Mickey has been reading Lewis Carroll's "Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There", and falls asleep. He finds himself on the other side of the mirror, where the furniture is alive.

Is it worth your time? If you have ten minutes and a soft spot for animation that feels like a fever dream, yes. It's for people who want to see Mickey Mouse fight a literal deck of cards with a sewing needle. If you need a coherent plot or don't like surrealism, maybe skip this one. It's pure chaos, and that's the poi...


Comparing the cinematic DNA and archive impact of two defining moments in cult history.

David Hand

Henry Edwards
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"Is it worth your time? If you have ten minutes and a soft spot for animation that feels like a fever dream, yes. It's for people who want to see Mickey Mouse fight a literal deck of cards with a sewing needle. If you need a coherent plot or don't like surrealism, maybe skip this one. It's pure chaos, and that's the point. Watching this feels less like a cartoon and more like someone took the weirdest parts of a Lewis Carroll book and shoved them into a blender. The way the furniture moves aroun..."
Lewis Carroll, William Cottrell, Bob Kuwahara, Joe Grant
United States

