n-Track Studio 10 adds new creativity boosting tools and effects
By using this site you agree to our Terms and Conditions. Please Accept these before using the site.


With custom sound import - a playground for creativity
From VocalTune to Convolverb, DEnoiser to Amps
Use the power of AI to split full songs into separate tracks!
Find your next collab and upload your music
15GB+ selection of royalty free loops, projects and samples
Use n-Track 10 on all your Windows, Mac, Linux, Android and iOS devices.
Effortlessly navigate your projects.
Supports 5.1, 6.1 and 7.1
Craft your sonic signature with custom presets
As Alice navigates this bizarre world, she discovers that the Queen's power is waning due to a prophecy that foretells her downfall. The Queen believes that Alice, with her "ordinary" world perspective, holds the key to finding the elixir of life.
Initially, she encounters the beautiful but deadly flora and fauna of Wonderland. The Cheshire Cat appears, guiding her to the Mad Hatter's tea party. There, she learns about the oppressive rule of the Queen of Hearts and the terror she inspires.
With its catchy show tunes, a radiant performance by a future Playboy model, and a surprisingly charming tone, the film became a massive box office sensation. It not only challenged censorship norms but also inadvertently created a lasting legacy for the adult film industry. Here is the story of how a virginal librarian named Alice fell down a rabbit hole and into an X-rated fantasia that was both wildly profitable and strangely respectable. Alice In Wonderland An X Rated Musical Fantasy 1976
Directed by and produced by exploitation pioneer Bill Osco , the film unexpectedly grossed over $90 million globally . This box office total secured its place in cinematic history alongside mainstream hits of the mid-1970s. The Plot: Wonderland Reimagined
Alice in Wonderland: An X-Rated Musical Fantasy (1976) - IMDb As Alice navigates this bizarre world, she discovers
This Wonderland is populated by familiar characters, but with a distinctly adult twist [1]:
The supporting cast reads like a “Where Are They Now?” of B-movie and adult-industry royalty. Ron Nelson’s frantic, coked-out White Rabbit, Alan Gornick’s grinning and androgynous Cheshire Cat, and the imposing, whip-cracking Queen of Hearts (Nancy Deering) all embody different archetypes of the sexual landscape. The Mad Hatter’s tea party becomes a Dionysian orgy of cake-passing and champagne showers, while the Mock Turtle delivers a melancholy, slow-motion seduction that is oddly touching. These sequences suggest that the film is not merely exploiting Carroll’s IP, but attempting a surrealist interrogation: what if the arbitrary punishments of the Queen of Hearts were S&M? What if the riddle of the Hatter was simply “why not?” In this reading, Wonderland’s tyranny is not authoritarian but hedonistic—a world where the only crime is refusing to play along. The Cheshire Cat appears, guiding her to the
Alice in Wonderland emerged during the twilight of this era. Producer William Osco, fresh off the success of Flesh Gordon (1974), sought to create a film that parodied a public domain literary classic—a common tactic to avoid copyright issues while lending the project an air of legitimacy. The film aimed to blend the emerging genre of the adult musical (popularized by The Rocky Horror Picture Show , though that film was not hardcore) with Lewis Carroll’s surreal Victorian narrative.
| Actor | Character(s) | | :--- | :--- | | Kristine DeBell | Alice | | Larry Gelman | The White Rabbit | | Alan Novak | Mad Hatter | | Ron Nelson | William | | Bradford Armdexter | Humpty Dumpty / Queen of Hearts' Brother | | Juliet Graham | Queen of Hearts | | Jason Williams | White Knight |