The White Rabbit’s anxious “Oh dear! Oh dear! I shall be too late!” is rendered in the 1951 dub as: “Astaga! Astaga! Aku pasti terlambat lagi!” (Back-translation: “Oh my! Oh my! I’ll be late again!”) The English “dear” (Victorian mild exclamation) becomes Astaga – a common Indonesian interjection of surprise, closer to “Good grief!” This domestication removes Victorian gentility but increases emotional relatability for Indonesian children.
In the 1951 film, the Mad Hatter’s riddle (“Why is a raven like a writing desk?”) is left unresolved in English. The Indonesian dub transforms it into: “Kenapa gagak mirip meja tulis? Karena keduanya tidak pernah membalas surat!” (Back-translation: “Why is a raven like a writing desk? Because neither ever answers letters!”) Here, the dub creates an original punchline based on gagak (raven) not being a letter-writer and meja tulis (desk) as a recipient of letters. The absurd logic is preserved, but the cultural reference to Carroll’s non-answer is replaced with a functional joke. alice in wonderland dubbing indonesia
Dubbing Alice in Wonderland for Indonesia requires transforming logical absurdity into culturally coherent silliness. The 1951 and 2010 Indonesian dubs demonstrate that successful localization prioritizes laugh triggers over lexical loyalty. Future research should examine audience reception among Indonesian children: Do they perceive the dubbed Wonderland as “weird” in the same way English-speaking audiences do? And how do dubbing studios handle newer adaptations, such as the 2021 Alice’s Wonderland Bakery series, which introduces modern slang? The White Rabbit’s anxious “Oh dear