JamesG
02-26-2010, 07:05 PM
U.K. Movie Reviews: Alice In Wonderland
British critics, ordinarily a wittily jaded lot, are grinning like Cheshire cats over Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland, which had its world premiere in London Thursday night.
Kate Muir in the London Times calls it "a 3-D epic for the next generation," while observing that Burton takes liberties with the original characters and plot with mixed results.
"In all, a fantastic film that gets curiouser and curiouser," she concludes.
Several critics suggested that the first half of the movie is virtually magical but that it becomes more formulaic as it goes on.
As Geoffrey Macnab writes in the London Independent: "The disappointment is that Burton's visual firepower and vivid characterization are being used in the service of a narrative that grows increasingly one-dimensional and simple-minded. By the final showdown, we could be back in the world of Oz or in the latest Narnia adventure."
Several critics compare Alice with James Cameron's Avatar, including Mark Monahan in the Telegraph, who writes that the movie is "gloriously realized: not entirely unlike Avatar's world, in fact. It is just as beautiful, but more somber (in that oh-so-distinctive knotted, gnarly Burton manner), and somehow rather more charming.
Even the most cynical grown-up will beam with pleasure, too, to see all those familiar characters rendered with such care, and with such respect for John Tenniel's original illustrations."
-IMDB News
British critics, ordinarily a wittily jaded lot, are grinning like Cheshire cats over Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland, which had its world premiere in London Thursday night.
Kate Muir in the London Times calls it "a 3-D epic for the next generation," while observing that Burton takes liberties with the original characters and plot with mixed results.
"In all, a fantastic film that gets curiouser and curiouser," she concludes.
Several critics suggested that the first half of the movie is virtually magical but that it becomes more formulaic as it goes on.
As Geoffrey Macnab writes in the London Independent: "The disappointment is that Burton's visual firepower and vivid characterization are being used in the service of a narrative that grows increasingly one-dimensional and simple-minded. By the final showdown, we could be back in the world of Oz or in the latest Narnia adventure."
Several critics compare Alice with James Cameron's Avatar, including Mark Monahan in the Telegraph, who writes that the movie is "gloriously realized: not entirely unlike Avatar's world, in fact. It is just as beautiful, but more somber (in that oh-so-distinctive knotted, gnarly Burton manner), and somehow rather more charming.
Even the most cynical grown-up will beam with pleasure, too, to see all those familiar characters rendered with such care, and with such respect for John Tenniel's original illustrations."
-IMDB News