Alice in Wonderland (1903 film)
Alice in Wonderland is a 1903 British silent film directed by Cecil Hepworth and Percy Stow.[1] Only one copy of the original film is known to exist. The British Film Institute (BFI) partially restored the movie and its original film tinting and released it in 2010. According to BFI, the original film ran about 12 minutes; the restoration runs 9 minutes and 35 seconds.[1] At the beginning of the restoration, it states that this is the first movie adaptation of Lewis Carroll's 1865 children's book Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.[2] It was filmed mostly at Port Meadow in Oxford.
Alice in Wonderland | |
---|---|
The complete film | |
Directed by | Cecil Hepworth Percy Stow |
Produced by | Cecil M. Hepworth Herman Casler (exec. producer) Elias Koopman (exec. producer) Harry Marvin (exec. producer) |
Written by | Lewis Carroll (book) Cecil M. Hepworth |
Based on | Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass by Lewis Carroll |
Starring | May Clark Cecil M. Hepworth Mrs. Cecil Hepworth Norman Whitten |
Cinematography | Cecil M. Hepworth |
Production company | |
Distributed by | American Mutoscope and Biograph Company Edison Manufacturing Company Kleine Optical Company |
Release date |
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Running time | approx. 8:19 minutes |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | Silent |
The film is memorable for its use of special effects, including Alice's shrinking in the Hall of Many Doors, and in her large size, stuck inside the White Rabbit's home and reaching for help through a window.[3] It is now available from several sources, and is included as a bonus feature on a 1996 BBC DVD. It is also included in the Vintage Cinema: Experiments in early film 1900s DVD.
Plot
Alice follows a large white rabbit down a rabbit hole. She finds a tiny door but cannot fit through it. When she finds a bottle labelled "Drink me" she does so and shrinks, but not enough to pass through the door. She then eats a cake labelled "Eat me" and grows larger. She finds a fan which enables her to shrink enough to get through the door to the Beautiful Garden, where she tries to get a dog to play with her. She enters the White Rabbit's tiny house, but suddenly enlarges to her normal size. In order to get out, she uses the fan.
She enters a kitchen, in which there is a cook and a woman holding a baby. She persuades the woman to give her the child and takes the infant outside after the cook starts throwing things. The baby then turns into a pig and squirms out of her grip. The woman turns out to be a duchess. The Duchess's Cheshire Cat appears and disappears a couple of times to Alice and directs her to the Mad Hatter's Mad Tea Party. After a while, she leaves.
The Queen invites Alice to join the royal procession, a parade of marching playing cards and others, headed by the White Rabbit. When Alice unintentionally offends the Queen, the latter summons the executioner. Alice boxes the executioner's ears, then flees when all the playing cards come for her. She wakes up to realise that it was all a dream.
Cast
Actors | Characters |
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May Clark | Alice |
Cecil M. Hepworth | Frog |
Geoffrey Faithfull | Playing Card |
Stanley Faithfull | Playing Card |
Mrs. Margaret Hepworth | White Rabbit / Queen of Hearts |
Norman Whitten | Mad Hatter / Fish |
References
- "Alice in Wonderland (1903)". British Film Institute Screenonline.
- Mills, Ted (31 March 2016). "The First Film Adaptation of Alice in Wonderland (1903)". Open Culture. Retrieved 19 May 2017.
- "Alice in Wonderland 150th anniversary: eight very different film versions". British Film Institute. Retrieved 4 November 2019.
Further reading
- Film History, an introduction (3rd ed.), Kristin Thompson and David Bordwell
- The British Film Catalogue 1895-1970: A Guide to Entertainment Films (1973), Dennis Gifford. Newton Abbot, England: David & Charles Ed.
- Alice in Wonderland 1903 Music by Rodrigo Favela http://vimeo.com/7034619
External links
- Alice in Wonderland on IMDb
- Alice in Wonderland at silentera.com; the full movie can be viewed here (9 minutes, 32 seconds long). The film can also be viewed at the BFI Screenonline site, but only by subscribers; it states the duration is 9 minutes and 35 seconds.