Dull Surprise: Several of her reactions throughout the film are hilariously underwhelmed for example, when she falls down the rabbit hole and calmly calls goodbye to her cat.She then escapes the Queen of Hearts by running away and waking up. Then she avoids being set on fire by shrinking. Damsel out of Distress: When she cries a river after being scared she would be trapped in Wonderland, she saves herself by luckily falling into a bottle.Constantly Curious: In the beginning, as she chases a white rabbit when she finds out he can walk and talk like a human.not to mention, considering all events of the movie took place in one of her dreams. In the real world she's probably considered a bit odd. But even this incarnation of Alice will occasionally display a certain eccentric line of thought, focus on the wrong thing in the wrong situation, or get downright nonsensical. In Wonderland, she's of course the Only Sane Woman - and (perhaps due to her Age Lift) she's less obviously loopy than her book counterpart, as most of her off-the-wall comments and bizarre ideas have been cut. Cloudcuckoolander: Downplayed, especially compared to the book.Butt-Monkey: Trolled by nearly everything and everyone Wonderland can throw at her.By the end of the song, she's crying even harder. Break the Cutie: She tearfully sings "Very Good Advice" when she feels lost and thinks she will never get back home.You wanted a world where everything is nonsense. Be Careful What You Wish For: Okay, Alice.Attack of the 50-Foot Whatever: Due to her sizeshifting, she does this twice to the denizens of Wonderland.However, the animated film adaptations tend to lift her age to 10-12, as evidenced by the physical maturity level contrasts between her book and animated counterparts, as well as her original voice actress being a then-12-year-old girl. Age Lift: The original book series has Alice state her age as seven years old.In the film she accidentally sneezes him out and feels sorry for him. In the original book, she intentionally kicks him out of the chimney. Adaptational Nice Girl: When it comes to Bill the lizard.In all fairness, her getting the poems wrong in the book is implied to be caused by the strangeness of Wonderland muddling her mind, not something she normally does. In the movie, she starts to recite "How Doth the Little Busy Bee" correctly, but the Caterpillar interrupts her to do the wrong version from the book instead. Adaptational Intelligence: In the original book, she tries several times to recite poems but always gets every line wrong.Voiced in Swedish by: Maj-Britt Nilsson (1951), Sanna Nielsen (1998)Ī curious and imaginative young girl and the protagonist of the movie. Voiced in Latin American Spanish by: Teresita Escobar Voiced in French by: Marie-Claire Marty (1951), Séverine Morisot (1974) Voiced by: Kathryn Beaumont (1951-2005), June Foray (1954 album Walt Disney's Mickey Mouse's Birthday Party) Hynden Walch (2005-present), Kat Cressida (in tandem with Kathryn Beaumont)
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