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> Alice Attraverso Lo Specchio a.k.a. Alice in Wonderland 2, Walt Disney Pictures
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messaggio 3/11/2015, 20:12
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Alice Through the Looking Glass, il terzo assaggio del trailer!



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messaggio 4/11/2015, 23:32
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Alice Through the Looking Glass: ancora uno sneak peek dal trailer

https://twitter.com/DisneyStudios/status/661921160091734016


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messaggio 5/11/2015, 15:45
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Nuovo trailer



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messaggio 5/11/2015, 17:35
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Trailer in Italiano



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messaggio 5/11/2015, 19:02
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Alice Attraverso lo Specchio: il Cappellaio Matto, la Regina Rossa e il Tempo in tre artwork inediti!

Parlando a Entertainment Weekly, la produttrice Suzanne Todd ha spiegato come è nata l’idea di un sequel di Alice in Wonderland:

La storia non si è palesata immediatamente davanti a noi. Ci abbiamo messo molto tempo a trovare l’idea giusta, un’idea che interessasse tutti, e cioè quella di giocare con il concetto di tempo.

Protagonista del film sarà il Tempo stesso, un personaggio mezzo orologio e mezzo umano interpretato da Sacha Baron Cohen:

È veramente antipatico, per come si comporta. Ha l’abilità di muoversi avanti e indietro nel tempo utilizzando un arnese noto come cromosfera che vogliono tutti: Alice ne ha bisogno, ma soprattutto a Regina Rossa. […] Parte della sfida per il cast è stato star dietro a Sacha! Per loro era come dover correre contro un esperto maratoneta!







EW / BT

http://www.ew.com/article/2015/11/05/alice...b979a075d955341


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messaggio 5/11/2015, 21:28
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Il trailer è spettacolare!!!


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-kekkomon-
messaggio 6/11/2015, 8:28
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CITAZIONE (veu @ 5/11/2015, 21:28) *
Il trailer è spettacolare!!!

Vero vero clapclap.gif
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nicolino
messaggio 6/11/2015, 21:19
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Chi è la doppiatrice di Alice? Ovviamente fanno le cose senza senso: tutti i doppiatori del primo capitolo riconfermati (almeno in questo trailer), tranne che per la protagonista.
Mi sembrerebbe Joy Saltarelli ma non ne sono certo.
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Capitano Amelia
messaggio 6/11/2015, 22:45
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CITAZIONE (nicolino @ 6/11/2015, 21:19) *
Chi è la doppiatrice di Alice? Ovviamente fanno le cose senza senso: tutti i doppiatori del primo capitolo riconfermati (almeno in questo trailer), tranne che per la protagonista.
Mi sembrerebbe Joy Saltarelli ma non ne sono certo.

Il fatto che non vi sia la doppiatrice del primo capitolo nel trailer non significa per forza che ella non tornerà di sicuro ma potrebbe anche essere che non era disponibile a doppiarlo: è capitato già altre volte che in trailer di "saghe" vi furono doppiatori provvisori che sostituivano gli altri effettivi ma nel film tornavano questi ultimi e non quelli provvisori... rolleyes.gif


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Grazie Simba !

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nicolino
messaggio 7/11/2015, 0:15
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Hai ragione, e spero che la tua tesi sia corretta...
ma io sospetto che vogliano cambiarla di proposito, dato che Letizia Ciampa ha già doppiato la protagonista del live-action di quest'anno.
E, sebbene sia un po' presto per pensarci, quasi sicuramente doppierà anche Belle nel live-action dell'anno successivo al nuovo Alice (se così non fosse, sarebbe il primo film in cui la Watson non viene doppiata dalla Ciampa).

In questo modo avremmo tre protagoniste, in tre anni consecutivi, con la stessa voce.
Se Alice non viene doppiata dalla Ciampa invece, almeno si salta un anno.


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Capitano Amelia
messaggio 7/11/2015, 9:53
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Personalmente dubito che possano prestare caso al fatto che ci sia una preponderanza da parte della Ciampa nel doppiare le protagoniste dei live-action: ho già notato che normalmente i non esperti non prestano particolare alle voci mentre seguono qualcosa, a meno che qualcuno non glielo faccia notare, e quindi non si pongono il problema. Però, nell'eventualità che facciano così, preferirei che l'abbinamento salti per "La bella e la bestia", visto che io preferisco che il doppiatore (compreso il talent) torni per una questione di continuità.


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Grazie Simba !

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messaggio 7/11/2015, 11:43
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In questo trailer si nota un deciso cambio di stile e di design rispetto a Burton... per ora sospendo il giudizio


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messaggio 7/11/2015, 17:13
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Bel trailer! E guardate che è sempre la Ciampa che la doppia anche qui.
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messaggio 7/11/2015, 20:44
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Alice Attraverso lo Specchio: anche Anne Hathaway e Mia Wasikowska hanno i loro character poster





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veu
messaggio 9/11/2015, 23:51
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Sono spettacolari questi poster, specie quello del Cappellaio, di Alice e della Regina bianca


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Pan
messaggio 3/2/2016, 22:41
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Due nuove clip:





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Pan
messaggio 23/2/2016, 2:03
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Nuovo trailer:



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messaggio 26/2/2016, 23:27
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Figo!
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veu
messaggio 26/2/2016, 23:49
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Sembra molto bello.


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GasGas
messaggio 14/3/2016, 11:13
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Sarà stupendo avere una saga con il titolo del primo capitolo ALICE IN WONDERLAND e il titolo del secondo capitolo ALICE ATTRAVERSO LO SPECCHIO.
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messaggio 29/3/2016, 22:37
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Dal sito Collider, intervista a Mia Wasikowska:

Mia Wasikowska on Playing a Classic Heroine in 'Alice Through the Looking Glass'

Wasikowska says Alice will be a more proactive character in the second film, which opens May 27th.

Mia Wasikowska reprises the iconic role of Alice in Disney’s all-new fantasy adventure, Alice Through the Looking Glass, the exciting follow-up to Tim Burton’s Alice in Wonderland directed by James Bobin. Her character returns to the magical world of Underland and travels back in time to rescue the Mad Hatter (Johnny Depp). Based on the beloved stories by Lewis Carroll, the sequel has a lighter touch and is less dark than the first film. Screenwriter Linda Woolverton has crafted a strong female character that’s on a very personal journey. The cast and unforgettable characters from the original film join exciting new characters played by Sacha Baron Cohen and Rhys Ifans.

At the early press day for the film, Wasikowska talked about playing a classic female heroine, why she was more comfortable working in the world of green screen this time around, how Bobin brought a different perspective on the world and pushed the characters to engage more emotionally, why it was fun to play a more proactive character and do more scenes with people than was possible in the first film, the cool dynamic between Alice and the character of Time (Cohen), how Colleen Atwood’s brilliant costumes helped inform her character, her memorable scene on the Chronosphere with Depp and Anne Hathaway, and why Alice’s story is so powerful.

In the story, three years have passed. How is Alice different in this movie?

MIA WASIKOWSKA: In the first one, she was quite uncomfortable, and a little bit awkward, and was very much finding her way. In this one, she’s just spent the past few years traveling and being the captain of a ship, and being very productive, and feeling really empowered. She’s much more sure of herself in this film.

What about yourself? Are you more empowered as well six years later?

WASIKOWSKA: Yes. Sure. I also feel like I really know the world of green screen and what it’s like to film on that. So, I felt probably a little bit more prepared or just had a deeper understanding of making a film like this.

How did you approach the role of Alice this time around? What was different?

WASIKOWSKA: James brought his own very different and unique perspective on the world, which was really great. He definitely pushed all the characters to engage in a much more emotional way, and I felt a little bit more proactive in this one. There was more stuff to do. So, that was really fun.

Do you see yourself as more of a heroine now in this movie?

WASIKOWSKA: Yeah. Alice is always saving the day, but it was nice in this. Also, in the last one, I was changing sizes a lot, which meant that I didn’t get to act with the other people very often, and in this one, I was the same size. I know that seems like a very slight technical thing, but it actually meant I got to do a lot of scenes with people pretty much always. That was really nice.

After doing the first movie with Tim Burton and now this one under a new director, James Bobin, who’s coming off of two Muppet movies, what was it like working with him to continue telling the story?

WASIKOWSKA: It was great. He brought his own kind of humor to the film, which was nice. That was great, and then also, it was with a few new cast members. Sacha brought a really funny, completely different kind of character. Alice and Time have a very fun dynamic. It was really good.

How has directing your own film changed your approach to acting?

WASIKOWSKA: It hasn’t changed it too much. I just really enjoy it. A lot of actors maybe direct to work with actors, but I did it because I love the visual side of it. So, I got to explore that on my own, which was great. I really liked that.

In the world of visual effects, where six years is almost like six decades, what has changed since the first movie?

WASIKOWSKA: I’m sure there’ve been massive changes in visual effects, but to me, it was really similar, because I don’t have much to do with that. It felt physically the same – like me just being in harnesses and blue things representing the things I’m jumping on. So, it felt similar that way for me, but I’m sure there’ve been big changes.

How did Colleen Atwood’s costumes inform your work in this piece?

WASIKOWSKA: The costume on a green screen movie is one of the most important things, because it’s really all you have to give you a sense of the tone or the visual style. Colleen (Atwood) is super brilliant. I’ve worked with her before on the last one, and I absolutely love her costumes. Also, to see the other characters’ costumes is really important.

Can you talk a little bit about what Alice goes through in this second adventure?

WASIKOWSKA: Well, she’s just had her years of traveling, and feeling really fantastic, and in charge, and empowered. Then, she comes back to England and realizes the expectations of her at this point are really low. Then, when she ends up back in Underland, she has everything reaffirmed for her again and is able to come back into the real world and approach it in a very authentic way.

Because Alice is more involved in this one, does she have more of a feminist mindset, without knowing it’s feminist obviously because she’s young?

WASIKOWSKA: Yes, I believe so. I mean, she’s just such a great character, especially because of the time that it’s set. We were so much further behind to what we are right now. She just had very high expectations of her role in society, which is really ahead of her time and great, I think.

What do you think was her biggest obstacle in this society?

WASIKOWSKA: Exactly that, I guess. Just that the expectations of her were so low and she didn’t want to submit to getting married and being a wife.

In the first movie and the second movie as well, why were the Alice stories so beloved, not just for girls but also for boys, young and old?

WASIKOWSKA: I think it’s because the books are so unique. They’re very subjective. Everybody has a very different idea of them and interprets them in a really different way. I mean, they completely give themselves over to the idea of many, many different interpretations, because there are so many film interpretations and creative interpretations. It’s kind of cool to just add to that collection of really different interpretations.

Is Alice like the original superhero? Now, we have comic books for that, but do you think when Lewis Carroll wrote it that she was kind of the first super heroine?

WASIKOWSKA: Yes, for sure. That’s a good way to put it into our culture now. She’s a very classic kind of female heroine.

What do you think about how other films like Matrix embrace Alice archetype stories. Why do you think her story is so powerful?

WASIKOWSKA: I think even though the characters are so authentic, they are archetypal in a way, and the relationships between them maybe represent things that people can put into different contexts.

This time around, Sacha Baron Cohen joins the cast. Can you tell us a little bit about the dynamic and how it all fits in?

WASIKOWSKA: Yes, he’s great. He’s super funny and super smart and has his own [ideas] and just completely changed the character and imbued it with a lot of humor. The relationship between Time and Alice is really fun. He talks ridiculously, and Alice is the only character to pull him off on that. It’s sweet.

Is this a time travel story? And what is your relationship to time?

WASIKOWSKA: Yes. In the end, the message is not to mess around with time, or try and obsess or fix things that have happened, but more to appreciate what’s happening now. I have a similar relationship in terms of just trying to appreciate now and not try and dwell on what’s happened.

What is the story behind the Looking Glass?

WASIKOWSKA: That’s her way into the world. Last time, she fell down the Rabbit Hole, and this time, she’s led to the Looking Glass, and that’s how she gets back into the world.

Did you have some input on the screenplay and did you manage to change things?

WASIKOWSKA: Oh, in just the tiniest way, because that happens with any collaborative person. You ask if you can say something else, and if they like that, then yeah, that’s what happens, but not in a huge way.

What’s the relationship between Alice and the Mad Hatter? Can you talk a bit about how she’s trying to help him?

WASIKOWSKA: At the beginning, it becomes evident that the Hatter has become less mad. It’s like he’s getting much more sane and unmad. So, she has to go back and help him get mad again and more like himself. It’s really sweet, a super sweet relationship.

What was Johnny like?

WASIKOWSKA: He’s great. He’s wonderful and has such a great energy. He’s always brilliant in his roles and especially with this character. It’s like a really sweet friendship between the two of them. He was a great scene partner.

What was one of the most memorable scenes that you shot?

WASIKOWSKA: There was one scene. It was always a nightmare being on the Chronosphere, because you had to be strapped into this machine, and it was usually two whole days of being pushed round on this machine, which is really nauseating. But, it was a really funny day when Johnny, Anne (Hathaway), and I were all trapped on it together. It was like a forced day of total hilarity. It was fun. It’s the worst thing to be in, but if you’re there with nice people, it’s really fun.

There are a lot of fantasy and CG characters in this story. If there was one that you could transform into reality, which one would you like to have in your life?

WASIKOWSKA: Probably Time, because he seems so ridiculous. He takes himself very seriously, so that would be really fun.

Which character is more ridiculous – Time or the Mad Hatter?

WASIKOWSKA: I think Time because he has such an inflated ego. So, he’s more fun, because he’s more extreme.

Was there a little bit of competition going on between Johnny and Sacha about who’s the more extreme character?

WASIKOWSKA: I never had scenes with both of them. They got along great and probably just had a ridiculous few days when they were shooting their Tea Party. They’re both great.

Did you have a free day where you could watch them shoot some of their scenes?

WASIKOWSKA: No. I didn’t. Sometimes there was a little bit of crossover, but no I didn’t.

Will you wait until the film is finished to see the whole thing?

WASIKOWSKA: Yes, I’ll wait until it’s all finished. James prefers everyone to see it when it’s done.

What was it like working with Anne Hathaway who won an Oscar between the two films?

WASIKOWSKA: She’s great. She was really fun and just so good for that character. I mean, they’re all such ridiculous characters, so everybody, I think, really enjoys playing them.

Do you enjoy doing fantasy films?

WASIKOWSKA: They’re great. For sure, I like to see how everybody does it slightly differently, and anything can happen in them, which is really fun.

What was one of the challenges for you of filming this movie?

WASIKOWSKA: Just the same thing that was last time, which was that they do their best to describe to you what’s around you and what’s happening, but it’s still kind of an abstract experience. That, and also just the level of it being extremely physical for five months.

Kids love to see these films over and over again. Are you ever recognized on the streets by kids?

WASIKOWSKA: Not very often, but occasionally, a little kid will stare at me. But it’s not very much, and they never think much of it or anything. Adults are more pushy and will come up and say something, but kids just maybe stare. No, it’s rarely happened. But, when it did, it was maybe like a week after the film came out.

This seems like it’s becoming a franchise, but it took almost six years to do the sequel. Are there any talks about an Alice 3?

WASIKOWSKA: No, not at the moment. I’m not sure whether there will be or not. But there are no talks of it at the moment.

What are you working on next?

WASIKOWSKA: Nothing at the moment. I’m just having a break.



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messaggio 3/4/2016, 23:11
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Si prospetta un altro fantasy? Boh! Il primo in effetti ha goduto del pompaggio di quella stagione 09/10 costellata dal 3D capitanato da "Avatar". Dopo 6 anni si ricreerà l'evento del 2010? AriBoh! Ma non possono tornare a fare live-action avventurosi come PDC e ITDT per citare solo gli ultimi?
Bello però il costume di Sasha Baron Cohen. XD
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messaggio 4/4/2016, 9:51
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A me ispira 1000 volte in più di Alice in Wonderland che io ho trovato orribile! biggrin.gif
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messaggio 20/4/2016, 22:49
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La canzone di P!nk per il film:

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Intervista a Suzanne Todd, la produttrice del film:

Dal sito Collider:

'Alice Through the Looking Glass' Producer Suzanne Todd on the Sequel's Delay and More

Todd also reveals why Tim Burton didn't return to direct and talks about a potential third film, a greater focus on action, and much more.

Collider was recently invited to an early press day for Disney’s upcoming Alice Through the Looking Glass, directed by James Bobin, and to chat with one of the film’s producers, Suzanne Todd. In the exciting new fantasy adventure based on Lewis Carroll’s popular stories, Alice (Mia Wasikowska) returns to the magical realm of Underland and travels back in time to save the Mad Hatter (Johnny Depp). The sequel to 2010’s Alice in Wonderland reunites the cast and memorable characters from the first film and introduces several new characters: Zanik Hightopp (Rhys Ifans), the Mad Hatter’s father, and Time himself (Sacha Baron Cohen), a time-traveling villain who is part human, part clock.

At our roundtable interview, Todd talked about the unexpected level of success of the first film, the six-year process to bring the sequel to the screen, Tim Burton’s involvement, the challenge of staying true to what they loved about the first movie while expanding on it, the importance of creating a new story that was resonant, felt authentic, and had complex and interesting plotlines, how screenwriter Linda Woolverton crafted a strong female character that’s unlike those in other movies, the epic opening and closing action sequences brought to life by visual effects supervisor Ken Ralston, the spectacular new costumes designed by Colleen Atwood, and story ideas for a possible third Alice film.

Why did it take six years to do a sequel?

SUZANNE TODD: We spent a very long time working on the script. None of us expected that there would be a second movie. This was one of those movies when we started it where Linda (Woolverton) had had this idea that she wanted to do a female empowerment movie and we loved the idea of Alice. It started, like most ideas, as a small thing. Then, she wrote the script and we sent it to Tim (Burton). Shockingly, happily, Tim wanted to do it, and then he wanted to bring in Johnny (Depp), and then he thought we should do it in 3D. Then, all of a sudden, it grew into this bigger thing. But, even when we were making the movie, no one could have predicted that it would have that level of success. So, no one was really focusing on the idea of a sequel. It wasn’t like if you take on the Harry Potter books, or these book series that you know you’re going to make a bunch of movies. There was a moment of shock just after the movie came out to say, “How could it have made this much money? That seems nuts, but a happy accident.” Then, it took us a long time to figure out a story we wanted to tell. There isn’t a natural story in the second book that you can just take and adapt as a movie. We worked for a very long time, over a year, on the idea and then a script before we started looking for directors. Then, the process actually takes much longer than a normal movie. A regular movie, if it doesn’t have visual effects, will have maybe a 20-24 week post. We finished shooting in October of 2014 and we are still in post, all day, every day. It’s much longer by an exponential number just in terms of days and manpower to get it finished.

How do you feel you improved on the first Alice? What did you change?

TODD: It was an interesting challenge because none of us felt like trying to do a second version of the first movie would work. The movie worked in the way that it did. It was kind of an anomaly in time. Avatar had just been out. There was this hunger for 3D movies, and it was the first in what has become now a very long series of storybook movies. There have been so many of these, dozens since we came out in March of 2010. The idea really was, how could we stay true to what we loved about the first movie, but reinvent it. I think we pulled back into just the characters and the storytelling and tried to do a good version of what you try and do on every movie, which is character stories that are resonant and feel authentic, and then put them in plotlines that are complex and interesting and exciting. This movie, when you get to see the whole thing, is actually – not to say it’s an action-adventure – it’s not a Divergent movie – but there is a lot more action in it than you will expect. That opening sequence parallels with an end sequence that is pretty blow-the-walls-off Ken Ralston (the film’s visual effects supervisor), the best version of visual effects that you’ll see of super-super exciting, edge of your seat. The first Alice didn’t really play like that. It was a different kind of movie.

Which scenes required the biggest budget in terms of the epic scale of the production?

TODD: The visual effects, for sure. That end scene. We call that the “Oceans of Time,” and there’s an epic chase/battle/race to save the world, to save Underland, maybe just in time or not in enough time.

With respect to the costumes, what would you say took the biggest budget?

TODD: Costume-wise, the most expensive of the new costumes is the new Red Queen armor. But all of those costumes I’m going to say are more expensive that you would think. I mean, Colleen Atwood is obviously a genius. She won the Oscar for the first Alice and came back for the second Alice. On the first movie, she was taking on the blue dress and the pinafore and the classic Alice that we had seen, and she was reinventing that. On this, she was really making all new stuff. There’s a new version of Hatter that we call “Safari Hatter.” As I said, the new Red Queen armor, which looks like it’s made of all plant material and vines, but it’s hard and fantastic, that she wears. The White Queen wears her dress from the first movie pretty much, so poor Anne Hathaway didn’t get a lot of new fashion. There are some sequences, because it’s a time-travel movie, where you get to see the characters when they’re younger. So, younger Anne Hathaway got a little bit of a new dress, but she’s in mostly the same. But Alice has so many incredible looks. You got to see that Ship’s Captain this morning, a little bit of the Chinese outfit that she wears, which I think everyone would love to wear. There’s a beautiful outfit that looks like it’s made of ribbons, like Hatter has sewn her a blouse from ribbons in his house – pink ribbons and kind of menswear. Everything Colleen makes is spectacular. But yes, very expensive.

When you made the first movie, you didn’t expect the success that it had or that you’d be making a second one. Do you have plans now for a third one?

TODD: Of course, because when you’ve struggled through the process of what that second story will be, a lot of times what happens is you come up with so many character moments or things that you want to do in the story but you can’t fit them all in, so then you start sloughing them off in your head to that... I literally have a note on my iPad tablet, “Add this, add that.” You’ll see when you see the end of the movie there’s like may be a little bit of a set-up of what might happen.

Is it in the works?

TODD: It isn’t in the works yet, but as I said, it was designed in a way in the movie that you’ll see for an adventure that could be built in if we wanted to go there. Also, there’s that idea of so in the first movie, there is an experience that she had had before the first movie happened. She’s supposed to have gone to Underland as a young child, but you didn’t really see what that was. It’s sort of hinted at what it is. We hint at it again in this one. I always like the idea of making that movie as the third movie, the one that happened before the first movie. But the whole thing, we talk about Alice brain and how it gives you a headache in these time travel movies to try and figure out which day, and which time, and who, where, and what age they were then, and all of that. So, I don’t know. We’ll see.

In the last year, we’ve gotten The Hunger Games movies and Mad Max, and we’re seeing all of these very strong female characters on screen. How important was it for Alice to join that club, especially in a film that’s set in an era where things like that weren’t really expected of females?

TODD: It’s interesting. I don’t think that we wanted to craft something that felt familiar to other movies, like in terms of pushing her into an action hero space. It’s an interesting challenge on a sequel, because generally on a movie you’ll start your character out in a time of crisis or in a time of need. They have something wrong, something missing, something they want that they haven’t gotten that then, over the course of the movie, they’re going to try and fail, and try and fail, and try and fail, and achieve. But, on the sequel, the thing we struggled with is, we really wanted her to come back from this journey in a place of success. We didn’t want the first movie to have been for nothing. Yet, having her come back in a moment of success, you also need to be creating a problem that she’s going to need to solve in the course of the movie. That opening scene that you guys saw wasn’t actually in the original script, and it evolved for us over time as something that we really wanted, because again, we wanted you to feel that she had gone off on this journey, and how important it was to her to achieve her father’s dream, and how hard she would try, and that you could see it. It wasn’t rooted in wanting her to play an action hero. It does kind of play like that, I see, but it wasn’t the intention and it’s not the core of the movie. When you see the whole rest of the movie, there’s that action scene at the beginning and there’s a big action scene at the end, but it’s not an action movie throughout by any means. Her journey, I think, is a very personal journey. You see those parts of it just in terms of her skill that she learned in her three years off to sea, because we like the idea of her as a kick-ass Ship’s Captain. It’s not a traditional girl thing, and she’s not a traditional girl.

Were there any unusual producing challenges for this film compared to the first?

TODD: Well, there’s bringing everybody back. Luckily, and thankfully, [that was possible] for all of our cast, because in the time since the first movie, Mia works all the time, Annie had gone on to win an Oscar, Helena is always in something fantastic, and Johnny works like a fiend. So, there’s the scheduling of the actors which was actually quite difficult getting everybody back together. Then, there were some particular things. Some of our locations in London we ended up having to fake the house from the first movie because it wasn’t available where it had originally been the Ascot Mansions. We put together two houses and a visual effects thing. Some stuff like that, when you’re coming back on a sequel, but other than that, just the normal, trying to make something that we made that many years ago and have it look fresh and have it look the same. I’d say that’s the biggest challenge. Normally, you want to push things forward and improve them, but you don’t want to make Thackery look completely different than he did in the first movie. There’s always things you can improve on after the fact. So, hanging on to what we had and finding areas we could improve, I think that’s also a big challenge.

The first movie wasn’t just loved by young girls and women. It was loved by all audiences regardless of gender or age. Can you talk a little bit about why everybody loved the first film and how important the concept of female empowerment was for you as a female producer?

TODD: It was vitally important. It was the reason why we started the conversation. Linda Woolverton, the screenwriter, had written a lot of other Disney movies and has written more since. She had written Beauty and the Beast. She had worked on Mulan. She has a daughter, a grown daughter now, who was younger then, and who I’m also very close with. That was vitally important to her in starting the conversation about what we wanted to try and achieve. I think it was probably maybe lucky that Tim wanted to join on, and then the veneer of Tim being involved made it interesting to more people, and then Johnny, and then the 3D, and as the elements came together. But for the second one, I think you’ll feel more so that way seeing the second movie than you did on the first, because we were able to focus on it more, given that we felt the first movie was already so successful and we had a little bit of play to do more of what we wanted in this one. It’s the heart and soul and core of the movie, of trying to find your voice, and trying to manage the complexities of the world, and stay in your integrity as a woman, and figuring out where that is.

How has Mia changed? She was a girl when you did the first movie, but now she’s a woman in the second movie.

TODD: It is really true. We have a conference room on the lot at Disney that has these big blow out, behind-the-scenes pictures from the first movie. I was in there yesterday for the first time in a long time and just looking at baby Mia from the first movie. She looks so young. I am so impressed with her. There’s this amazing thing about Mia, and I obviously work with actors of all different ages and ranges, and for a lot of young actors, you see them so quickly get caught up in the People Magazine, and wanting to be a star, and what those things are. I just think for Mia, she is so thoughtful and she is so intelligent, and from her very young age, when Tim sort of plucked her to play this part, she has really focused on the directors she wanted to work with and the projects she felt would feed her soul creatively. She’s very, very impressive that way. There’s not a lot of young actors that behave that way. You won’t see her out clubbing and being ridiculous and making a fool of herself. She was always wise beyond her years. It’s been lovely to see her grow up in that way.

Did you reach out to Tim again to direct and in what ways was he involved in the sequel?

TODD: Tim said, from the beginning, he would not do a sequel. He’s like, “Sequels are not my thing.” Also, as I said, these movies are very, very hard. I feel like the post production on the first movie just did him in. It’s such an extended period of really long hours 24/7 that you don’t get on other movies that are easier from a physical production standpoint. We always knew that Tim didn’t want to direct the sequel. We developed the script and then talked to him at the time about who else he thought might be interested in directing. He stayed involved as a producer. He helped us with character designs, and talked to James (Bobin) about certain things, and was involved in a producorial capacity. We always knew he wasn’t going to do another one. He’d said that from the beginning. He’s never really done a sequel to his other movies. I think it’s a particular thing for a director. Unless you feel very inspired for what that next chapter is going to say to you, it feels like taking on the same thing. Also, for Tim, it’s because so much of his movies come from this world in his mind, and his drawings, and his paintings, and his designs. He’s moved onto something else now where he’s designing a whole new world. I think that’s part of the appeal for him.

After Tim created this world in the first movie, what is it that James brought to expand upon it in the second?

TODD: Well, a little bit of a lighter touch even than what you saw today. Like in the backgrounds and the Tea Party, we see there’s less darkness. Although, I think it’s still the same world that Tim created. But we wanted to create an environment where people felt okay with laughing, because this movie is intended to be funnier than the first movie. It’s hard to create those moments where the audience feels like it’s time to laugh if it’s all very dark. So, there’s definitely a lightness. Also, it feels a little bit differently, because we built a lot of sets, which we didn’t on the first movie. Again, it’s sort of subliminal, but it feels different when you watch it. It feels a little bit more like a real place, rather than a re-creation of a place you’ve never seen. It feels like a place maybe that you could visit, because there are so many actual buildings, even in Underland. We built this incredible town of Wit’s End that I’m sure will show up in a Disney Park soon, and you’ll get to see it in its full glory. Yeah, Shanghai! Shanghai actually has this very cool Aliceland, the one that’s opening in June of 2016. All of Fantasyland in Shanghai, the one that’s opening now, is all Alice in Wonderland-themed with mazes and hedges and painting the roses red. It’s pretty amazing.

I think Disney should invite us.

TODD: Yes, we should all go. Shanghai 2016! There’s a second version of Shanghai in the second wave of them building stuff that will be four or five years later where they’ll have the ride that lines up with what happens in this movie, which is super exciting.

When it comes to something like that, is anybody on the creative side of the movie involved in developing it?

TODD: Totally! That’s one of my favorite things about working at Disney. Imagineering? Those are all my favorite parts. Imagineering, the Parks, everything, the synergy of what they do. Nobody does that like Disney. It’s really an incredible entertainment company. But yes, we go back and forth. They had some ideas on how to do stuff. There was actually one or two things that we changed in the movie to line up with what they were going to do. Just small things. It’s an incredible sharing of creative minds at work. On the second movie, since it was post the Pixar deal, we also get the benefit of working with Pixar a little bit. They use them as an asset for story development, which was fantastic. We didn’t get to do that on the first movie. Basically, you get a bunch of the smartest guys from Pixar to read your script and talk to you about it, which is awesome. You get to be in this conversation of again sharing ideas the same way you do with the guys at the Parks, and the Imagineers, and everyone else.

Were you able to get John Lasseter’s point of view?

TODD: We didn’t get John, but we got a bunch of them, and they were very helpful. I have to say it always is when its people who do that for a living and do it at the highest level. Also, even if it’s not like a particular idea that you take, that creative conversation always pushes you into something better. And on these kinds of movies, and again the pressure from the first movie having been so successful, that’s all it was about for us the entire time. It was like how to make it better. You never sleep, because you’re just working trying to make it great.


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