Alice (1990) Poster

(1990)

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8/10
"I've done things I didn't know I had in me. "
Galina_movie_fan9 August 2005
Less known that Allen's "Annie Hall", "Hannah and her Sisters", "Crimes and Misdemeanors", and "Manhattan", "Alice" is a charming and delightful film that can be viewed as Allen's remake of "Juliet of Spirits" with some obvious themes from "Alice in Wonderland". Mia Farrow plays a wealthy New Yorker who one day feels that something is missing in her sheltered and comfortable life. She turns to a Chinese doctor whose magic herbs help her to reevaluate her life and her relationships with her husband, lover, mother, and sister. She may not find the answers for all the questions but she certainly learned a lot about herself. During the few days that film takes place, Alice experiences romance, finds spirituality, and even enjoys the power of invisibility. This film has one of the most optimistic endings in Woody's film. Mia Farrow is absolutely wonderful.
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8/10
Another Woman's Midwinter Night's Sex Comedy
BrandtSponseller26 April 2005
Alice Tate (Mia Farrow) is living in New York City, married to Doug (William Hurt), a man from a wealthy family. They have two kids, a lavish condo and domestic employees. Alice eats caviar, spends her days shopping, getting manicures and pedicures, and so on. However, she's not very happy. She's even been thinking about having an affair. When she finally goes to see an acupuncturist, Dr. Yang (Keye Luke), on several friends' advice because her back is bothering her, he tells her that her problem is in her head, not her back. Through his extremely unorthodox treatments, Alice gradually transforms her life.

Although there is a fair amount of light humor in Alice, and it is relatively upbeat and hopeful, the bulk of this film is much more in the vein of director/writer Woody Allen's more "serious" straightforward dramas, ala Interiors (1978), September (1987) and Another Woman (1988). Interestingly, Allen has a strong fantastical thread running through Alice at the same time, and it references a number of literary classics--both thematically and occasionally in terms of more literal content-—resulting in a kinship also with Allen's A Midsummer Night's Sex Comedy (1982).

At its heart, Alice is a film about awakening and then achieving authenticity. It is told with a nod to Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol (1843) (which is even supported by the appearance of "O Tannenbaum/We Wish You A Merry Christmas" by Liberace on the soundtrack at one point), with slight references also to Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (1865) and other fantasy literature, including J.M. Barrie's Peter Pan (1911).

The catalyst through all of Alice's revelations is Dr. Yang, whose slightly rundown Chinatown office is symbolic of Alice periodically making trips to another world for enlightenment, or making repeated treks to pose questions to a metaphorical Oracle at Delphi. Dr. Yang's treatments are designed to address the various ways in which Alice needs to "open up", the various emotional needs she must come to terms with.

It is interesting to note, especially after Allen's The Curse of the Jade Scorpion (2001), that the initial spark for Alice's transformation is provided by hypnotism, as that device appears for the same ultimate purpose in Curse. This probably has some significance for Allen outside of his life in film, although it is difficult to say whether its because he's undergone hypnotic treatment himself or whether he just sees it as a metaphor for digging beneath public facades which one has fooled oneself into believing, too.

Dr. Yang's treatments either result in encountering some important person or event from Alice's past and/or tapping into some unrealized potential. The encounters are often not with real persons. They can be memories made almost literal, ghosts, or hallucinations. These are the most direct parallel to A Christmas Carol. As in that story, eventually Dr. Yang's treatments lead Alice away from an embrace of materialism for its own sake to an appreciation of more humanist values. Of course, Allen makes it a bit more complex than this, so that the positive transformation also has an impact on personal relationships that could be seen as negative, as well.

Alice is also remarkable for its cinematography, which is usually symbolic of the dramatic scenarios. Sometimes this is very overt, as when Dr. Yang's office transforms into an amusement park midway (the slowly strobing red light was particularly exquisite, with red also symbolizing caution), and often it is subtler, as with the tracking shots of Alice and Vicki (Judy Davis) seen through various glass-like surfaces, or Alice and Joe (Joe Mantegna) through a fence as prison bars, or Alice and Dr. Yang with a wall in between them as the camera pans from one to the other, and so on.

Of course the performances are good--Allen can even get admirable performances out of actors whom I usually do not care for, such as William Hurt. Of course most of the dialogue can easily be imagined as emerging from Allen's mouth instead of whatever character happens to be on screen. And of course the music selection is a fine collection of mostly pre-bop classic jazz. In other words, this is a typical post-Annie Hall (1977) Allen film, so if you like his style, Alice is a safe bet, and if you already know you dislike his style, you're probably not even reading this far.
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7/10
Unexpectedly Charming
RodReels-230 August 2002
Mia Farrow excels in this unexpectedly charming fable. I think if people happened upon this movie not knowing it was a Woody Allen film, they would be more than pleased with it. Knowing it is Woody, maybe many fans hold it to a higher standard. True, it's not anywhere near being his funniest or greatest film. But I think it is a well-cast, well-shot, well-produced, and even well-written tale. Knowing it's history, I was not expecting to like it nearly as much as I did. But I did, and I look forward to seeing it again. Mia really is underrated as an actress, isn't she?
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Enjoyable romp
Movie_Man 50025 May 2002
Next to the Front, this contains Woody Allen's best ending. There's one striking visual image in the plot I still can't get out my head: Mia is cheating on William Hurt with Joseph Mantegna and the 2 of them are over at Mantegna's apartment, while a glorious downpour crashes against a huge glass window behind them. The sound of the rain hitting the window compliments their nervous dialogue perfectly. One of Farrow's nicest performances (the Purple Rose of Cairo is her most heartbreaking). And where else are you going to see invisibility in the same story as Mother Theresa? One of Allen's better cast jobs, too. Even the smallest roles are exquisite. Gwen Vernon as Farrow's old time movie star mother is sublime. And Bernadette Peters makes a great wise cracking muse.
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7/10
Mild and gentle with some surprising insight.
ags1231 May 2008
Not one of Woody Allen's best films, "Alice" is nonetheless far better than what he's been turning out lately. The structure seems too random and unfocused, but it's still full of Allen's wise observations and commentary on human nature and modern-day life – the qualities that make Woody Allen movies so special. The biggest fault I find with this film is Mia Farrow. Her run of films with Woody Allen are among his best, and her contributions are immense. Here she just seems unconvincing as a wealthy upper-Eastsider. Yes, we meet her character while she's questioning her life, but somehow the hat, the hair, the shoes just aren't sophisticated enough for a woman who's been living that lifestyle. She lacks the hardboiled edge of a seasoned New Yorker. Because she's too soft right from the beginning, her transformation falls short. The film is helped by all the star cameos, and even though they're brief, the characters are well-defined. "Alice" is definitely worth a look.
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7/10
A delightful Woody tale, sans-Woody
mrpooh_and_minnie25 January 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Within 5 minutes of watching this film for the first time, I commented on how nice it was to see a Woody film without having to see or hear him. I love the man to death, but there is much more to his aesthetic than the four-eyed doomed, dreamer lamenting about death and mortality in an internal monologue along the streets of Manhattan. (This thought wasn't helped by my 10 Allen films in 3 days marathon).

Case in point - Alice.

I knew that something was up when a lovely version of La Cumparsita started playing in the background, teasing you with it's back-and-forth melody.

Alice is a delightful tale that manipulates you with its pacing - lingering on seemingly mundane moments and whisking you away from deliberate flights of fancy (e.g. the afternoon of invisibility with Alec Baldwin) that leave you wanting much more. Allen repeats himself on that front with Vicky Christina Barcelona, but that's a tale for another thread.

All in all, I'd take a chance on watching this film on more than one occasion. You won't regret it.
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7/10
very enjoyable
blanche-25 April 2011
Mia Farrow is "Alice" in this 1990 Woody Allen film. Here, Allen borrows from "Juliet of the Spirits" and "Alice in Wonderland" to make a delightful movie about an unhappy woman trying to find herself.

Alice (Farrow) married a wealthy man (William Hurt) and gave up a career in fashion. She has everything - a gorgeous New York apartment, two children, and servants. She spends her time shopping and having beauty treatments. At her kids' school, she meets a man (Joe Mantegna) and is shocked to realize that she's attracted to him. When she goes to a Dr. Yang (Keye Luke) for a back problem, Dr. Yang sees right away that Alice's pain is psychological. He gives her an herb to take.

The herb has an amazing effect on Alice, who then openly flirts with the object of her affection, Joe. Dr. Yang keeps hitting Alice up with potions: one makes her invisible, so she can watch Joe with his psychiatrist ex-wife (Judy Davis); another reunites her with the ghost of her first love (Alec Baldwin). Alice and Joe finally get together. But one of the potions helps her to find something out that she not only didn't know, but that changes her life.

Mia Farrow does a good job as Alice; in my opinion, other than "Rosemary's Baby," she did her best work with Allen. The rest of the cast is good and sail through this film about self-discovery, unrealized goals, and passion. An unsung film of Allen's that deserves more attention.
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6/10
Woody Allen's version of magic realism
JamesHitchcock27 January 2010
Warning: Spoilers
"Alice" can be seen as Woody Allen's version of magic realism. It makes use of magic, but does so not in the context of myth, fairy-tale or fantasy but in the context of contemporary real-life America. The title character, Alice Tate, is an upper-middle-class New York housewife. Alice is married with two children, but her marriage is not a happy one. Her husband Doug is wealthy and good-looking, but cold, dull and unresponsive to her needs.

The film explores what happens two strangers come into Alice's life. The first is Joe Ruffalo, a handsome musician to whom she finds herself attracted. The second is the mysterious Chinese herbalist Dr Yang, who is treating her for backache. Dr Yang prescribes a series of herbal treatments for her, but it is clear that these are much more than just backache remedies. Indeed, these herbs have magical properties. One type takes away her inhibitions and make her act on her feelings towards Joe; another type makes her invisible, enabling her to watch both Joe and Doug unseen. A third enables her to communicate with the ghost of her now deceased first lover Ed.

The film is very different in its overall tone to Woody's previous offering, "Crimes and Misdemeanours" made a year earlier. Yet there is also a similarity between the two films. "Alice" can be seen as continuing the debate about religion which began in the earlier film, Given that Woody is normally thought of as a religious sceptic, "Crimes and Misdemeanours" came as something of a surprise to me with its positive view of religion, especially the sympathetic view taken of Sam Waterston's Rabbi, a man whose religious faith enables him to bear the prospect of blindness with stoicism. Although physically he is losing his sight, morally he can see more clearly than any other character in that film.

In "Alice" the religious debate takes place in the context of Catholicism rather than Judaism. Although she no longer practises her religion, Alice was raised as a Catholic. (As was Mia Farrow who plays her; Mia's original name was the very Catholic Maria de Lourdes Villiers-Farrow). The film's view of Catholicism is a mixed one. One the one hand, Alice's Catholic upbringing is seen as a source of sexual guilt. On the other hand, Catholicism is also seen as a source of humanitarian idealism. As a girl and young woman, Alice's was to help people like Mother Theresa, whom she greatly admired. As a middle-aged married woman she has lost sight of her idealistic goals and leads a luxurious, materialistic lifestyle, dominated by shopping, beauty treatments and gossip. Religion can therefore be seen as being the partial cause of Alice's problems in that it causes her to feel guilty about her feelings for Joe. (There is a suggestion that her backache is psychosomatically linked to these guilt feelings). It can, however, also be seen as part of the solution to those problems, as she eventually rediscovers her earlier idealism.

Another link between this film and "Crimes and Misdemeanours" lies in their colour schemes. In the earlier film the predominant colours were browns, greys and dull yellows and oranges. Here similar colours predominate, except that they are also relieved by brighter oranges and reds. This may have been intended to symbolise the difference in tone between the two films. "Crimes….." is one of Woody's darker films, combining humorous and serious stories, although even the humour is often of a dark, cynical nature. "Alice", by contrast, is generally lighter and more playful, a comedy raising serious issues as opposed to a serious film lightened by humour.

Magical realism in the cinema is not always successful; "Practical Magic", for example, which likewise tried to introduce magical elements into a modern-day realistic setting, is a hopeless mess of a film, one of my least-favourite movies of the nineties. "Alice" is a considerably better film than "Practical Magic"- it would be difficult to be worse- but I nevertheless got the feeling that Woody was never entirely happy with his supernatural subject-matter and does not handle it as deftly as he did in, for example, "The Purple Rose of Cairo", another film of his which includes fantasy elements. Although this is not her best collaboration with Allen- that was probably "Hannah and Her Sisters"- Mia Farrow makes a likable heroine and there are also good performances from Alec Baldwin as the ghostly Ed and William Hurt as Doug. Overall, this is a generally enjoyable film, with some amusing scenes, but it does not really count as one of Allen's great works. 6/10
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9/10
The Wood-man starts off the '90s in style
craigjclark9 December 2001
This was the first Woody Allen film I got to see in the theaters and -- since it has such strong fantasy elements -- it was truly a magical experience. Compared to a film like "Crimes and Misdemeanors" it's a bit of a lightweight, but taken on its own terms "Alice" is an enjoyable portrait of a woman trying to find herself and her spiritual center. And there are plenty of funny moments along the way, which I wouldn't dare spoil for you. All I'll say is watch for Bob Balaban (the dead guy in "Deconstructing Harry") in the party scene late in the film.

This film also marked the first time Allen worked with the amazing Judy Davis, who would make more of an impression in "Husbands and Wives" two years later.
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7/10
Great performance from Mia Farrow
HotToastyRag17 September 2017
When I first saw Alice, I didn't know it was a Woody Allen movie, but I can imagine if I'd been expecting the usual stammering joke fest, I might have wondered where Woody's influence went. He doesn't always make strict comedies, though, and this movie proves it.

Mia Farrow and William Hurt are married, have two children, and live the high-life. But Mia, in the title role, is unsatisfied and she doesn't know why. She visits a Chinese acupuncturist to help with some back pain and enters a journey of self-discovery.

Mia does a wonderful job in this slightly off-beat flick. Just as in The Purple Rose of Cairo when she rises above an unhappy marriage and finds herself, she expresses curiosity, sadness, hope, and invigoration all at the right times. I happen to be a Mia Farrow fan, so I was expecting to like this movie, but my mom doesn't like her nearly as much as I do, and she still really enjoyed Alice. As always in Woody Allen movies, there's a large cast, and this one includes Alec Baldwin, Blythe Danner, Cybill Shepherd, Joe Montegna, June Squibb, Julie Kavner, Bernadette Peters, Gwen Verdon, and Bob Balaban. Alice is thoughtful and sweet, and a great movie to watch when you're pondering the universe.
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5/10
Shows signs of an indecisive filmmaker
moonspinner5518 May 2002
I don't always find Woody Allen funny or stimulating, but I do think he's very smooth and efficient as a filmmaker, and that's why the stumbling "Alice" surprised me. It has bits and pieces of clever comedy and fantasy, but it's saddled with a script that seems made up of parts from different movies. Mia Farrow is charming (as usual) playing a New York City wife and mother whose visit to a Chinese herb doctor sets her on a journey of self-discovery. So far, so good. But I found nothing of interest in her sour marriage to William Hurt (their scenes are poor from all standpoints) and nothing good can be said for Alec Baldwin as a ghost. Keye Luke is perfectly cast as the unconventional medico who helps Alice change her outlook on life, and the film picks up a bit at the 60 minute mark with other nice turns by Bernadette Peters and Blythe Danner. But when Woody Allen veers back to the marriage stuff, his narrative becomes unhappily inconclusive. "Alice" plays very flat on television; perhaps in the theater--with an appreciative audience--it was somewhat more bearable. ** from ****
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8/10
Tour de Force for Mia
Hitchcoc22 March 2019
This is one of those scatter gun films that kept me attending throughout. Of course, it is part of the Woody Allen canon. Mia is rich and has it all, all except a feeling of purpose and happiness. She shops, eats, lives in luxury, and, ultimately, admires more than anything, Mother Teresa. But now we move into the supernatural element, where Keye Luke (number one son) is able to provide her with magical potions, allowing her to observe the lives of those she wishes. It isn't a good thing for her. The man she truly loves and finally gets together with is conflicted and can't make the move forward. Her husband is a total jerk, using her as a prop. I was so pleased with the way this film ended.
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7/10
Alice in Wondering-Land...
ElMaruecan8222 March 2019
Or "Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore" (Scorsese fans will get the reference), there seems to be some inner-girl escape-impulse associated to the name Alice and Woody Allen's heroine, played by the irresistible Mia Farrow, is no exception.

Alice is married to Doug, a wealthy businessman played by William Hurt. Together, they live in a luxurious apartment of Manhattan, her kids go to a private Catholic school, she's got a baby sitter, a cook, a trainer, a decorator, and all the time in the world to go shopping, get beauty treatments, gossip with her friends... and worry.

Some deep torment expresses itself through backaches and a sort of Catholic guilt due to her infatuation on Joe Ruffalo, a dark and handsome Jazz musician played by Joe Mantegna. Something is burning inside, channeling itself through that innocent lust, behind the obvious, there might be some strong existential call. Following numerous advice, Alice visits Dr. Yang (Keye Luke) a herbalist who seems to know what it's all about, certainly not the back.

The film deals with serious matters such as existential boredom, meaning of life, infidelity, but the "Chinese Riff" and tango leitmotifs remind us that this is all played for laughs, so we're not surprised when the treatment ventures in the realm of fantasy. Comedy needs that extra-kick when the laughs are too mild-mannered. For instance, when Alice mentions that penguin mate for life, Yang's answers "you think they're Catholic?" echo the infamous 'pigeon' quote from "Hannah and her Sisters" and it's not a good sign when Allen recycles his own jokes.

Only halfway through the film when the adoration of Mother Teresa and a few references about childhood reemerged that I understood that Catholicism wouldn't be the butt-monkey of Allen's humor but something with a strong bearing on Alice's guilt and existential crisis. Something that can be summed up in that quote from "Inherit the Wind": "What touches you, what warms you? Every man has a dream. What do you dream about? What... what do you need?"

The answer is surely not in Alice's life, Doug constantly belittles her ambitions, a TV series executives played by Cybil Shepherd dismisses her writing projects, and everyone treats her with relative condescendence. It's hard to believe that the film was released 22 years after "Rosemary's Baby". Here is Mia Farrow as a middle-aged mother caught in the suffocating coziness of an apartment supported by seemingly benevolent people and looking as frail, powerless and "young" as her Rosemary counterpart.

I guess fragility has always been Mia's strongest suit, one she wears with grace and gentleness, the only negative feeling she's capable to embody is that Catholic guilt less as a principle than an alibi to her incapability to fight, except her own demons. That's Alice Tate in a nutshell, and one can draw parallels with Cecilia from "The Purple Rose of Cairo", a woman who could only find artifices to escape her condition (and coincidentally, the film became my highly rater movie for helpfulness).

So there's one thing that Woody Allen's "Alice" gets right is the casting, Diane Keaton is too strong and free-spirited to fit the character. It's obvious Allen wrote it for and with Mia in mind, a few years before their marriage would collapse, foreshadowing of many scandals and accusations. I'd rather ignore the storm and contemplate the silence; this is one of Mia Farrow's best roles and it was written by someone who obviously knew her a lot and loved her enough to provide her a character with a happy ending, not bittersweet but happy. Mia was overdue one.

There's a catch though, she's so sweet and genuinely sympathetic that she' not really the best choice for a leading comedic role, it's not a case of "women can't be funny" but there's a moment where after drinking of a mixture, she learns how to talk with a seductive voice and talks sexy with Joe , who responds nervously. That scene was funny but it was incongruous and I was afraid it would be a "reveal your inner self" moment. I needed to relate to the real Alice, which happens to be in line with Mia's personality.

So the film is a series of situation where a fantasy device allows Alice to know about her husband's whereabouts, to talk with her deceased ex-boyfriend, a sexy bad boy played by Alec Baldwin, to have a hilarious talk with her muse played by Bernadette Peters, to talk with her mother... it's basically a psychoanalysis through magical plants with many visual gags, some genuinely good moments, especially the visit to her sister played by Blythe Danner, but we're never taken to the heights reached by "Hannah and Her Sisters" or "The Purple Rose of Cairo" except for a hilarious sequence involving a love potion.

Despite a few moments of creativity, the film is Woody Allen at his mildest, driving us at cruise speed to a satisfying ending where Alice finally fulfills her dreams because she knew how to control herself and get rid from her entourage's nuisance, embodying that quote from a French great man named Clemenceau: "in life, you've got to know what you want to do, have the courage to say it and the energy to do it."

Still, had they made a "Real Housewives of Manhattan" in 1990, I wonder if a character like Alice Tate would have been kept in regard to audiences' premises. She'd be just too gentle, too shy, too introverted to contribute to the narrative dynamics... and yet she is the titular heroine of a film with a high promise, the result is uneven, it's heart-warming but slow-paced though not deprived of interesting dynamics.

Maybe there's a reason why it's rarely mentioned among Allen's best... but never among his worst. Some would call it a gem, I would call it an enjoyable little film. Which is good enough.
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5/10
Mediocre and Vampiristic
Judith33325 March 2014
Warning: Spoilers
ALICE is a mediocre film that could have been a good film. This is because Woody Allen likes to dabble in themes such as self-discovery and the angst of relationships with others and with the self, but he frames everything in schtick, so that everything that happens is basically the setup for jokes. This works well when he sticks to comedy and satirizes wealthy Upper West Side New Yorkers, but you can't have a film about self-discovery when everything that is about to become serious deteriorates into schtick.

Male directors have a long history of fetishizing actresses and trying to squeeze their female secrets out of them, and Allen is no exception. But Allen goes one further, and makes his actresses like ventriloquist dummies who adopt his own neurotic self-deprecating style. So rather than trying to get into an actress's soul, as Rosselini or Bergman did, he inserts his own soul into them and has them be him. It's a sort of vampirism. Psychologists have noted that compassion lies in the ability not to understand how YOU would feel in another person's situation, but to understand how THEY feel, as THEMSLVES, as a person who is NOT you. Allen lacks compassion in that sense, and that is a strange handicap for a writer who is attempting scripts that deal with issues of identity.

His vampirism causes him to create a world where his own values predominate: that is, where everyone has the hots for everyone else, and where the activity du jour is for people to jump in bed with one another. Mia Farrow's character Alice is originally drawn into this world, but in the end rejects it for higher spiritual needs (going to Calcutta, working with Mother Theresa, giving up her wealth and selfish lifestyle and servants, and doing her own cooking and cleaning). Female socialites gossip at the end of the film about her remarkable transformation, and include in the same breath the transformation of another friend who has had plastic surgery. While Allen seems to be making fun of these gossipy women, he is also shares their view of Alice: that her transformation is as shallow as having a facelift.

He always takes a tone of petulant jealousy in his films when women reject him in favor of something else. He seems to feel most abandoned not when they are leaving him not another man, but when they are leaving him for a place where they can hide away from him in their own soul - to "find themselves." His most famous films - Annie Hall, Manhattan, and others - all deal with this theme of being rejected by a woman when she goes into herself. He makes fun of women when they do this. They are seen as flaky, self-involved, being attracted to new-agey forms of self-discovery that are beneath him. For me what is really deflating about his movies is his jealousy of the spiritual center of women, and his attempt to trivialize and belittle them for having deeper souls than him. It's as if he doesn't want anyone to feel anything beautiful if he can't. For Allen, women are disappointing because they have to go on these spiritual journeys and won't just go with romance (which for him means that everyone gets to bed everyone all the time). Even where there are opportunities for something really interesting to happen - such as when characters are given a magic potion that allows them to be invisible for a time - the only way they take advantage of this is to watch other people having sex, voyeuristically gaze at models undressing, or listen to people engaging in gossip about love affairs. So nothing ever rises above the level of a sex comedy.

Most viewers will miss the references in the mostly 1930s soundtrack. Over the opening credits "Limehouse Blues" plays, a song from the '20s about the ghetto in Chinatown: "In Limehouse, where Orientals love to play, In Limehouse, where you can hear those blues all day…" This song is the setup for Alice's visit to the weird Chinese herbalist/ hypnotist doctor, and plays whenever Alice visits his exotic den in Chinatown. It's a type of racist humor that may have played well in the '50s, but not so well today. "I Remember You" plays when her dead husband pays her a visit, another gag. And "Alice Blue Gown" plays during Alice's moments of self-discovery and over the ending credits, and may even be the inspiration for the title and character name. This song is from around 1919, and is about a girl singing wistfully about a "beautiful Alice blue gown" that she used to have. Here are some of the lyrics: "In my sweet little Alice blue gown, When I first wandered down into town, I was so proud inside, As I felt every eye, And in every shop window I primped, passing by." This indeed is the way Allen looks at his Alice character: as a sweet girl proud to wear a lovely gown, primping and trying to catch men's eyes. He plays this song when Alice is going on her spiritual journey, which would seem inappropriate. It's as if he is saying that she is not a grown woman with children and her own inner life, but only a lovely young girl in a gown, a girl who exists only to be loved and admired but who is stupid enough to reject love for her own silly pursuits.

In the end Allen makes fun of Alice's purity and refusal to wallow in bereft values like the others with the song, and by framing her selfless actions as a form of fanaticism. This is actually how sociopaths feel: jealous of people with real feelings and real love. Allen appears to have a voracious appetite for youth and innocence, which he merely tries to corrupt.
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Woody's film for non-fans
drosse6711 June 2003
This movie is Mia Farrow's most magical moment. She glows in this film and as Woody Allen doesn't appear in it, and the film is not a heavy drama like Interiors or Another Woman, it will appeal to most audiences. The plot dabbles in mysticism and magic, similar to A Midsummer Night's Sex Comedy and his segment in New York Stories, and is basically the story of a pampered woman in search of her identity. As Farrow's Alice is onscreen nearly every moment, the film couldn't have a better title. Alice begins to question her religious faith amidst an upper-class Manhattan setting and intellectual friends--in other words, she plays a female, Catholic version of the character Woody Allen has played in many other movies. There are not a lot of laughs in the movie but it still remains a classy winner, and a good start to Allen's '90s career. The big name cast (with the exception of William Hurt and Joe Mantegna) contribute cameo appearances, more or less; a casting move he would continue later in the decade. Not a movie that lends itself to countless viewings, like Manhattan or The Purple Rose of Cairo, but a definite charmer.
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7/10
A lovely, overlooked film from Woody Allen
gridoon202431 December 2014
Warning: Spoilers
Made right after one of Woody Allen's most celebrated films, "Crimes And Misdemeanors", "Alice" seems to be one of the forgotten entries in his filmography. In both of these films, Allen effortlessly walks a fine line between drama and comedy, and although "Alice" appears to be a smaller, simpler film compared to "Crimes", the viewer gradually realizes that the central dilemma - will Mia Farrow cheat on her husband or not ? - is just a pretext: the film seamlessly blends reality with fantasy (the fantasy touches are creative, though not unprecedented in Allen's cinema: see, for example, "Play It Again, Sam" or "The Purple Rose Of Cairo"), and the present with the past, to paint the portrait of a woman at a crossroads in her life. And who better to play that woman than Mia Farrow, who does "mousiness" to sweet perfection? Many other fine actors appear as well; William Hurt is kind of boring as the husband - but that's the point! Blythe Danner shines as Mia's sister. Only the ending becomes a little too preachy. *** out of 4.
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7/10
A doodle at best
MOscarbradley7 August 2016
Alice doesn't so much go through the looking glass or down a rabbit-hole as get strung out on Dr. Yang's herbs. She also has more money than she knows what to do with and Dr Yang's herbs are the conduit into a whole new world of impulsive and uncharacteristic behavior not to mention invisibility and the ability to fly like Supergirl. Despite its sterling cast this is minor, low-key Allen, designed as a vehicle for Farrow and she's excellent. The movie itself falls between 'the early funny ones' and the somewhat more serious later films. It's a doodle at best but even a doodle from Mr Allen isn't to be sniffed at.
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6/10
OK, ish
grantss13 April 2012
Not one of Woody Allen's best. Has its moments but the plot is average. The whole upper-crustness and superficiality of all the characters was quite irritating.

Mia Farrow was miscast as Alice. Woody Allen wrote the role for her, as he did many of his 80s movies (they were in a relationship, after all). However, she simply comes across as irritatingly mousy and neurotic. Typically Woody Allen would play the neurotic character, as that is all he knows (by his own admission) but as the part required a female, he probably thought Mia Farrow was his female equivalent.

William Hurt nails the aloof, too-rich-to-care, stuck-up husband, though his character is quite irritating. Good support from Joe Mantegna, Alec Baldwin, Judy Davis and Cybill Shepherd.

Overall, OK but certainly not a must-see, even if you are, like me, a Woody Allen fan.
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6/10
another pale of "nice"
dominik962 August 2005
The thing that comes to someone's mind, by seeing a Woody Allen movie is the word "nice". As the naive art in painting, his work accomplished the same title in the world of cinema. Whichever movie of Allen you will see, it won't be great, it won't be bad, it will be a "nice" movie....and once again this movie is another pale of "nice". If you want to spend 140 minutes without exhausting your mind, but nonetheless have a "nice" entertaining, than it's your movie. Particularly if you're at risk falling asleep and then waking up, because it won't matter! I mean, i don't think i will ever see an Allen piece of art, that surprises me, it will certainly be nice and smooth. Not more, not less. It's almost like an established brand in the cinema. And dear reader, this little text of mine i am writing right now, by watching this movie. That shows quite "nice" the character of it... And the ultimate question is: "will Allen finally struggle for excellence, and try to make a "great" movie? When judging his wife, you must notice that he hasn't done it yet with his women.... Not a good sign for his movies...
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9/10
Willing to suspend disbelief
maisannes19 May 2002
Alice (9 out of 10)

Woody took my disbelief and suspended it high above Manhattan, so I could peer down upon Mia's Chinese-herb-aided exploration of infidelity, family and Catholicism.

Allen here is clearly more in touch with both yin and yang than Kubrick in Eyes Wide Shut. A dream, not a nightmare; a trail, not a train track.
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6/10
Disappointing Woody
gavin694210 December 2014
A spoiled Manhattan housewife (Mia Farrow) re-evaluates her life after visiting a Chinatown healer (Keye Luke).

So, this film has the interesting historical footnote of being the first films for both June Squibb and Lisa Marie. This is about the best thing that can be said for the film. (Actually, the cast as a whole is pretty darn good.)

This is supposed to be Woody Allen's take on "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland". Well, yes, it certainly is that. But if the lead character was not named Alice, perhaps the viewer would never make that connection. There seems to be less Alice here than there ought to be.

One has to wonder about the Mia Farrow years versus the Diane Keaton years. Maybe it is the writing, maybe the directing, but it seems that the Keaton years of Woody's work were so much stronger than the Farrow years. In some films, particularly "A Midsummer Night's Sex Comedy", Farrow is just downright awful.
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4/10
Could have been better! 4/10
leonblackwood19 November 2014
Review: This is another movie from the Woody Allen camp, about a woman whose in a troubled relationship and looks for comfort from another man. The only difference in this movie is that Mia Farrow seeks help from a Chinese healer who gives her different powers which sends her into a fantasy world. One of her powers is to disappear, which is when she catches her husband doing the dirty on her, so she decides to leave her wealthy husband for a man who she meets whilst picking up her kids from school. Some of the fantasy scenes go a bit too far, like when she's flying with Alec Baldwin in the sky, but the storyline isn't as bad as some of the movies that I have seen from Woody Allen lately. The main problem that I found with the film was Mia Farrow, who I find emotionless and quite dry. She really can't deliver wit or warmth to her roles and her constant whining spoilt the movie for me. Apart from that, the movie is watchable, with many twists and turns throughout. Watchable!

Round-Up: I wonder if Woody Allen would have used Mia Farrow so much if he wasn't with her? For a writer and director who mostly makes comedies, she really would be the last actress who I would star in my movies. There are some good actors in this film, like William Hurt and Joe Mantegna, but it's mostly based around Farrow who was quite dull. I liked the moral of the story at the end, which was quite sweet, but the main character had to go through a hell of a journey to get there. Basically I have come to terms with the fact that a lot of Woody Allen movies would have been much better if he didn't cast Mia Farrow in the lead, but that's just my personal opinion.

Budget: $12million Worldwide Gross: $7.3million

I recommend this movie to people who are into there Woody Allen movies about a woman in a troubled relationship and seeks help from a Chinese healer. 4/10
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10/10
An Amazing Intelligent Comedy
oleven1 October 2006
Woody Allen's "alice" is one of my favorite comedies. Woody Allen has a great way of using his own theatrical language to show his view of the human psychic. The movie is full of refreshing originality and great Text. Woody Allen Prooves himself here as a true artist and a true master in writing scripts, and of course great dialogs. The cast is amazing and Mia Farrow plays a convincing and powerful role. The movie stands in the thin line between realistic and magical, Beetwin story and Fairytale. Woody did this touch of fantasy with much skill, as a writer and as a Director. The storytelling style touches Shakespeare.

I personally think this movie is one of Woody Allen's greatest pieces along with "The Purple Rose Of Cairo" and "Great Aphrodite". This movie is definitely a Must-See if you Enjoy real Intelligent Original Comedies, great storytelling and genius writing.
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7/10
Mia in Wonderland
lee_eisenberg21 May 2021
Warning: Spoilers
I have a vague memory of having seen Woody Allen's "Alice" when I was little. Of course, at that age I didn't understand the plot; I only picked up on the invisibility scenes and saw a correlation to "Alice in Wonderland" (and of course only knew Disney's animated version).

Anyway, now that I'm old enough to understand the movie, I can see that Woody Allen was shifting into the phase of his career where he focused a lot on neurotic rich people. At least this movie had a comedic - even fantasy - element to it.

Now comes the unpleasant aspect. Co-starring in the movie is Dylan Farrow. Do I even need to elaborate on the allegations against Woody Allen? At this point, watching any of his movies is unpleasant, clever though the movies may be.

Overall, it's a good movie. Not Allen's best by any measure, but certainly fun. In addition to Farrow, the cast includes Alec Baldwin, William Hurt, Keye Luke (best known for the Charlie Chan movies, but also played Mogwai's owner in the Gremlins movies), Bernadette Peters, Cybill Shepherd, Joe Mantegna and Julie Kavner (that means that Marge Simpson and Fat Tony co-starred outside "The Simpsons"!).
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5/10
Poor little rich girl..................
ianlouisiana2 February 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Poor little rich girl takes revenge on her philandering husband with tenor saxophone player.It might have been more gripping if the tenor player had been Archie Shepp but no,it's that safe but rather boring Joe Mantegna. Alice is so rich that my sympathy for her is strictly limited,unlike Miss Farrow's not dissimilar role in the superior "Purple Rose of Cairo" where her options were far more restricted. Her husband is a pompous ass,but physical violence is not on his agenda. Advised by her equally rich but emotionally impoverished friends to visit the mysterious Dr Yang,she takes his magic powders and becomes what she wants to be rather than what she actually is.Miss Farrow's steely determination shows through her fragile exterior.Once she decides she seriously wants Joe she sets out to get him - no error. Blink and you'll miss the great Judy Davis in an appearance so brief as to be almost Hitchcockian. Eventually she ditches the tenor player and goes off to help Mother Teresa (the way you do). The music,as is often the case in his films,is sublime,the photography sumptuous and spartan by turns.I just can't work up a lot of enthusiasm for the project as a whole,which is a pity ,but it promises a lot more than it produces.
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