
Thinking her a monster, the Rabbit asks the Dodo to help expel her. While searching for the gloves, Alice finds and eats another cookie and grows giant, getting stuck in the house. Alice tracks the Rabbit to his house he mistakes her for his housemaid, "Mary Ann", and sends her inside to retrieve his gloves. As Alice continues to follow the Rabbit, she encounters numerous characters, including Tweedledum and Tweedledee, who recount the tale of " The Walrus and the Carpenter". She takes another sip from the bottle to shrink again, and rides the empty bottle through the keyhole. Exasperated by these changes of state, she begins to cry and floods the room. She then eats a cookie that causes her to grow excessively. She shrinks to an appropriate height, but has forgotten the key on the table. Upon landing, she finds herself facing a tiny door, whose handle advises drinking from a bottle on a nearby table. Alice follows him into a burrow and plummets down a deep hole.

She spots a passing White Rabbit in a waistcoat, who complains of being late.

In a park in England, a young girl named Alice listens distractedly to her sister's history lesson, and begins daydreaming of a nonsensical world. A sequel to the film, Alice Through the Looking Glass, directed by James Bobin, was released in 2016. Although the film received generally negative critical reviews on its initial release, it has been more positively reviewed over the years.Ī live-action adaptation of Carroll's works and a live-action re-imagining of the story, Alice in Wonderland, directed by Tim Burton, was released in 2010. Its 1974 re-release in theaters proved to be much more successful, leading to subsequent re-releases, merchandising and home video releases.

The film was considered a disappointment on its initial release, therefore was shown on television as one of the first episodes of Disneyland. The film was originally intended to be a live-action/animated film however, Disney decided to make it a fully animated film in 1946. Walt Disney first tried to adapt Alice into a feature-length animated film in the 1930s and revived the idea in the 1940s. The film features the voices of Kathryn Beaumont as Alice, Sterling Holloway as the Cheshire Cat, Verna Felton as the Queen of Hearts, and Ed Wynn as the Mad Hatter. The thirteenth release of Disney's animated features, the film premiered in London on July 26, 1951, and in New York City on July 28, 1951. Alice in Wonderland is a 1951 American animated musical fantasy comedy film produced by Walt Disney Productions and based on the Alice books by Lewis Carroll.
