Alice in Wonderland (1949)
Reference View | Change View
- Not Rated
- 1h 16min
- Adventure, Family
- 26 Jul 1951 (USA)
- Movie
This exceptional theatrical version of Lewis Carroll's 1865 classic features a combination of live characters and stop-motion animation.
Director:
Writers:
Photos and Videos
Complete, Cast awaiting verification
Stephen Murray | ... |
Lewis Carroll / The Knave of Hearts (voice)
|
|
Ernest Milton | ... |
The Vice Chancellor / The White Rabbit (voice)
|
|
Pamela Brown | ... |
The Queen of Hearts (voice)
|
|
Felix Aylmer | ... |
Dr. Liddel / The Cheshire Cat (voice)
|
|
David Reed | ... |
The Prince Consort / The King of Hearts (voice)
(as David Read)
|
|
Carol Marsh | ... |
Alice
|
|
Joyce Grenfell | ... |
Ugly Duchess / Dormouse
|
|
Jack Train | ... |
Puppet Character (voice)
|
|
Peter Bull | ... |
Puppet Character (voice)
|
|
Ivan Staff | ... |
Puppet Character (voice)
|
|
Claude Hulbert | ... |
Puppet Character (voice)
|
|
Raymond Bussières | ... |
The Tailor / The Mad Hatter (voice)
(as Raymond Bussieres)
|
|
Rest of cast listed alphabetically: | |||
Nathalie Alexeeff | ... |
Bit Part (uncredited)
|
|
Joan Dale | ... |
Edith Liddel (uncredited)
|
|
Elizabeth Henson | ... |
Lorina Liddel (uncredited)
|
|
Adele Leigh | ... |
Alice Liddell (uncredited) (singingVoice)
|
Directed by
Dallas Bower |
Written by
Lewis Carroll | ... | (novel "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland") |
Henry Myers | ... | (screenplay) & |
Albert E. Lewin | ... | (screenplay) (as Albert Lewin) & |
Edward Eliscu | ... | (screenplay) |
Maurice Aubergé | ... | (writer: French version) (uncredited) |
Maurice Griffe | ... | (writer: French version) (uncredited) |
Produced by
Lou Bunin | ... | producer |
J. Arthur Rank | ... | producer (uncredited) |
Music by
Sol Kaplan |
Cinematography by
Gerald Gibbs | ... | (photography) |
Claude Renoir | ... | (photography) |
Editing by
Marity Cléris | ... | (uncredited) |
Denys de La Patellière | ... | (uncredited) |
Editorial Department
Inman Hunter | ... | supervising film editor |
Jacqueline Thiédot | ... | assistant editor (uncredited) |
Production Design by
Bernyce Polifka | ... | (as Bernice Polifka) |
Art Direction by
Irving Block | ||
René Bertrand | ... | (uncredited) |
Jacques Douy | ... | (uncredited) |
Henri Ménessier | ... | (uncredited) |
Costume Design by
Florence Bunin | ... | (costumes) |
Makeup Department
Florence Bunin | ... | coiffure / makeup artist (uncredited) / hair stylist (uncredited) |
Production Management
Sam Fisher | ... | unit manager |
Benny Rubin | ... | production director (as Ben W. Rubin) |
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
Marc Maurette | ... | associate director |
Vincent Permane | ... | assistant director |
Florence Bunin | ... | second assistant director (uncredited) |
Lou Bunin | ... | associate director (uncredited) |
Pomme Pernette | ... | first assistant director (uncredited) |
Art Department
Russell Bernstein | ... | model designer (uncredited) |
Jacquez Lecos | ... | model sculptor (uncredited) |
Sound Department
Jacques Carrère | ... | sound recordist (uncredited) |
Peter Davies | ... | re-recording mixer (uncredited) |
Bill Matthews | ... | re-recording mixer (uncredited) |
Gordon K. McCallum | ... | re-recording mixer (uncredited) |
Charles Tasto | ... | sound recordist (uncredited) |
Special Effects by
Irving Block | ... | special effects |
Lloyd Knechtel | ... | special effects assistant |
Camera and Electrical Department
Gilbert Chain | ... | camera operator (uncredited) |
Walter Limot | ... | still photographer (uncredited) |
Walter Wottitz | ... | camera operator (uncredited) |
Animation Department
Richard Bernstein | ... | model engineer (as R. Bernstein) |
Erwin Broner | ... | animation photographer |
Lillian Davis | ... | model maker |
Oscar Fessler | ... | puppet animator |
Gene Fleury | ... | layout designer (as Eugene Fleury) |
William King | ... | puppet animator |
Ben Radin | ... | puppet animator |
Herrmann Silversher | ... | model maker (as H. Silversher) |
Art Babbitt | ... | animator (uncredited) |
Denys de La Patellière | ... | animator (uncredited) |
Music Department
Edward Eliscu | ... | additional lyrics |
Ernest Irving | ... | conductor: The Philharmonia Orchestra |
Henry Myers | ... | additional lyrics |
The Philharmonia Orchestra | ... | orchestra |
Stephen Dalby | ... | music editor (uncredited) |
Script and Continuity Department
Anne Deeley | ... | continuity secretary (as Ann Deely) |
Additional Crew
Benjamin Berg | ... | technical director |
Roland Petit | ... | choreographer (uncredited) |
Production Companies
- Lou Bunin Productions
- Punch Films (II)
- The Rank Organisation
- Union Générale Cinématographique (UGC) (in cooperation with)
Distributors
- Electric Pictures / Contemporary Films (United Kingdom) (theatrical)
- L'Alliance Générale de Distribution Cinématographique (1949) (France) (theatrical)
- DTP Entertainment (2011) (Germany) (DVD)
- Edel Media & Entertainment (2013) (Germany) (DVD) (Starmovie)
- Interglobal Home Video (1989) (Canada) (VHS)
- Souvaine Selective Pictures (1951) (United States)
Special Effects
Other Companies
- Ealing Studios (music recording)
- The London Symphony Orchestra (LSO) (music performed by)
Storyline
Plot Keywords | |
Genres | |
Parents Guide | Add content advisory for parents » |
Certification |
|
Additional Details
Also Known As |
|
Runtime |
|
Country | |
Language | |
Color | |
Aspect Ratio |
|
Sound Mix | |
Filming Locations |
Did You Know?
Trivia | Carol Marsh insisted on doing some of the most difficult sequences herself, when a double would have been permissible. Falling down the rabbit hole to Wonderland entailed a hair-raising thirty-foot drop into a net. A famous French trapeze artist, Mile Roselie, showed her how to make the fall, but Carol completed the scene with bruised knees, scratched legs and six ruined pairs of stockings. Carol found the most difficult scene was the one where she slides down an enormous table leg. It was an almost perpendicular drop, and Carol admits she was very frightened while doing it. See more » |
Goofs | In the end credits Joyce Grenfell is listed as 'Joyce Gronfell'. See more » |
Movie Connections | Featured in The Best of Stop Motion - The First Features (2014). See more » |
Crazy Credits | Carol Marsh's on-screen credit reads, "and by arrangement with J. Arthur Rank: Carol Marsh as Alice". See more » |
Quotes |
Opening Crawl:
Nearly a century ago, a professor at Oxford, Charles Dodgson - better known as Lewis Carroll - wrote a simple story, a fascinating story, called "Alice in Wonderland". But, perhaps the story was not so simple, because you see that Lewis Carroll modelled his creatures of Wonderland on the foibles of real people. The Cheshire Cat, it is told, is really a Dean of Oxford; the Queen of Hearts, the Queen; the Mad Hatter, a tailor; the White Rabbits, the Chancellor; and so on. See more » |