Katherine Beaumont's Alice in that one was more entertaining and memorable! I didn't think Mia Wasikowska's Alice was too great, kinda bland.
Beaumont still rules (we get an Alice who likes a
little bit of nonsense, but is utterly frustrated in trying to restore order out of chaos), but make sure you rent the '72 just in case you haven't seen it.
There are so many lines (as in the Trial scene) that slip by you when you first read the book as a kid, you have to hear them to get them, and most versions just don't take the time.