A very bright full moon behind the leading characters of Tim Burton and Mike Johnson's Corpse Bride |
QUICK REVIEW:
A young man in a Victorian-era, uptight European village is forced to marry, but when he stumbles in his vows, he accidentally opens the grave of a miserable bride, who promptly marries him. - But what is then right? - Or least wrong?
The first 15 minutes of Corpse Bride are enthusiastic and lots of fun, - before SPOILER the death world comes to life in booming colors and songs and continues like this for almost the entire remainder of the film.
My mind soon got tired from the heady bombardment of compact dialog, songs and fast editing, (as was the case with the related The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993)). And Corpse Bride continues to amuse, but without resulting in actual laughs.
What's just as bad; it is without thematic meaning: Corpse Bride is pure fairytale surface, essentially about nothing.
But the dolls in it are unbelievably good-looking, the characters are original, and the lighting, colors and designs are staggering. - Doll stop-motion is a wonderful thing, but alas, Corpse Bride, with its just 77 minutes playtime, still feels long.
The film is written by John August (Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005)), Caroline Thompson (The Adams Family (1991)) and Pamela Pettler (Monster House (2006)) (with characters by Tim Burton (Batman Returns (1992)) and Carlos Grangel (Hotel Transylvania (2012), character designer) and co-directed by Burton and Mike Johnson (The Devil Went Down to Georgia (1996), short).
Burton is busy at the moment shooting his next film, Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children (2016) a fantasy adventure with Asa Butterfield as the protagonist.
Related reviews:
Tim Burton: Dark Shadows (2012) - Fun, flamboyant vampire romp is a celebration of culture
Batman Returns (1992) - Burton gives us the ultimate, Gothic spin on Gotham City and its sinister characters
Batman (1989) - A huge, glitzy, empty joker
Beetle Juice (1988) - Burton and team serve one of the best horror comedies ever
Watch the original trailer for the film here
Cost: 40 mil. $
Box office: 117.2 mil. $
= Box office success
[Corpse Bride opened # 2 in the US behind Flightplan (2005) and made 53.3 mil. $ there (45 % of the total gross). Its best foreign markets were France, the UK and Japan with 8.8 mil. $, 8.5 mil. $ and 7.1 mil. $, respectively. The film was Oscar-nominated as Best Animated Film, but lost to Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit (2005). It subsequently made 114.7 mil. $ on DVD and Blueray sales in North America alone.]
What do you think of Corpse Bride?
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