Carroll’s Alice had long been a target for psychedelic reinterpretation. The 1960s had given us Jefferson Airplane’s “White Rabbit” and the dark, druggy film Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (1972) starring Fiona Fullerton. It was only a matter of time before someone realized that the story’s inherent themes of transformation, power dynamics, and bizarre rules lent themselves to the adult industry.
For fans of the surreal, the obscure, or the simply bizarre, this film is a rabbit hole worth falling into. Just don’t expect to come back with your sense of propriety intact. Alice In Wonderland An X Rated Musical Fantasy 1976
The performances range from the professionally dubbed to the hilariously off-key. It is said that director William B. Norton (who also wrote the score under the pseudonym “Norman Simon”) forced the actors to record their vocals live on set, rather than in a studio. The result is a raw, warbling sound that adds to the film’s uneasy, dreamlike quality—like hearing a nursery rhyme while you have a fever. To understand the film, one must understand the “porno chic” moment of the early-to-mid 1970s. Following the success of Deep Throat (1972), The Devil in Miss Jones (1973), and especially the mainstream crossover of The Opening of Misty Beethoven (1976), producers were desperate to legitimize adult films by giving them plots, sets, and—most bizarrely—musical numbers. Carroll’s Alice had long been a target for
Director Norton claimed in a rare 1998 interview that he intended the film to be a “feminist critique of Victorian repression.” He argued that Alice—by saying “yes” to every adventure, sexual or otherwise—was taking agency in a world that wanted to silence her. Most critics, then and now, roll their eyes at this. The film is not The Story of O . It is a commercial product designed to get a reaction. For fans of the surreal, the obscure, or
In the mid-1970s, the Sexual Revolution was in full swing. Pornography was tentatively creeping out of the shadows of grindhouse theaters and into the mainstream—or at least, into the "mainstream" of late-night adult cinema. Within this landscape of artistic ambiguity and commercial exploitation, a bizarre subgenre was born: the adult musical. And no film embodies the surreal, often ridiculous, collision of childhood nostalgia and hardcore sex better than William B. Norton’s Alice in Wonderland: An X-Rated Musical Fantasy .
Final rating: ★★★ (Three stars out of five—one for ambition, one for the soundtrack, and one for the sheer audacity of making the Cheshire Cat a mime who only appears during orgasms.) The film is currently available on several cult streaming services (like Something Weird Video) and has been released on an unrated Blu-ray by Vinegar Syndrome, fully restored from the original 35mm negative. Viewer discretion is strongly, strongly advised.
Released in 1976—a year bookended by the Bicentennial and the rise of Deep Throat ’s cultural shadow—this film promised audiences a simple equation: take Lewis Carroll’s beloved Victorian fairy tale, add a funky 70s soundtrack, and remove all clothing. But what emerges is something far stranger, and arguably more interesting, than mere pornographic clickbait. It is a time capsule of an era trying to have its cake (and eat it too) while wondering why there were no cakes left on the table. For those who have only seen Disney’s 1951 animated classic, the premise of An X-Rated Musical Fantasy will sound familiar—until it doesn’t. The film opens with a melancholy Alice (played by Kristine Heller, credited as “Bree Anthony”), a young woman bored with her buttoned-up Victorian life. Frustrated with her sister’s prudish lectures about proper behavior, Alice drifts off to sleep.