Mad Hatter and March Hare: Difference between revisions

From the Kingdom Hearts Wiki, the Kingdom Hearts encyclopedia
Jump to navigationJump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{{delete}}
{{InfoCharacter
{{InfoCharacter
|name=Mad Hatter & March Hare
|name=Mad Hatter & March Hare

Revision as of 04:19, 2 May 2009

All worlds begin in darkness, and all so end.
Ansem 7★ KHUX.png
This article has been nominated for deletion.

If you believe it should remain, please state why on KHWiki:Pages for deletion.

You may continue editing this page, but this notice must not be removed until discussions regarding it have closed.

Template:InfoCharacter The Mad Hatter and the March Hare are two characters that appear in Alice in Wonderland.

Their tea is always enchanted with special effects, such as shrinking the drinker.

In Kingdom Hearts, they are trapped in a painting on the wall in the Tea Party Garden. Strangely enough, the emotions of the Mad Hatter and March Hare change from time to time. When examined, the message that appears is "A very merry unbirthday. Sit to get your present." The reward obtained depends on which seat Sora takes.

Sora has to take a seat which he has never sat on before, or else the table and chairs will disappear and Heartless will overrun the place. When this happens, the Mad Hatter's and March Hare's faces turn shocked, and the painting will become unexaminable.

If Sora and company successfully get all the presents in the Tea Party Garden, the Mad Hatter and March Hare's faces momentarily turn happy. Upon examination, their faces turn sad and the message that is displayed is "That's all the presents."

The Mad Hatter and March Hare are amongst the few characters of Kingdom Hearts that do not have a place in Jiminy's Journal, such as Chernabog, Glut, Ansem's Guardian and Anti-Sora.

Trivia

  • It is unknown how the Mad Hatter and the March Hare are a painting, instead of single flesh-and-blood characters. It may be explained in a future game, if possible.
  • When the characters speak of an unbirthday, they refer to a riff on birthdays explained upon in the classic book Alice And The Looking Glass (And What She Found There), in which it is explained that (quote) each person gets just one birthday every year, but there are 364 un-birthdays (unquote). That means it could essentially be anyone's unbirthday within that world (or any world for that matter.

See also