Professional LED mapping software built for large-scale and permanent installations. Intuitive, efficient and powerful — the ideal solution for all 2D and 3D LED projects.
Quickly and precisely map your LED strips whatever their shapes. Map curves and lines at any angles in a few clicks.
For complex shapes, using a background image as a guide makes the mapping process a real joy.
Map various 3D shapes like LED cubes, tunnels and spheres with ease.
Thanks to its innovative effect engine, creating unique 3D effects and content is really made easy with LJLM!
Preview your work in real-time with the built-in 2D and 3D visualizers.
Hundreds of professional and configurable effects are at your disposal, right out of the box.
The film’s aesthetic is a pastiche: bright, hallucinatory set design and exaggerated costumes nod to both Carroll’s surrealism and 1970s kitsch. Its musical numbers—playful, sometimes crass—attempt to recast Wonderland’s nonsense verse and archetypal characters into vaudeville-tinged, cabaret-inflected performances. This incongruity creates a strange tonal blend: at times mischievous and comical, at others deliberately shocking. The use of satire targets not just sexual taboos but also bourgeois morals and the hypocrisies of adult institutions, echoing the original book’s subversive spirit while transposing it into a sexually explicit register.
Alice in Wonderland: An X-Rated Musical Fantasy (1976) is a provocative, transgressive reinterpretation of Lewis Carroll’s classic that deliberately collides childhood whimsy with adult erotica and countercultural satire. More than a straightforward pornographic pastiche, the film functions as a cultural artifact of the 1970s—an era when sexual liberation, experimental filmmaking, and underground art collided in ways that challenged mainstream sensibilities. Alice In Wonderland An X Rated Musical Fantasy 1976
Viewed today, the film raises complex questions about consent, representation, and the intersections of nostalgia and adult content. Its deliberate appropriation of a children’s tale for explicit purposes produces an enduring discomfort: a meta-commentary on how cultural icons can be repurposed, but also a reminder of the era’s looser boundaries around adaptation and taste. For film historians and scholars of 1970s counterculture, it’s a curious case study—illustrative of how underground cinema experimented with genre, sexuality, and parody. For general viewers, it remains provocative, polarizing, and of primarily historical interest rather than artistic triumph. The film’s aesthetic is a pastiche: bright, hallucinatory
Performances and direction lean into camp and caricature rather than subtlety. Characters like the Mad Hatter, the Queen of Hearts, and the Caterpillar are exaggerated into embodiments of sexual fantasy or societal caricature, which both amplifies Carroll’s original absurdity and reduces his characters to single-note personas tailored to the film’s erotic aims. The music and choreography—key selling points—are uneven; some numbers achieve a sense of gleeful, transgressive fun, while others feel dated or indulgent by contemporary standards. The use of satire targets not just sexual
In short, Alice in Wonderland: An X-Rated Musical Fantasy is an audacious, camp-heavy artifact of its time—misaligned with mainstream adaptations of Carroll and valuable mainly as a window into 1970s subcultural experimentation and the era’s fraught relationship with erotic satire.
Until you get a license, LJLM runs in trial mode with all features enabled and a reminder screen every 5 minutes.
The web app lets you remotely control LJLM from any phones, tablets and computers with a web browser. See the instructions included in the zip file.
For a list of great LED controllers, see these Art-Net/sACN LED controllers.
Buy and manage your licenses in the portal:
For optimal compatibility with Enttec LED controllers, we recommend using ELM, the official Enttec-branded version of LJLM.
For special licensing requests and suggestions, feel free to contact us.
Any questions? Contact us!