The Queen of Hearts has outlawed Christmas. As a child, the white rabbit missed her gift. Years later, Father Christmas receives the lost letter and voyages to Wonderland. With the help of c... Read allThe Queen of Hearts has outlawed Christmas. As a child, the white rabbit missed her gift. Years later, Father Christmas receives the lost letter and voyages to Wonderland. With the help of curious young Alice, can Christmas be saved?The Queen of Hearts has outlawed Christmas. As a child, the white rabbit missed her gift. Years later, Father Christmas receives the lost letter and voyages to Wonderland. With the help of curious young Alice, can Christmas be saved?
Lenny Rush
- Robin
- (voice)
6.3566
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Featured reviews
Something different
It's actually a pretty good film. It is kind of a mix of most of the classics. This is something different that paints to the newer generations. I good not keep my eyes off the tv and was tapping my foot to the songs. Animation style is made to look more hand painted or drawn, which is a work of art in itself.
This is not your typical holiday animation with upbeat and catchy music. I do recommend that anyone keeps an open mind as this movie seems to be more developed towards children.
There are plenty of scenarios that tie along with classics and what better Christmas "villain" would be someone like the Grinch. The ending ties along with a mixture of Rudolph The Red Nose Reindeer and The Grinch. There are bits of Alice in the Wonderland. Overall this movie was put together really well and if you have younger kids it's a must watch.
This is not your typical holiday animation with upbeat and catchy music. I do recommend that anyone keeps an open mind as this movie seems to be more developed towards children.
There are plenty of scenarios that tie along with classics and what better Christmas "villain" would be someone like the Grinch. The ending ties along with a mixture of Rudolph The Red Nose Reindeer and The Grinch. There are bits of Alice in the Wonderland. Overall this movie was put together really well and if you have younger kids it's a must watch.
My kids can't stop watching this
As an adult and a parent I've not sat through this film even once, but it's been played by my kids over Christmasnat least 20 times, they can't get enough of it. It seems to have the magic of Christmas about it, and at least one of the songs is an ear-worm (not in a good way sadly). This is a kids Christmas film and you can feel the love it was made with, it's pure joy and fun; and parts I've seen are totally bonkers. I'm a way it reminds me of Santa's Apprentice, in that it's totally different from everything else that's out there. We need to be kinder to children's Christmas films, which I believe is on message for this movie.
Stoic The Viking Does Christmas Rap = UGH
I know that searching for Christmas coziness is a nearly futile pursuit, and has been for awhile, but seriously-does EVERYTHING need to be geared toward the TikTok/ <20s community??
Nasal, generic female singer proffers auto-tuned pop songs, while snarky young Scottish actresses who sound gleaned from trashy soaps charmlessly voice Santa's reindeer who are all bullying a single outlier (YAWN).
And Gerard Butler--really? He has ONE setting! Gruff-but-jolly Scotsman, and he is NOT a singer. He isn't really an actor, either, but no one loves Butler as much as he loves himself-can he look at a camera lens without that smug "yes. I AM Heathcliff, and my ponytail and jack boots are here to whisk all of you Shirley Valentines away to the wild heather'ed Moors" Recall the days, about 30 years ago when the rags were plastered with the tousled-hair-to-the-collar guys? When women actually swooned over the icky greaseball commonly known as Vigo Mortensen? Or how about the wan twig who's now aged into Gramps Munster, Orlando Bloom, or the sentient whiskey bottle who portrayed Lady Chatterley's Lover, Sean Bean? Hugh Jackman's barely-concealed cheesiness was at its peak when he stole the widdle tweedy heart of cutesy-wootsy Meg-my-sleeves-cover-my-hands-because-I'm-so-little-and-New-York-awkward/adorable Ryan in his 18th-century dickie and frock coat (and jack boots-don't forget the JACK BOOTS!). Oh, and he also portrayed Van Helsing, a fictional vampire hunter. With one of the English Kates.
Yeah. You even got a bit dewy over the crashing bore of a drunken boar Russel Crowe, didn't ya! Well, Gerard Butler was working that blue-collar brogue hoping to plant his smirk on your heart somewhere amongst the rakish cads....
..and what he'll be remembered for is a Scottish Viking riding a cartoon dragon. He just isn't that interesting. More interesting than I, admittedly, but so are many people.
The artwork is folksy and warm, but it's ruined by digital cut-out movement that only serves to make it look like a literal cut & paste job, and the authors' pilfering of better material trying to blend a nursery rhyme and a fantasy tale just isn't that clever. Nope.
Nasal, generic female singer proffers auto-tuned pop songs, while snarky young Scottish actresses who sound gleaned from trashy soaps charmlessly voice Santa's reindeer who are all bullying a single outlier (YAWN).
And Gerard Butler--really? He has ONE setting! Gruff-but-jolly Scotsman, and he is NOT a singer. He isn't really an actor, either, but no one loves Butler as much as he loves himself-can he look at a camera lens without that smug "yes. I AM Heathcliff, and my ponytail and jack boots are here to whisk all of you Shirley Valentines away to the wild heather'ed Moors" Recall the days, about 30 years ago when the rags were plastered with the tousled-hair-to-the-collar guys? When women actually swooned over the icky greaseball commonly known as Vigo Mortensen? Or how about the wan twig who's now aged into Gramps Munster, Orlando Bloom, or the sentient whiskey bottle who portrayed Lady Chatterley's Lover, Sean Bean? Hugh Jackman's barely-concealed cheesiness was at its peak when he stole the widdle tweedy heart of cutesy-wootsy Meg-my-sleeves-cover-my-hands-because-I'm-so-little-and-New-York-awkward/adorable Ryan in his 18th-century dickie and frock coat (and jack boots-don't forget the JACK BOOTS!). Oh, and he also portrayed Van Helsing, a fictional vampire hunter. With one of the English Kates.
Yeah. You even got a bit dewy over the crashing bore of a drunken boar Russel Crowe, didn't ya! Well, Gerard Butler was working that blue-collar brogue hoping to plant his smirk on your heart somewhere amongst the rakish cads....
..and what he'll be remembered for is a Scottish Viking riding a cartoon dragon. He just isn't that interesting. More interesting than I, admittedly, but so are many people.
The artwork is folksy and warm, but it's ruined by digital cut-out movement that only serves to make it look like a literal cut & paste job, and the authors' pilfering of better material trying to blend a nursery rhyme and a fantasy tale just isn't that clever. Nope.
Fun Festive Film!
A lovely Christmas film with charming characters, beautiful artwork (that felt very nostalgic the snowman-esq to me which I loved) and well written, catchy songs which are now the sound track to any journey we make in the car. Wonderfully cast with loveable characters. An interesting story with "Alice in Wonderland" quirks, twists and turns and, ofcourse, a classic Christmas redemption story. Contrary to other reviews I have seen, I found the length to the film no issue with my 5 year old who was glued to the story from start to finish. A great feel good family Christmas film I am sure we will come back to time and again.
Fun concept which didn't land well
As a lover of 'off beat' Christmas movies (think ''The Nightmare Before Christmas', or Terry Pratchett's Hogsfather) I really looked forward to watching 'The Night before Christmas in Wonderland'!
Sadly while watching it I ended up thinking ''Meh."
I found the music tiring to listen to, with nothing really clever in the lyrics (no, I don't expect Shakespeare in a Christmas film!). Combining these predictable lyrics with the uninspired musical scores, all I wanted to do was fast forward till the songs were over.
The colours used to create scenes were beautiful, and many of the static scenes were lovely to look at. And trying to make the animation look painfully hand created is difficult to do, yet the creators did a good job in meeting that goal. But somehow I couldn't help but think that, in the end, the actual 'movement' of the characters in the film looked just too 'basic', or static - which detracted from the vivid imagery.
I really wanted to like this film! Unfortunately, in the end it just felt flat and uninspired. Certainly not repeatable to look at next year, or any year after that when the Christmas season rolls around again.
Sadly while watching it I ended up thinking ''Meh."
I found the music tiring to listen to, with nothing really clever in the lyrics (no, I don't expect Shakespeare in a Christmas film!). Combining these predictable lyrics with the uninspired musical scores, all I wanted to do was fast forward till the songs were over.
The colours used to create scenes were beautiful, and many of the static scenes were lovely to look at. And trying to make the animation look painfully hand created is difficult to do, yet the creators did a good job in meeting that goal. But somehow I couldn't help but think that, in the end, the actual 'movement' of the characters in the film looked just too 'basic', or static - which detracted from the vivid imagery.
I really wanted to like this film! Unfortunately, in the end it just felt flat and uninspired. Certainly not repeatable to look at next year, or any year after that when the Christmas season rolls around again.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Also known as
- Ніч перед Різдвом у Дивокраї
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 20m(80 min)
- Color
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