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Alice Through the Looking Glass
Sequel to Alice journey to wonderland, she slips through a mirror and makes her way back to the whimsical world to save the Mad Hatter.
7 November 1950, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK
3 August 1936, West Bowling, Bradford, Yorkshire, England, UK
16 June 1977
6 July 1950, Maidenhead, Berkshire, England, UK
1943, England, UK
13 October 1971, Hammersmith, London, England, UK
30 July 1944, Bovingdon, Hertfordshire, England, UK
6 October 1970, Kansas City, Kansas, USA
January 09, 2017
Alice Through The Looking Glass is as unnecessary as you expect it to be.January 01, 2017
Curiously lacking a sense of the 'uncommon nonsense' and freakish fun of the source novel, Alice Through The Looking Glass falls short of its potential.May 27, 2016
Burton had the right idea sitting this one out; one trip to "Wonderland" was plenty.December 31, 2016
Overall, the cartoonish CGI overwhelms, lacking the sense of awe we saw recently in Disney's far superior The Jungle Book.January 20, 2017
Special effects spectacular.December 31, 2016
This movie takes the curiosities of Wonderland and turns them into a plasticized theme park.May 27, 2016
It's an achievement of sorts, but it's worlds away from the poignant lunacy of the Lewis Carroll books.January 03, 2017
No doubt the film will serve nicely as a passing amusement for the kids on a wet weekend, but overall it is a disappointing step-down for Disney's live action output.May 27, 2016
As Lewis Carroll should have said: Efficiency is no substitute for enchantment.May 27, 2016
A solid kids' movie in the old style. One with something to say about something real - family and time- and a willingness to admit consequences, even as it serves up goofy humor, mild thrills, and slippy-slidey accents from slumming stars.May 27, 2016
I don't remember the last time I saw actors more dispirited and bored than in Alice Through the Looking Glass.May 27, 2016
This sprawling tale trades yet again on cultural affection for Alice, the Hatter and the Red Queen without incorporating them into a story or a design that can stand on its own feet.