the most beautiful bit of psychedelia: Ralph Steadman's Alice

Mar 07, 2010 09:17

What: Illustrator Ralph Steadman's acid-trippy version of Lewis Carroll's classics Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass, first published in 1967 by Dennis Dobson of London, then alongside The Hunting of the Snark as The Complete Alice in the definitive 1986 Jonathan Cape version.

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bit of psychedelia

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The only Alice that matters? :P anonymous March 7 2010, 23:42:53 UTC
John Tenniel is doing cartwheels in his grave right now. :P

Sorry, but I'm of the opinion that remakes really have to do something special to earn a place over the original. Kubrick's The Shining may be a good movie, but it's practically The Shining in name only.

I get that in your eyes, it IS that special. But just being trippy only makes me want to read over my Annotated Alice again. :P

- Rei

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Re: The only Alice that matters? :P selinker March 7 2010, 23:55:41 UTC
OK, OK, I'll give you that. How about the only Alice after 1900 that matters?

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Re: The only Alice that matters? :P anonymous March 8 2010, 00:32:11 UTC
Sure, apart from Annotated (and even then is it technically the same work or not?).

Certainly I agree that the Disney version is an abomination before God, and I can't think of many other adaptations that are worth a tinker's damn. (The only possible exceptions, which I can't think of right now, are ones that don't even pretend to be following the original and do something fresh. 'Course, doing THAT well is just as hard as adapting the original.)

- Rei

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Re: The only Alice that matters? :P selinker March 8 2010, 00:40:04 UTC
I don't think the animated version is an abomination. It's just not my Alice. I look forward to seeing the Tim Burton version tomorrow, as I expect my friends at Disney did a great job with it.

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