Alice Through the Looking Glass

1.50
    Alice Through the Looking Glass
    2016

    Synopsis

    Alice Kingsleigh returns to Underland and faces a new adventure in saving the Mad Hatter.

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    Cast

    • Mia WasikowskaAlice Kingsleigh
    • Johnny DeppMad Hatter
    • Anne HathawayWhite Queen
    • Helena Bonham CarterRed Queen
    • Alan RickmanBlue Caterpillar (voice)
    • Michael SheenWhite Rabbit (voice)
    • Sacha Baron CohenTime
    • Andrew ScottAddison Bennett
    • Rhys IfansZanik Hightopp
    • Timothy SpallBayard (voice)

    Recommendations

    • 67

      Entertainment Weekly

      For better or worse, Looking Glass loses none of the first film’s muchness, with Bobin mimicking both his predecessor’s wildly saturated style and his general disregard for plot and substance.
    • 60

      Total Film

      Bobin’s attempt to fill Tim Burton’s shoes generates a lively but ersatz sequel that only truly ticks when Baron Cohen and Bonham Carter are around.
    • 60

      Empire

      Wasikowska gives it her all, and Cohen shines, but while this is a better film than the first, that was a low bar to reach.
    • 40

      The Hollywood Reporter

      Depp is convincingly vulnerable and forlorn, all while maintaining the Hatter’s otherworldly eccentricity, and Wasikowska has the requisite grit. But Alice’s mission feels as manufactured as the story’s whatsits and doodads, as Bobin struggles to infuse make-believe with emotion.
    • 40

      Variety

      The problem with “Alice” is its lack of narrative imagination.
    • 40

      The Guardian

      The studio has managed to deliver a follow-up that’s even weaker than its predecessor. In crude terms: Alice’s second trip to Underland wasn’t worth the wait.
    • 35

      TheWrap

      What Alice Through the Looking Glass constantly underscores, however, is that even the greatest cinema trickery serves little purpose without stories and characters to support. The pictures are pretty (or scary or awe-inspiring) but they ultimately don’t mean anything.
    • 33

      Hitfix

      I think it is precisely because the technical work by everyone from James Bobin down is so good that I find myself infuriated by the film. So much muscle, so much effort, so much raw talent on display, and all in service of demographic-and-merchandise-driven garbage that sullies the name of the source material.

    Loved by

    • Rui Pinto