Quote:
Originally Posted by panasonic
It's best not to think about it or if you do just remember "Wonderland logic."
...so Alice's body being rubber isn't outlandish especially because "Wonderland logic".
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That clarifies a few things. Regarding the "artificiality" effect upon Alice in her giantess form, there was another Alice film that gave the character similar treatment:
And every time Alice shrank or grew, she would turn into a doll or some kind of artificial figure devoid of human anatomy.
Also taking into account the food and drink (and pieces of mushroom) that Alice consumes to change sizes, it would also suggest that her resorting to indulge in said consumables would be a way of abandoning her sense of reality; and in effect, her acknowledgment that she's only flesh and blood and nothing more.
In a more gistful proposition, Alice is no better than a doll in Wonderland. No sense of reason or accountability, much like the dolls she may have been situated by her adult superiors to play with often. This is easily understood because basically she's still just a child, or a young woman with no grip on reality yet (depending on your point of view, perverse or otherwise).