The supporting cast reads like a “Where Are They Now?” of B-movie and adult-industry royalty. Ron Nelson’s frantic, coked-out White Rabbit, Alan Gornick’s grinning and androgynous Cheshire Cat, and the imposing, whip-cracking Queen of Hearts (Nancy Deering) all embody different archetypes of the sexual landscape. The Mad Hatter’s tea party becomes a Dionysian orgy of cake-passing and champagne showers, while the Mock Turtle delivers a melancholy, slow-motion seduction that is oddly touching. These sequences suggest that the film is not merely exploiting Carroll’s IP, but attempting a surrealist interrogation: what if the arbitrary punishments of the Queen of Hearts were S&M? What if the riddle of the Hatter was simply “why not?” In this reading, Wonderland’s tyranny is not authoritarian but hedonistic—a world where the only crime is refusing to play along.
Starring Jayne Mansfield, Richard Greene, and Veruschka, this boundary-pushing adaptation is not for the faint of heart. With its explicit content, outrageous costumes, and general air of decadence, "Alice In Wonderland: An X Rated Musical Fantasy" is a true guilty pleasure. Alice In Wonderland An X Rated Musical Fantasy 1976
If you’re looking for high art, look elsewhere. But if you want a time capsule of 1970s sexual politics, campy musical numbers, and a genuinely committed performance from a woman who looks like she wandered off the set of a Coca-Cola commercial into an orgy, Alice in Wonderland: An X-Rated Musical Fantasy is a must-see. Just don’t expect to hear “Jabberwocky” recited with a straight face. The supporting cast reads like a “Where Are They Now
Rating: ★★★★☆ (Four stars for what it is; zero stars for what it isn't.) Where to watch: Available on Blu-ray from AGFA/MVD, and streaming on several cult film platforms (check your local listings for the uncut version). These sequences suggest that the film is not
As Alice navigates this bizarre world, she discovers that the Queen's power is waning due to a prophecy that foretells her downfall. The Queen believes that Alice, with her "ordinary" world perspective, holds the key to finding the elixir of life.