When Tim Burton released his reimagining of Alice in Wonderland in 2010, audiences weren’t sure if they were falling into a dream or a nightmare. With a blend of live-action, motion capture, and surrealist CGI, the film divided critics but captured the box office.
Equally impressive is the —a reptilian, bat-winged dragon with razor-sharp poetry. The final battle sequence, where Alice decapitates him, remains a benchmark for motion-capture creature work, giving the monster a terrifyingly intelligent eye. aliceinwonderland2010 top
: Wonderland was reimagined through a dark, whimsical lens. From the twisted, gnarled trees to the hyper-saturated colors of the Red Queen’s court, the film felt like a "Burton sketch come to life." When Tim Burton released his reimagining of Alice
Depp’s Tarrant Hightopp is not just whimsical; he is tragic. Burton allowed Depp to explore the character’s dual nature—manic joy one minute, heartbreaking sorrow the next. The scene where he performs the Futterwacken (a victory dance) remains one of the most searched viral moments. The final battle sequence, where Alice decapitates him,