Alice in Wonderland
United Kingdom
1903
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10687 Views
Alice in Wonderland (1903), the first-ever film version of Lewis Carroll’s tale, has recently been restored by the BFI National Archive and premiered at a celebration of the history of the classic story at the British Library.
Made just 37 years after the novel’s publication and eight years after the birth of cinema, the first film adaptation was directed by Cecil Hepworth and Percy Stow, and was based on Sir John Tenniel’s original illustrations. Hepworth cast his wife as the Red Queen, and he himself appears as the Frog Footman. His production secretary May Clark played Alice, and even the family cat and dog got in on the act. The cat played the Cheshire Cat, and the dog would go on to become the first authentic British film star (canine or otherwise) to have his name in the credit of a film when he headlined the pioneering chase film Rescued By Rover in 1905.
Although originally running just 12 minutes, Alice in Wonderland was the longest film produced in England at that time and represented a major investment for the pioneering Hepworth Studios. However, despite its historical importance, it was almost lost for good, and just one incomplete print is known to survive.
—BFI National Archive
http://www.bfi.org.uk/nftva/work/alice.html
'Severely damaged' is not overstating it, but I'm happy to get to see it none the less. Stow and Hepworth saved the best for last; that deck of cards was brilliant!
By and large, the biggest problem with most adaptations of Lewis Carroll’s fable is people’s tendency to read too much into it. I guess it could be said that he so effectively created absurdity that… read review
I find it utterly fascinating to look at a piece of film history that has survived for over 100 years. Thank you, MUBI/The Auteurs, for making it availiable to us and thank you BFI for restoring it… read review
British film pioneer Cecil M. Hepworth (“Rescued by Rover” & “The
Egg-Laying Man”) teamed-up with fellow film pioneer Percy Stow for the
first big screen adaptation of the classic children’s… read review
Before going to see the masterpiece by Tim Burton which opened recently. I had the opportunity to watch the first film produced about the history written by Charles Lutwidge in 1865. The 1903 film… read review