Alice in Wonderland | |
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Directed by | Bud Pollard |
Written by | Lewis Carroll (book) John E. Goodson (adaptation) Ashley Ayer Miller (screenplay) |
Based on | Alice's Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll |
Produced by | Hugo Maienthau |
Starring | Ruth Gilbert Leslie King Pat Gleason Ralph Hertz Meyer Berensen |
Cinematography | Charles Levine |
Edited by | Bud Pollard |
Production company | Metropolitan Studios |
Distributed by | Unique Foto Films |
Release date |
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Running time | 58 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Alice in Wonderland (1931) is an independently made black-and-white Pre-Code American film based on Lewis Carroll's 1865 novel Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, directed by Bud Pollard, produced by Hugo Maienthau, and filmed at Metropolitan Studios in Fort Lee, New Jersey.
This was the first sound version of the story, and therefore the first film in which Carroll's original dialogue was heard.[1][2] The film stars Ruth Gilbert as Alice and Leslie King as the Mad Hatter. The film opened at the Warner Theatre in New York City. The movie begins with a jazzy theme song written by Irving Berlin.
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