If you meant a non-adult film called Alice (e.g., a 1990s indie or European art film) with split-screen techniques, please clarify and I’d be happy to help further.
: By splitting the story into distinct vignettes, the film mirrors the episodic nature of the original Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland . Each scene acts as a standalone encounter—with the "Pillar," the "Cheshire," or at the "Mad Hatter’s tea party"—allowing the viewer to engage with the aesthetic of Wonderland in bite-sized, thematic chunks.
: The Harford home serves as the primary stage for Alice's confession of her sexual fantasies. This confession "splits" the narrative, shifting Bill’s journey from a secure domestic life into a dark, nocturnal odyssey through New York’s elite underworld. The Final Scene
The Split Scenes format solves this narrative fragmentation by embracing it—treating the movie strictly as a collection of standalone, highly produced segments rather than a cohesive story. 3. Archival Differences and Missing Footage
In 2010, director Erica McLean took on the monumental task of reimagining Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland as an adult feature for Cal Vista.
: Unlike the Victorian landscape of the original books, this version uses the urban and rural locales of Southern California to represent a "seedy" Wonderland. Understanding "Split Scenes"