Lewis Carroll’s beloved Alice has returned in a film that offers wondrous imagery but little else.
Alice Through the Looking Glass is the sequel to 2010’s Alice in Wonderland, which already was a sequel of sorts. Directed by Tim Burton, it imagined Alice as a teenage version of the young girl who once found herself in the eccentric world of the Mad Hatter and the Cheshire Cat.
Though admired for its surreal photography and characters, the earlier film was criticized for its ho-hum storytelling. Nevertheless, it was a huge hit, setting the stage for the current release.
Whether or not Looking Glass is equally successful at the box office, it’s sure to draw even more brickbats. Director James Bobin fills the screen with images as odd as anything Burton could have concocted, but the storytelling is blandly uninvolving.
Set a few years after Wonderland, Looking Glass finds 20-something Alice (Mia Wasikowska) as the captain of the merchant ship her late father once helmed. Though it’s an unconventional career for a 19th century Englishwoman, she’s clearly good at it.