Lewis Carroll fans, rejoice. The have been released and if they’re any signal of what’s to come, we can’t deferred for the movie’s premiere on March 5, 2010. The film, a live-action/CGI hybrid, is fully stacked in terms of talent: Johnny Depp, Helena Bonham Carter, Alan Rickman, Michael Sheen and Anne Hathaway all be suitable for their Jabberwockian debut, with Mia Wasikowska of "In Treatment" glory playing Alice. Instead of a sheer retelling of the amusing children’s tale, however, Burton’s side posits itself as a darker, surrealist sequel. Now 17, Alice falls down the rabbit pierce a decade after her initial jaunt, but can’t think back on being there the elementary time.
The assorted characters are hoping she’ll recall enough to domestic them take-over (against what? We don’t know, but we’re enthusiastic to summon out). (USA Today has a. ) Burton’s untimely work, such as "The Nightmare Before Christmas," "Big Fish" and "Edward Scissorhands," all infuse just enough amusing joy into unpropitious tales, so the interplay of brilliant and black elements is to be expected in the upcoming "Alice." To quotation the Walrus from the book, the point has come.
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