Okay, so here I am attempting to explain my story.
Alice is in an institution where she gets tortured to reveal who she is, hence her asking herself the question: 'Who am I?' in Chapter 3. I haven't thought about she is, really, but, thinking about it now, Alice is just an innocent bystander in a world full of chaos and insanity, or is she? Oh, and remember how she felt as if a hammer was being thrown against her head in Chapter 1? Well, the hammer at the end of the story is the same hammer. So, yes, she really was being hit with a hammer at the beginning of the story. And this is the time when Alice loses consciousness and starts to enter Wonderland.
Now, Wonderland is not the Wonderland she usually dreams about. After being tortured and hammered in the head, Wonderland will definitely not be the same. There's no more riddles, no more nonsense in Wonderland – there is only chaos and randomness.
Hmm, character time! Okay, the White Rabbit – believe it or not, I based him on Tykki Mikk (Gosh, he's so cool and elegant and just what I needed to portray the White Rabbit). I made the White Rabbit wear black because, of course, Tykki wears black, and because I wanted to contrast the White Rabbit from Wonderland with the torturer from reality (the torturer is wearing white). He's always checking his watch for the time because he has someone else to torture next besides Alice. Yay. On to the Queen. She is actually the Red Queen, you know, she's wearing red, by the way. I based the Queen on the mother-loving, peace-loving woman in the movie, 'The Cell.' This woman appeared in the innocent days of the serial killer, the paradise that which he had before it became corrupted. The woman looked nurturing and powerful so every time I imagined the Red Queen, I imagined this woman.
With the Mad Hatter (gosh, he's so insane), I based him on a jester. The hats he sells are, of course, funny-looking hats that make him laugh hysterically, and he dresses like a jester. I don't see him as a joker because he's not. He's serious and mad. I imagine him with long, skinny legs and arms with a skull-like face structure covered in make-up. I made his partner, the March Hare, sort of a religious man. I don't know why, but every time I read the story, I see the March Hare as the person bringing the Mad Hatter back to reality. So I guess you can picture the March Hare as a priest, or a wise man. With the Cheshire Cat, he's like the class clown, twisting everybody's words around himself and grinning that grin of his. He was so down one day that the Duchess found it highly disturbing, so the Duchess took out a needle and some thread and sewed the Cheshire Cat's grin onto his face. The Duchess is equally as disturbing. With Tweedledee and Tweedledum, they are twin girls who are spoiled and enjoy whatever the Queen is enjoying. I guess you could say the twins are her girls. The King and Queen of Hearts are just a couple of idiots.
Now, the real Alice has dark-color hair, not blonde like you see in the Disney movie. I prefer her with black hair anyways. So, yes, Alice has black hair and violet blue eyes (because I like it). I didn't base Alice on anyone so I can't really describe her.
Back to the story, Alice goes on an adventure and ends up being food for the citizens of Wonderland. The end of the story is bringing us back to the beginning where it all started. And no, the torturer is not the White Rabbit, but they have similar characteristics, like their eyes, for example. As you can read, if Alice can tell the torturer who she is, Alice can go home, but it seems that Alice has forgotten who she is really. An innocent bystander with be terrified out of her wits if she was being tortured just to reveal who she is. And please remember that Alice, after all, is still a child, so when a child gets scared or is afraid, that child will not speak a word about it.
By the by, this will be all. Until next time.
~ nero vicious
