Alice in Wonderland - videos, teasers and stills from filming

All videos, teasers and footage from the filming of the film "Alice in Wonderland"
Alice in Wonderland (1951)
Timing: 1:15 (75 min)
Alice in Wonderland - TMDB rating
7.19/10
6166
Alice in Wonderland - Kinopoisk rating
7.854/10
78672
Alice in Wonderland - IMDB rating
7.3/10
166000

What's left behind the scenes

  • The cartoon is based on Lewis Carroll’s tale “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland” (1865).
  • This film was the first Disney animated feature to display the last names of the voice actors alongside the characters’ names on screen.
  • The project was in development for 10 years, and its production took another 5 years.
  • The dummy was modeled after the actor who voiced him, Ed Wynn.
  • In the scene with the Walrus and the Carpenter, the letter 'R' flashes in the word “March” on the oyster mother’s calendar. This is a reference to an old saying about only eating oysters in months containing the letter 'R'. This saying originates from the fact that in England, the months without the letter 'R' (May, June, July, August) coincide with the hot season, when freshly caught oysters wouldn't last long without refrigeration.
  • During the filming of the mad tea party scenes, Ed Wynn spontaneously came up with the lines that the Mad Hatter delivers while trying to "fix" the White Rabbit's pocket watch. Walt Disney himself observed the filming and instructed the animators to include the lines in the film. They initially objected, citing extraneous noises in the recording, but Disney simply told them that wasn't his problem and left. The sound engineers had a difficult time, but they were able to re-record Wynn's lines and remove all extraneous noises as instructed.
  • Kathryn Beaumont voiced Alice and served as a model for the character for the studio animators. Scenes with Beaumont were filmed in the studio pavilions, and Beaumont was dressed in Alice's dress. For the scene in which the oversized Alice gets stuck in the White Rabbit's house, stagehands constructed a model of the house and placed Beaumont inside it. According to animator Eric Larson, to properly animate Alice's body, they needed to see how it moved while inside the house, so the model had to be disassembled and then reassembled with transparent walls, allowing them to observe Beaumont's body.
  • Originally, the cartoon was intended to be made in the 1930s. Storyboards were created by the talented British artist David Hall. The script was even closer to the original plot than Disney's final version, but this version was rejected as being too frightening. In particular, it included a scene in which the Mad Hatter and the March Hare chase Alice with a knife and scissors, the Cheshire Cat had numerous razor-sharp teeth, and Alice nearly lost her head.
  • In late 1945, English prose writer, science fiction author, novelist, and philosopher Aldous Huxley worked with Walt Disney on early script drafts. Huxley's mother, Julia Arnold, was once one of the girls whom the author of 'Alice's Adventures in Wonderland' photographed and to whom he told stories about Alice. Disney found all of Huxley's ideas too intellectual and refused to use them, and didn't even mention Huxley in the film's credits.
Did you like the film?

© ACMODASI, 2010-2026

All rights reserved.
The materials (trademarks, videos, images and text) contained on this site are the property of their respective owners. It is forbidden to use any materials from this site without prior agreement with their owner.
When copying text and graphic materials (videos, images, text, screenshots of pages) from this site, an active link to the site www.acmodasi.in must necessarily accompany such material.
We are not responsible for any information posted on this site by third parties.