It's pretty fractured, all right!!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alice_in_Wonderland#Synopsis
Read the synopsis of the story (don't bother watching any of the movies) and then you can adjust your story as needed.
What definition have you been given for "fractured fairy tale," anyway??
I know I asked this earlier, but right now I want to know if this is close enough to the original Alice in Wonderland to be a fractured fairytale (I've never seen Alice in Wonderland before and don't have enough time to watch it and write this before it's due): I want the story to open with Alice at the Queen's celebration. When the Cheshire cat tricks the Queen, the Queen continues through with Alice's death sentence. So Alice becomes evil and basically becomes like the next Queen of Hearts. Would that count as a fractured fairytale, and does it match Alice in Wonderland's story plot?
3 answers
She didn't really give us a definition, just examples. She said that Shrek was a good one. And she told us of some story where Cinderella actually liked cleaning and didn't want to go to the ball. Things like that. A lot of kids turned theirs in today, just the story written from a different POV, but she said it wouldn't count and made them rewrite it.
Thanks for all of your help!
Thanks for all of your help!
You're welcome!