
In terms of violence and sex, don’t forget this is a Disney film - of course there is nothing that’ll impact your child. READ MORE: Johnny Depp’s wife, Amber Heard, files for divorce (One thing I will give Alice Through the Looking Glass: its “time” puns are A-level.) The moral of the story is to treasure what you have while you have it, or else it’ll be robbed from you by Time. She’s trying to go back to rectify several events that took place in the past, all in order to “save” the Mad Hatter (Johnny Depp, made-up to the nines), who’s fading away from sadness.Įverybody has family issues in this movie, from the Hatter to Alice to the Red and White Queens.

The movie’s point is made clear through the convoluted plot, which has Alice (Mia Wasikowska) flitting back and forth through time, using Time (personified by Sacha Baron Cohen)’s Chronosphere as transport. If it sounds too serious for Wonderland, you’re not entirely wrong. In Through the Looking Glass, the sequel (prequel?) to 2010’s Alice in Wonderland, her usual worries about fitting in and being too dreamy, things kids and teens care about, are long gone, replaced with more adult concerns about what to do for a living, maintaining connections with family and realizing that time is a precious commodity.

Alice is no longer a child, that’s for sure.
