Alice
In Wonderland, Tim Burton’s 2010 take on Lewis Carroll’s 19th-century
surreal classic, was generally given the thumbs down by the critics, but a
global box office take of $1.025bm for Disney, for an outlay of around $200m, ensured that
it was a success – and that a sequel was likely.
Now,
in Alice Through the Looking Glass, Burton has returned to Carroll.
This time, though, he’s one of the producers, with the directing reins handed
to James Bobin and Linda Woolverton returning for scriptwriting duties.
The
first film was messy, but still fun.
This
is messier still and has been roundly trashed by the critics, but still has
merits – although they’re perhaps harder to find.
Like
the first film, it’s “based on” Carroll’s characters, with Alice as an adult.
It
opens three years after the last film, with Alice – now the captain of her late
father’s ship – steering it away from Chinese pirates and back home to Blighty
after a three-year voyage.
This
fantastic escape gives time to re-establish that she has lost none of her
feistiness or bravery, and that ‘impossible’ remains, for Alice, a dirty word.
But
once back at home, all is not well, and she finds herself plunged back into a
fight to retain her chance for adventure and wonder against conventional
expectations and pressures.
Just
in time, Absolem the butterfly (formerly the caterpillar), reappears and leads
her to the mirror that offers a door back to Wonderland.
And
once there, Alice discovers that the Hatter is dying – and that only she can
help.
Absolem
is, once again, voiced by Alan Rickman – his last performance before his
untimely death at the beginning of this year, and it brings a lump to the
throat to hear his voice.
At
the heart of this film is the idea of time – you can’t get it back – and how
you must live every day to its fullest extent and make sure you never live to
regret any bad relationships with your loved ones.
And
if that sounds clunky, it’s because it is: twee, sentimental and hamfisted.
Keeping the world running |
Some
of it – perhaps especially not being able to tamper with time and the dangers
if you do – are laid on with a JCB: and for goodness sake, do the writers think none of us have ever seen Star
Trek?
I
love the characters and I loved how the first film developed them. But even
though it’s good to see so many of these cinematic friends again, it’s hard to
care much about what happens to them – especially as the bulk of the film
drags.
We
get backplots aplenty, explaining how the Red Queen became the nasty character
we’re familiar with (and how she got her big head) and how the Hatter became,
well ... the Hatter.
Dysfunctional
families, eh?
And
there is Time himself, in the persona of Sacha Baron Cohen, trying to prevent
Alice from breaking time itself.
Now,
as I said, there are compensations.
In
the last quarter, it eventually gains real pace and a sense of tension and even
passion. Finally, you are drawn into caring what happens. But it takes a long,
long time.
If
there is a sense that Johnny Depp is pretty much treading water as the Hatter,
Mia Wasikowska turns in another enjoyable and solid (if not Earth-shattering)
performance as Alice.
Anne
Hathaway’s White Queen is as vague as before, but as we start to understand the
reasons for the relationship breakdown between her and her sister, the Red
Queen, the contrast becomes more understandable.
As
for the Red Queen, Helena Bonham Carter returns and adds some much-needed
energy to proceedings.
Baron
Cohen, once over an initial bit of clowning, is actually very good.
Incidentally,
how many times in mainstream Western cinema has a scene been played between
actors with three names each – Helena Bonham Carter and Sacha Baron Cohen?
We get a brief cameo from Sherlock’s Moriarty, Andrew Scott, who seems to have cast in order to bring that character to this film.
Wilkins tries to work out how to make things right |
And
I did like Wilkins, Time’s long-suffering, robotic butler – played by Muppets
puppeteer Matt Vogel, with Toby Jones voicing, although why a character with
such an English name should look and sound German is a mystery.
The
biggest compensation is that it is visually superb – dazzling in places, not
least in the time-travel shots and in Time’s castle, where there is also a
rich, blue and gold palette that brings to mind Martin Scorsese’s Hugo.
And
the visuals are not harmed by being viewed in 3D: having only seen my first 3D
film 10 months ago, I’m certainly getting value from those glasses!
Alice
Through the Looking Glass is ultimately disappointing. In some ways, having
Burton’s name attached actually adds to the disappointment, because we expect such great things from him – and for a reason. But then again, whatever you may read or hear from the critics, it isn't some sort of cinematic version of the Titanic either.
And like its predecessor, it’s probably a fair prediction to say that it’s hardly likely to be flop.
And like its predecessor, it’s probably a fair prediction to say that it’s hardly likely to be flop.