Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (1991) (Nostalgia Critic)

(Channel Awesome logo is shown. The NC intro is shown. After the intro, NC sitting in his desk)

NC: Hello, I’m the Nostalgia Critic. I remember it so you don’t have to. Remember how I did those different versions (Alice in Wonderland) such as a Disney movie. Aside from that early review...

(a briefly review clip of Top 11 Saddest Moments is shown)

Alice: But I very seldom follow it! (sobs)

NC: And remember this one...

(a briefly review clip of End of Days with any footage clips shown of Alice in Wonderland when the Dormouse runs across the table screaming: "CAT!" which Mad Hatter and March Hare trying to catch the dormouse and the bum-priest grabbing things in End of Days, with people screaming merge together.)

NC: And maybe this one...

(a briefly review of The Magic Voyage when the seagull trying to catches Pico with a NOISIER footage clip shown of Alice in Wonderland where The March Hare eyes move back and forth, saying "MAD WATCH! MAD WATCH! MAD WATCH!")

NC: And I've been tricked where this movie might be difference, but the public domain video using it yet. So, that footage appears...

(a briefly clip of Fällan* where the footage, Alice in Wonderland, appeared to be shown on the TV in the background during the dinner with the family scene.)


 * Note: The title is Fällan (1975) translates "The Trap" in English.

NC: (vo) ...from the forgotten 1975 Swedish film (The Trap), where Alice enters a room on TV in the background during the dinner scene. I despite where Disney had enough to control the foreign P.D. (public domain) movie yet.

NC: And so, I think this one is a god-awful Disney remake, directed by Tim Burton with...

(a briefly clip is shown a review of Disney and Tim Burton's Alice in Wonderland'' where Malice and NC thinks...)

Malice: Oh, but I loved that cartoon!

NC: (sighs) No, not that one!

(back to NC sitting in the chair)

NC: And yet, also, remember what I have an another one is the god-awful Care Bears movie. But you're so special, didn't you?

(a clip of Care Bears in Wonderland, Alice is shown)

Alice: I'm just not special.

NC: Yeah, but I don't care what the hell happened but you SUCK!

(the original book, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass images is shown at multiple times)

NC: (vo) This book was only in the public domain, it means that anyone can use or adapt the story for their own purposes. But you can freely use any text quotes and illustrations from the author's (Lewis Carroll) work with these characters.

NC: But if they can use a different version which is not like a Disney version which they could see an underrated anime approach yet.

(the title Manga Sekai Mukashibanashi and the clips are shown as NC speaks)

NC: (vo) To be premise, the anime version was a translated in Japanese, "Manga Fairy Tales of the World" (translate Manga Sekai Mukashibanashi). This is a forgotten shown where any produced to directing it by Madhouse Studio (aka Madhouse Inc.), which an anthology series based on fairy tales and classic stories, produced by Dax International. Every tale is produced by a different staff who gave each episode their own distinctive style.

(a images of Osamu Dezaki, Akio Sugino, Yoshifumi Kondō, Yoshiaki Kawajiri, Toyoo Ashida, Shuichi Seki, Mariko Miyagi and Akira Nagoya are shown as NC speaks)

NC: (vo) They have among the various animated directors who worked on the series. The narration is provided by Mariko Miyagi, who also voices all the characters in the series along.

(back to more clips are shown as NC speaks)

NC: (vo) This series aired in Japan on TBS (aka Tokyo Broadcasting System Television, Inc.) from 70s. The series features adaptations of the public domain histories such as fairy tales, legends, literature classics and famous characters biographies. It consists of 127 episodes, each one combining two different stories, for a total of 181 story arcs which run for 10 minutes each, except for 13 mid-series stories that covered an entire half-hour episode. Some story arcs in the second half of the series are told over several episodes, as in the case of A Little Princess lasting 11 episodes, and Les Misérables, which lasted 13 episodes for a total running time of 120 minutes. The series was also released in several other countries and selected episodes of the show were released during the '80s in English-speaking countries by different companies under various titles. They had released it under the titles Tales of Magic and Merlin's Cave, while another version was titled Wonderful, Wonderful Tales From Around the World. Some episodes were adapted by Astro Boy's pioneer (a picture of Fred Ladd is shown) and broadcast by archival educational company (BFA Educational Media) on Paramount's CBS as single half-hour specials. And this is not how they didn't seen it yet.

NC: Unless, of course, they got a mixing up where TMS gotta do make a god-awful mess-up. And I just wanna talk about Alice's Adventures in Wonderland which they have one of the strangest and most bizarre approach a first Disney-like depiction remake.

(the title is shown and the clips are shown while "The Clock Tower" and "This Dark Chamber" by Alan Silvestri plays in the background)

NC (vo) Unlike this 1951 animated version, this title is so wrongful,* but this scenes might be dark and chaos, mixing up to own techniques for a public domain stories to life. This film, to be fair, still produced at TMS Entertainment, who brought the perchance dreams to puke of all messy, (a poster of Little Nemo is shown) teamed up with Madhouse Production, who that creates (shown on a TMS/Madhouse version of Treasure Island) a supernatural pirate island (shown on a TMS/Madhouse version of Nobody's Boy Remi) and a homeless child adventure, presenting a story about a young girl discovered an imaginary world whose some different stories are going to mixing up to a epic darkest and freakish world ever. This is a fairy tale with the darker and weirdest elements, most likely that same episode. Still the animation is nicely and those same designs are decent which that one (a shown of a Gakken Japan cover...) is the forgotten Gakken approach at the same time. It started production in 1988, but was released in 1991. It went through few directors, few writers, several animators and several idea men. Even it's recalling the pleasant production as “The worst experience of his professional career.” Had it been released after Little Nemo, it probably would've done better. There's a lot of mixing-up that simply fit a fairy tale come true. But maybe there's an awesome cliché to that, too.


 * Note: This title may be wrong was "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland" but it might be changed to "Alice Liddell" in Japanese.

NC: Well, let's everything on my command and take a freakish look!

(A shortly briefly clip of Care Bears in Wonderland when Alice screaming in horror silently, and then there's what she's screaming at: the wizard's mouth has gaped out into an impossibly distended set of jaws that barely seem connected, with a mass of twisted fangs framing the gaping space, sitting underneath a huge, bugged out, almost insectile pair of blank white eyes.)

NC: (scared) Jesus! That freaky!

(the film starts with Tokyo Movie Shinsha logo in the worldwide; for example, on the black background, at the center, there was a small TV tube with the letters "tms" (In an abstract cursive font) on it without any white words: "TOKYO MOVIE SHINSHA CO., LTD." below the tube. Then the title appears...)

NC: (vo) It starts off with a logo without letters appears in white at the background; then it appears, it may be WRONG title! Try it use a different title... (changed to "Alice" from "Něco z Alenky" title appears) Nope. Not this one. Try it, if your dare. (changed to "Alicja" title appears in 1982) No, you goddamn it. Try it appea-! (changed to "Alice" title appears in 1990) NO! Try the title appea-! (changed to a miniseries title "Alice" appears) GODDAMN IT! Try and use it appear! (changed to "Alice Liddell" in Japanese; back to the movie... a Japanese print version like this?) Oh, that's much better.

NC: I'd never noticed that title may be changes what E.A. games got slasher this shit. (an image of American McGee's Alice and Alice: Madness Returns is shown in the left and right)

(the scene starts with the depth of the forest, the chirping of the birds lead them to the place...)

NC: (vo) So, after that title appeared; this scene starts with the depth of the forest...

NC: Well, that music introduces a Disney film (Bambi) with that scene can be homage like...

NC: (vo; as Donald Novis, singing "Love is A Song That Never Ends") Whole world's gone fetish and tragic... (as a gunshot is heard, Man shoots Bambi's mother at off-screen) -

''This article is a fan stub. You can help Idea's Channel Awesome by expanding it.''