Alice ha realizzato il suo desiderio: il Paese delle Meraviglie è finalmente diventato la sua nuova casa. La situazione, però, non è tutta rose e fiori. Se infatti, nel mondo reale, la sorella Edith e l’amico d’infanzia Earl tentano di trovare un modo per riportare Alice indietro, nel Paese delle Meraviglie qualcuno sta tramando contro di lei, tentando di rivoltarle contro gli abitanti di quel mondo incantato. E mentre il ghigno malvagio del nemico di Alice è sempre più vicino, la ragazza è alla disperata ricerca di un po’ d’ordine in una dimensione fatta di caos assoluto.
Alice mai più è il nuovo graphic novel scritto da Dan Panosian e disegnato dall'italiano Giorgio Spalletta per i colori di Francesco Segala. Un oscuro graphic novel che fa da sequel ai romanzi di Lewis Carroll e che prosegue il racconto iniziato con Alice per sempre. Una storia dalle tinte dark e horror che parla di crescita interiore e di quanto sia pericoloso decidere di continuare a inseguire il Bianconiglio.
2.5 stars. Reading this right after Alice Ever After just highlighted some of the difference in story telling. The story filed wasn’t anything unexpected and followed a lot of the standard horrors and treatments of the time. I missed some of the cut cat sketches that brought a little whimsy and light to the story.
Started off decent and devolved into absolute nonsense. I feel like there's an interesting story to tell here but this just didn't make the mark for me, ended really abruptly too.
I enjoy the broad premise of Alice being on drugs, psychological play etc. The art is good, especially from Spalletta. This whole part of the story was pretty boring though. Nothing interesting happens. It feels like an in-between two other stories that actually are the ones that matter. It also doesn't seem to have decided what the target audience is. In the first volume, from what I remember, and also in parts of this one, the target audience is obviously older and mature. However, much of it is like a kids episode of Alice that 7 year olds might enjoy. I had some high hopes for this one. Unsure if I will continue reading, if they decide to do more
Alice Ever After left a bad taste in my mouth given the ending, but Never After goes a little way to restore my faith.
I'd have liked a bit more interplay between the Real and Wonderland worlds like the first mini-series, especially since most of the Wonderland sequences involve Alice bickering with everyone without actually doing anything. She complains a lot about not having any agency, and then stands around for four issues not doing much of anything anyway.
Still, this feels unfinished. Maybe there's an Alice Forever After in the works?
It's essentially a REALLY dark Alice in Wonderland tale with Alice's creepy father the root of all her problems. It's implied that Alice was institutionalized, then lobotomized(?) and hasn't been right since.....hence Wonderland. When she's brought home, what's first thought as illness is the early stages of pregnancy.
Her sister, knowing how bad her father is, begins to try and talk Alice out of her fugue and back to the real world. ===== Bonus: Did I say this was dark? Because it's dark Bonus Bonus: Oleander tea will kill you.
This is a dark version of Alice in Wonderland. Like Alice Madness Returns (though I still think that ones darker in a lot of ways). This is what if her father was the root cause of her trauma. Seeing the character change was really creepy. There's a lot of implications that make this pretty disturbing, too, but the ending is really good. I enjoyed the line about the previous Queen of Hearts being like Alice once upon a time.
Dark and twisty spin on Alice in Wonderland. This follow-up ties up some loose ends but leaves things open for more. We'll written with stellar artwork.
Original review: The art was nice for the most part (I didn’t like Alice’s Queen of Hearts dress but that’s really the only art thing I disliked). The art contrast between Wonderland and the real world was fun. Her dad being a dentist was an interesting twist. But, overall it felt average (at best) and like it was missing a lot of needed character development and background information. I feel like if you want a “dark” Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland retelling, Alice: Madness Returns (the video game) is better.
Update: realized this is a sequel(?) to Alice Ever After. I’ll give it a read when I have the chance and see if it changes my opinion of this
Update 2: I read the first one. It’s made me even more confused about the Alice-being-pregnant plot. Definitely did help with the feelings I’d had of missing context (obviously lol).