Some people believe that the characters in Alice in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll are metaphors for the human psyche that delve deep into the human consciousness in the political, economic and social frameworks as a satire. Each character is unique and strange in the illusions woven to reveal the truth in the socio-economic-political structure created by humans as society to ridicule it. There are also opinions which do not support this theory, including one which suggests that the strangness of Wonderland and its characters is in fact a satire on contemporary ideas about mathematics which Carroll considered ridiculous and laughable.
The clothing worn in the film was created by a wardrobe department specifically for that film. Many of the costumes are CGI and really do not exist. The main human characters wore real clothes. You could get some shots and have something similar made but you would have to be aware of copyright .
The Mad Hatter is a character in Alice in Wonderland. He is present at the Mad Tea Party, and famously asks the riddle, "why is a raven like a writing desk?"In Lewis Carroll's book, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, he is NEVER referred to as 'the Mad Hatter' and is just called 'the Hatter'. The name 'the Mad Hatter' appears to be purely a Disney creation.He appears again in Through the Looking Glass, but his name has been changed to Hatta.In the Disney version he was voiced by Ed Wynn.In the movie by Tim Burton, the Mad Hatter is played by Johnny Depp.
If you mean lures him into danger when He's still on campus, the one who looks like a human, her name is simply Alice.
Sweeny Todd, Corpse Bride, Harry Potter, Alice in Wonderland, Cinderella, Charlie and the Chocolate factory, fight club, kings speech, great expectations, Planet of the Apes, dark shadows, room with a view, big fish,les miserables, wallace and gromit, the wings of the doves, lady jane, the terminator salvation, Frankenstein, howards end, young and prodgious ts pivot, burton and taylor, hazard of hearts, conversations with other women, hamlet, till human voices wake us, and a lot more!!!
No, the Mad Hatter is a human being.
Alice is a human being. Most of the other characters are fantasy types.
Lewis Carroll doesn't specify what type of animal the Hatter is, but we can see from John Tenniel's illustrations that he is a human being.
In the book, the White Rabbit is the first Wonderland animal that Alice sees, however she doesn't see him in Wonderland, but in the real world. She follows him into Wonderland, and just catches a glimpse of him as he hurries down a corridor, so he is also the first animal she sees in Wonderland.The first animal she actually meets is the Mouse, who has fallen into the pool of tears along with Alice.As to whether the animals are particularly strange is perhaps a matter of opinion. It is certainly strange for animals to have human characteristics, such as speech and clothing (and pocket watches), but the majority of animals Alice encounters are relatively normal - cats, dogs, birds etc.After meeting the mouse, she meets a dodo, which could be described as strange as dodos are extinct. Towards the end of the book she meets a mythical animal, in the form of the Gryphon, and a fictional animal, created by Lewis Carroll, the Mock Turtle. They are definitely strange.
Nothing in Alice in wonderland in acually "sane". Alice is falling into the world of wonderland which no human has gone to. It is like if someone found flying cats, no one would believe them even if it was "sane". Overall sane or insane would be a exageration or underestimate.
The Hatter, the Duchess and her cook are human adults who appear in the book Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.The King, Queen and Knave of Hearts are also portrayed as human, despite the fact that they are really living playing cards.
The Cheshire Cat's grin is reminiscent of the vagaries of human character or of a trickster .
Some literary elements in Alice in Wonderland include satire, absurdity, symbolism, and fantasy. The book uses these elements to create a whimsical and imaginative world that serves as a commentary on society and human behavior.
its a place where human mortals are banned but shannara elves are allowed there as well as other creatures of faerie and the trolls mwellrets dwarves and gnomes but not humans except that my great great great great great great great great grand mother Alice from Alice in wonderland went there because she found a secret passageway to there
Several live action film versions of Alice in Wonderland have been made over the decades, and the best known was probably Shirley Temple in the title role. There are surprising similarities between Alice in Wonderland and Dorothy (in Oz). They both have female leads, start off in reality then go elsewhere, have animal and human characters mixed, and numerous other parallels while being quite different stories. Alice, if I am not mistaken, has no juvenile or adult companions on her journey- it is even more solo adventure than the Baum novel, which has strong residual family ties.
Alice's human name was Mary Alice Brandon.
A wig is a head covering made from human or synthetic hair. In "Alice in Wonderland," the King's crown may not have looked comfortable because it was a whimsical and exaggerated depiction of a royal crown, meant to enhance the fantastical and surreal atmosphere of the story rather than focus on practicality or traditional aesthetics.