Lewis Through The Camera Lens
They’re making a biopic of Charles Dodgson (better known as Lewis
Carroll). But before we talk about him,
let’s talk about Alice .
‘Alice
in Wonderland’ is one of those rare stories; not only do you not need to have
read the book to know it, you also don’t need to have seen the films
either. It is a story that it just
known, deeply rooted in popular culture worldwide.
And it absolutely deserves that status – it is legendary in
a literal sense; ‘Alice In Wonderland’ is a legend that can be interpreted and
re-interpreted over and over again to different creative effects. The famous Disney cartoon places the story
firmly in fairy tale territory; Tim Burton takes the idea into darker
territory.
The rampant dreamlike happenings of the story (and that of its
superior sequel, ‘Through The Looking Glass’) lend themselves well to visuals
both in film and illustration. John
Tenniel’s
original drawings are testament to that, and are perhaps still the
best (although I think Anthony Browne’s Magritte inspired pictures give Tenniel
a run for his money…) Perhaps because
the story started as part of the ‘oral tradition’ style of telling tales it
allows it to be flexible and fluid; Carroll no doubt had to incorporate interruptions
and questions into the story as it went along.
Alice & Friend |
Of course, because the story was told before it was written the
magic of the Alice
books really lies in its use of language and absurd ideas. All of the wordplay,
nonsense poetry and parodies of nursery rhymes, unanswerable riddles (“Why is a
raven like a writing desk?”), anthropomorphic characters, playing cards
painting flowers, murdering time, babies turning into pigs, disembodied smiles
left hanging in the air… Everything is
possible, especially when it shouldn’t be.
It is anarchic in every sense – there are no rules to what happens. This is why, I believe, the Alice books still
have the capacity to terrify children; there are no genre tropes here where the
heroine will be fine after defeating the villain/discovering the treasure/winning
the game, etc. The lack of rules or
objectives is completely disorientating, and children can find this troubling
(it terrified me – my Mum had to give up during the second chapter apparently).
And where is Carroll actually going with all of this? It goes nowhere of course; it ends with that
most clichéd of dues ex machina endings – Alice
woke up and it was all a dream. It’s a
complete admission on Carroll’s part that his anarchy doesn’t have a conclusion
or a ‘point’ to make – it is there to be enjoyed, and then it isn’t. It’s notable that this is exactly the same
way the sequel ends, and was not seen as something from the first book that
could be ‘fixed’ this time round. It’s
also notable that no one complains about either of the books having weak
endings.
So, that’s my opinion of the Alice books.
Written by Lewis Carroll…
… but then Lewis Carroll didn’t exist in real life. Charles Dodgson existed in real life but we
don’t know very much about him. Or
rather, we don’t know very much about the part of him that wrote the Alice books, which are
the only relevant bits for us. It is
worth little to us now to know that he was a good but very dull maths
lecturer. His biographical details are
largely uninteresting apart from the aspects of Dodgson’s life that converged
with Carroll’s – namely the nature of his relationships with children. Nevertheless, they (‘they’ being Hollywood ) are planning a biopic, called 'Queen Of Hearts'. Hmm. It's being talked about on industry sites, and the one
sentence synopsis is as follows: "Oxford instructor Charles Dodgson (Lewis Carroll) tells stories to the dean's daughter, Alice, and her sisters, while falling in love with the dean's wife."
Now, it may seem unfair to judge an unmade film on a
tagline, but this already sounds a bit lame.
The emphasis sounds like it’s on completely the wrong thing. The story of Carroll/Dodgson doesn’t have
anything to do with falling in love with a Dean’s wife (something which maybe,
possibly, might have happened but which is in the end pure speculation based on
some missing diary pages). No, the only
story to tell about Dodgson’s life worth telling is about his love for Alice
Liddell.
What form that love took is quite unknowable. There are the posthumous accusations of
paedophilia, but no direct evidence for them.
He shared a typical Victorian taste for over-sentimentalising children,
and girls in particular (see also Little Nell and most of the rest of Dickens). But I don’t think he wanted to sexualise
children. He comes across in biographies
as a man who wasn’t particularly interested in sex, and was probably frightened
of it, and I think it more likely that he enjoyed the company of children
because they represented to him a retreat from the sexualised world of
adults. Which is undoubtedly still
rather messed up; but then he lived in the Victorian era, which had a very
messed up code of ethics and morals about most things. There’s something of the ‘Old Peter Pan’
about his character, someone who shouldn’t have grown up but did. Perhaps that explains the reoccurrence of
time as a concept in all of his books. And
perhaps that’s why there’s also an air of sadness and of violence amongst all
the comedy, expressing a sense of frustration with the tediousness/emotional
responsibilities of the adult world.
Charles Dodgson |
This aspect of his character is the only part worth
examining, frankly, because that’s the only bit we know that links directly to
the work we remember him for. If the rumours
(and I think even ‘rumours’ is too strong a word) that he was having a fling
with the Dean’s wife were true then you’d still just have a dull melodrama set
in Victorian Oxford. You can say what
you want about her importance in his life, but he didn’t write a book for her,
he wrote one for her daughter. The
complex bit of his character, and therefore the interesting bit, is his
attitude to childhood and his relationship with children; his relationship with
adults just doesn’t sound very interesting.
Even if the film is a good piece of drama about a love
triangle – and it could be a very good piece of drama – that’ll probably put
Alice in more in the background which is… well, fine I suppose – but it would
seem a bit perverse to make a film about the relatively unremarkable life of
Charles Dodgson instead of the more enigmatic Lewis Carroll.
Always interesting stuff, Lewis Carroll - of course, there are more than 10 answers to the 'writing desk' riddle. Dodgeson answered it thus: "Because it can produce a few notes, tho they are very flat; and it is never put with the wrong end in front!" This answer is believed to be a misprint and the original is believed to be "Because it can produce a few notes, tho they are very flat; and it is naver put with the wrong end in front!" I always liked "Because they each contain a river--Neva and Esk. My friend is a librarian at the library of Congress, she claims that Alice Lidell is the good reverend's illegitimate daughter and cites compelling evidence from letters. Must go for now.
ReplyDeleteI know there's a ton of 'Raven' answers in 'The Annotated Alice' which unfortunately I didn't have to hand for this post! (It's also great to have all the 'real' versions of the rhymes being parodied by Carroll) The answers, even the ones by Carroll, are after the event though; the riddle was meant to have no answer and so I think the point stands that it's just as much an absurdity as the Cheshire Cat's smile hanging in the air!
DeleteIs the implication in Alice Liddell being illegitimate that she was Dodgson's?
Yes, some scholars believe she was his child. You're right about the riddle though, as usual.
ReplyDelete