100% found this document useful (2 votes)
2K views160 pages

Tim Burton Pocket Essentials

Colin Odell and Michelle Le Blanc are the authors of this book. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, without the written permission of the publishers.

Uploaded by

marina3502
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
100% found this document useful (2 votes)
2K views160 pages

Tim Burton Pocket Essentials

Colin Odell and Michelle Le Blanc are the authors of this book. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, without the written permission of the publishers.

Uploaded by

marina3502
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 160

Also in this series by the same authors David Lynch Horror Films Jackie Chan John Carpenter Vampire

Films

Tim Burton
Colin Odell & Michelle Le Blanc

www.pocketessentials.com

This edition published in 2005 by Pocket Essentials P.O. Box 394, Harpenden, Herts, AL5 1XJ www.pocketessentials.com

Distributed in the USA by Trafalgar Square Publishing, P.O. Box 257, Howe Hill Road, North Pomfret,Vermont 05053

Colin Odell & Michelle Le Blanc 2005

The right of Le Blanc/Odell to be identied as author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise) without the written permission of the publishers.

Any person who does any unauthorised act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages.

A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

ISBN 1-904048-45-5

2 4 6 8 10 9 7 5 3 1

Typeset by Avocet Typeset, Chilton, Aylesbury, Bucks Printed and bound in Great Britain by Cox & Wyman, Reading

For Marc

Acknowledgements
Our thanks to the usual suspects Andy, Paul and Lizbeth for the welcome distractions, accounting, gig bookings and movies. A big hello to Martin and Rosy and Ben and Heather.Thanks to Andrea for nding cuttings for us. Domo arigato gozaimashita to Geoff, Steve and Veronica for all the karate training which led to our black belts. Thanks to our fab folks for all their support, as ever, and especially to Mum for sending loads of clippings. A huge thank you to Jim next door, who has done wonderful things to our garden while weve been watching lms and writing books.A big mention to Richard Clarke who is, after all, still the Best Man we wish you and Charlotte every happiness. Huge congratulations to Gavin and Hanako on your engagement and our very best wishes for your future together. Finally to Alice Razorclaws, a most misunderstood and mischievous moggy.

Contents
1 Introduction:Tim Burton Hollywood Contradiction The gothic trappings, themes, motifs and style of Tim Burtons work 2 And It All Started Happily Ever After Covering the early shorts Vincent (1982), Hansel and Gretel (1982), Frankenweenie (1984) and Faerie Tale Theatre (1984)

11

25

3 Look Bike in Anger 37 Pee-wees Big Adventure (1985), Alfred Hitchcock Presents: The Jar (1985) 4 Its Showtime Beetlejuice (1988) 5 Holy Budgets, Batman! Batman (1989) 6 An Uncommonly Gentle Man Edward Scissorhands (1990) 7 Bats, Cats and an Army That Quacks Batman Returns (1992) 8 Angora, Bela, Cinema:The ABC of Ed Wood Ed Wood (1994) 47

54

63

74

83

CONTENTS

9 Do Not Run,We Are Your Friends Mars Attacks! (1996) 10 Tackling The Classics Head On Sleepy Hollow (1999) 11 Monkey Business Planet of the Apes (2001) 12 Like Santa Claus and the Easter Bunny Combined Big Fish (2003) 13 Life Had Never Been Sweeter Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005), Tim Burtons Corpse Bride (2005) 14 Other Skellingtons in the Closet: Burton as Producer Family Dog (1987-93),The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993), Cabin Boy (1994), Batman Forever (1995), James and the Giant Peach (1996) 15 Whats This? Other Projects Singles (1992), Adverts 16 Resources Books,Web Sites, DVDs

93

103

112

121

130

137

148

151

1. Introduction:Tim Burton Hollywood Contradiction


It cant be Halloween every day you know. It is for me. Beetlejuice Cartoons: Critter Sitters Tim Burton is an artist. Normally such a statement is anathema to all that Hollywood cinema stands for. Hollywood, we are told, is a land where the only recognisable art is that on a dollar bill. How then can you explain the continued success of Tim Burton? His output is lled with imagery that is morbid or grotesque. He spends vast amounts of money creating lms within genres that are either past their sell-by date or reserved for the straight-to-video market. He has produced a body of work that focuses on the outcasts of society. His villains are rarely resolutely evil theyre normally misunderstood. Traditional narrative techniques exist in his lms, but are secondary to image and feeling. In some senses his output is belittled by mere description a lm about a man who has scissors instead of hands may sound trite but needs to be felt. It is the overall aesthetic cohesion that makes his work stand out. Conceptually he is far removed from the mainstream and yet is successful enough to ensure that his name on a lm is eminently marketable. Although often seen as deeply shy, withdrawn, sensitive 11

LE BLANC/ODELL

and unwilling to face confrontation,Tim Burton is nonetheless shrewd when it comes to business. In this respect his path as a director seems to follow both commercial and personal projects the more money he has to work with, the more protable the studios expect his nished product to be. He doesnt intentionally waste studio money, but follows his instincts as to what he would like to see. Fortunately this is a body of work that is sumptuous and steeped in arresting imagery. The downside of this is the infrequency of new Burton lms the project must be right and the studios willing to cough up the cash but its a price worth paying for what is undoubtedly one of Hollywoods most fascinating directors. Although Tim Burtons oeuvre connects with a large portion of the cinema-going audience, he is ostensibly a mainstream cult director. As such, his more personal lms have little market outside his niche audience fortunately for him and the studios that niche is sufciently large. However, his lms must make a prot, which makes his position as one of Hollywoods leading A-list directors a fragile one. This is an inherent problem; his most nancially successful lms are also his weakest artistically. He needs money to realise his personal vision but if the box ofce does not show healthy returns, he faces loss of control and dilution of the very thing that makes his work so interesting. Both of Burtons lms released in 2005 are steeped in the usual imagery, but Charlie and the Chocolate Factory is clearly geared towards box ofce friendly takings. It has been a palpable hit but has managed to retain the Burton vision. His next lm is another stop-motion picture, Tim Burtons Corpse Bride; a smaller and more personal project.

12

T I M B U RT O N

Gothic Trappings, Nonsense Rhymes and Macabre Etchings


What makes a Burton lm so magical is the inuence of past absurdities and eccentricities, the never-never land of childrens books or the charnel house trappings of the existential horror writers. The links between horror, folk tale and fantasy genres have always been strong, especially in works for children.There is a time in childrens lives when they can confront their worst fears; where everything is understood but nothing is impossible. Theres a duality between the magically wonderful and grotesquely grim, the soul torn between wonder and despair. This is the world of Tim Burton. His literary heritage stems from Walpoles The Castle of Otranto to the melancholia of Edgar Allan Poe. Its a world of waking dreams and delirium. Unlike lm-makers who develop along the path of surrealism and touch upon horror or the bizarre, Burton adopts a different route that takes in the feel of Lewis Carroll (frightening but detached), the Brothers Grimm and Edward Lear. The inuence of Dr Seuss, both in rhyming and illustration, cannot be ignored the spindly creatures, striped hats and mischief makers who nonetheless retain sympathy, feed directly into Burtons body of work. Closest of all aesthetically is Edward Gorey, writer, artist and designer whose quirky, macabre books contain more than a hint of the Burtonesque with misunderstood individuals (including the moping, unwanted penguinlooking creature of The Doubtful Guest) inside a world of Edwardian angst. This goes a long way to explain the rare lmic charm of Burtons work his heritage as a lm-maker differs from that of his peers, because his output descends from phantasmagorical tales so beloved of pre-cinema magic lantern shows. In telling fables or allegorical stories there is very little visual subtext to much of his work the tale is told 13

LE BLANC/ODELL

in a fantastical light and not burdened with too much extraneous baggage. This economy makes his best lms timeless and hits the basic human emotions, as all good folk tales should. Burton is a fantasy lm-maker fantasy refers here to the fantastic rather than the sword n sandal/sorcery/elves sense of the term and even his horror lms Mars Attacks! and Sleepy Hollow do not scare in the conventional ways associated with the genre. They are the embodiment of a nostalgic youth the wonder of discovery like opening up a musty book on a windy night and being unsure as to whats inside.

Themes and Motifs


Im a loner. A rebel. Pee-wee Herman in Pee-wees Big Adventure It normally does not take more than a few seconds of screen time to realise that you are watching a Tim Burton movie. This is because he employs a number of recurring themes and motifs that create a cohesive and personal vision. In some senses you are not watching a Burton lm, but entering his world. Genre Subversion: The key to Burtons approach with his lms lies in the way he takes an established genre and twists it. By confounding expectations, particularly in the mainstream where audiences are used to formulaic lms, he creates a sense of wonder and discovery. In Beetlejuice the concept of the haunted house lm is subverted instead of eccentric, macabre ghosts haunting a bland family, a horrible family haunt a pair of bland ghosts. The biopic Ed Wood concentrates on someone who was, arguably, not at all successful. The Batman lms focus more on the villains, the 14

T I M B U RT O N

hero himself being of a dubious nature and psychologically scarred. In Batman Returns Burton pulls off the impressive trick of making you care for a physically repulsive, lecherous freak who wants to slaughter an entire citys child population. Mars Attacks! sees us rooting for the aliens to destroy Earth and features a US President who doesnt rally his troops Henry V style into patriotic war, but is totally ineffectual. Edward Scissorhands sees the teen romance lm twisted by having the main romantic lead an automata with more heart than any human. Sleepy Hollow has a hero coroner who cant bear the sight of blood and Pee-wees Big Adventure subverts the comedy genre by having a central character who isnt funny! Classic Horrors and B-Flicks: Many of Burtons lms use the look of classic science ction and horror movies, particularly those of the 1950s and 1960s, as a template for his visual style. Among the lms that seem to have inuenced Burton are those produced by Roger Corman, as well as Mario Bava. Bava is the stylish Italian lm-maker whose works include The Mask of Satan (a big inuence on Sleepy Hollow) as well as a series of garish serial killer lms such as Blood and Black Lace and Bay of Blood. The techniques employed by animators Ray Harryhausen and Willis OBrien are a big inuence, and the attraction of period horror lms produced by Hammer is also clear. Angst and the Outsider: In many respects Tim Burton lms are about not tting into society, about people who dont conform with the attitudes and mores of the day. This concept of the misanthropic person, normally a youth, comes from a number of sources; there is the association with Burton himself, the fascination with self-loathing that Edgar Allan Poe explored, and the Gothic aesthetic. Perhaps this 15

LE BLANC/ODELL

helps connect his body of work with so many young people who feel disenfranchised with society and relate to the characters they see on the screen. The most sympathetically portrayed protagonists are those who differ from the norm be they awkward, gauche, naive or simply misunderstood. Big Fish subverts the misanthropic hero pattern, as the affable and gregarious lead acts as a catalyst to bring those who are on the fringes of society into his fold, rather than being an outcast himself. Characters Origins: The origins of a character, particularly concerning their parents (or lack of them), form a signicant contribution to their psyche. Pee-wee apparently has no parents or any guiding authority gure and acts as such he has no responsibility. Batmans bereavement and The Penguins rejection lead them in diametrically opposed directions morally, but there is no doubt that both lives would have been radically different without that parental loss.This theme comes to the fore in Edward Scissorhands and Sleepy Hollow. Structurally and traumatically Edwards origins are similar to that of Ichabod Crane. In both lms we learn about their pasts via a series of ashbacks which terminate in the event that shaped the central character the death of a loving parent. In Edward Scissorhands this death is moving and shocking as young Edward cannot understand what has happened to his creator. In Sleepy Hollow the death isnt melancholy or dignied but horric, deliberately instigated to instil fear. What both Edward and Ichabod have learnt from their departed (good) parents is treated very differently. Ichabod rejects all faith, but eventually turns back and accepts that of his mother, while Edward, having no other source of information about society, can only rely upon the etiquette his creator taught him. Even when sympathetic characters do have parents (Lydia in Beetlejuice, Richie and Taffy in Mars 16

T I M B U RT O N

Attacks!) they are inattentive to their childrens needs and it would probably be better that they were absent altogether. Big Fish goes some way to explore the complex relationship between an estranged son and father, where one is bland and the other extraordinary, and aims to reconcile their differences. Charlie and the Chocolate Factory takes the parental theme to the limit, by introducing a sub-plot involving Willy Wonkas estrangement from his dentist father, whose extreme dental treatments exacerbated his sons need to become a chocolatier. The Bastard Sons of Frankenstein: Mad scientists and mad science populate many of the narratives young Victor Frankenstein, Edward Scissorhands Inventor, Ichabod Crane, the Martian technicians, Alfred the butler, Willy Wonka, Vincent Malloy and Jack Skellington all have traits that are shared with Mary Shelleys most renowned scientist. The results of their labours and those of unseen creators (such as the inventor of Pee-wees breakfast machine) contribute to both the drive of the narratives and ambience of the lms. Disrespect for Authority: Figures of authority rarely get a good time.They are symbolic of the status quo and thus not to be trusted. The exception to this is Edward Scissorhands, where the policeman is one of the few people who realises the extent of Edwards problems and attempts to protect him from the angry mob, but such instances are rare. More common are the authorities being ridiculed or seen as actively evil. In Batman the mayor is a useless gure. In Batman Returns the true evil person is not The Penguin but entrepreneur Max Shreck. In Mars Attacks! the President is incompetent, his rich wife vacuous and the businessman is again portrayed as uncouth. In Sleepy Hollow judges and 17

LE BLANC/ODELL

policemen doubt the validity of Ichabods deductive reasoning, as do the respectable leaders of the country community. The Grotesque: Whether it is the evil rays of the Martians, the resurrection of a dead dog, the autopsy of a pregnant cadaver, the tragic death of a young boys creator, dribbling bile from the mouth of a deformed man, evil clowns with nasty surgical tools, the headless horsemen clutching a bag of heads or a haggard witch with a detachable eye, there is always something grotesque going on. This is closely linked with Burtons morbid themes, but what makes Burtons work so unusual is that the use of such devices does not make for depressing viewing. It is another contradiction. His lms deal with the sinister and macabre but somehow manage to be uplifting examples of entertainment. Stripes and Swirls: Burtons lms are remarkably visual, which comes as no surprise bearing in mind his origins as an animator and artist. His style is apparent in the design of his lms and the mise en scne he employs the stripy sock sand worms of Beetlejuice, the swirls covering the Martian spy girls dress and Jack Skellingtons impossibly spiralling hilltop upon which he expresses his woes. Every Burton lm bears visual embellishments, which emanate from his original preproduction sketches. Weird Sciences and Domestic Appliances: Gadgets are part of every superheros arsenal and every boys dreams. From the elaborate breakfast-making devices in Pee-wees house to the kitsch but fully functional cookie machine of Edward Scissorhands, machinery plays a large part in shaping not only the characters, but their relationship with the outside world. This is quite literal in the case of Edward 18

T I M B U RT O N

Bloom, who spends years inside a growing contraption. Batmans inability to communicate is shown in his overreliance on gadgets, from his costume to the Batmobile all safely stashed away in the cavernous recesses of Wayne Mansion. The Martians are similarly attached to their toys and technology they are spoilt rich kids, amoral versions of Batman, relishing their technological supremacy. They share similar traits with that of the Inventor, creating new things out of old, for an unclear purpose. Even in Sleepy Hollow Ichabod has all the latest forensic equipment. In Charlie and the Chocolate Factory Willy Wonka has a cornucopia of bizarre contraptions whose outlandish and absurd designs produce remarkable candies. Im of that generation where, you know, Im polluted by television. Tim Burton, Behind the Scenes Timex Commercials Television: Burton is a child of the television generation indeed much of his lm knowledge comes from reruns that, at the time, only the channel-heavy United States could supply. It plays a massive role in imparting information, plot or character development, paradoxically providing a link with reality. Pee-wee learns of his bikes fate whilst watching television in hospital and Betelgeuse advertises his services on TV. The Jokers rst major strike affects a newscaster and both the Penguin and Max Shreck use television as a propaganda tool to discredit Batman. In Mars Attacks! two central characters are presenters and the rst indications of the Martians destructive intentions are broadcast live across the globe. In Ed Wood television provides Ed with Vampira and gives Lugosi a humiliating break. A pivotal moment in Edward Scissorhands is when Edward appears on a chat show 19

LE BLANC/ODELL

at once we know why Edward is special, that he really does love Kim and that she realises this. In Planet of the Apes the strange electromagnetic storm that is the catalyst for the adventure beams back television signals from a distant galaxy. Although the character of Mike Teavee in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory should face criticism for watching too much television, Burton twists the books condemnation of the boy by having him addicted to video games and showing a violent temperament as a result. He is ultimately punished because he doesnt use the gogglebox for its intended purpose. Strangely, although television does not play a part in Sleepy Hollow (unsurprisingly), it does in the Aladdin and his Wonderful Lamp episode of Faerie Tale Theatre directed by Burton! Snow: Snow plays a big part in the visual motifs within Burtons lms. Aesthetically it is appealing yet also represents something that can be deadly, cold and distant. Sleepy Hollow uses snow to represent key events in the little towns violent history and Batman Returns opens with snow at Christmas time a season for celebration curtailed by the icy grip of a crime wave. But snow is not all bad. Edward Scissorhands brings the gift of magical snow to the town, and snow reects Edwards moment of pure happiness when he realises that Kim loves him. Charlie Buckets world seems to be perpetually covered in snow to the extent that, when he nally moves into the factory his house is dusted in sugar snow, sprinkled from giant shakers. Dogs: Burton is fascinated by dogs. In fact one of his designs led to the animated series Family Dog.The love of Sparky in Frankenweenie is such that its young owner is driven to resurrect him from the dead. Speck appears as Pee-wees dog and the Maitlands in Beetlejuice die in an accident because a 20

T I M B U RT O N

mischievous mutt jumped off the plank that was keeping their car precariously balanced on a bridge. Edward Scissorhands features a whole neighbourhood of them waiting to be elegantly fur-styled while the unfortunate Nathalie in Mars Attacks! becomes attached to her hound in a far more macabre way her head is swapped with her poochs. Godzilla: For acionados there is nothing better than a Godzilla lm (and were not talking about that dreadful Hollywood travesty, we mean the real Toho beast). In fact Burton once said he would like to have played Godzilla trampling models of Tokyo.And who can blame him? It is no coincidence that this image crops up in many of Burtons lms from Edward Scissorhands topiary to the conclusion of Pee-wees Big Adventure, as well as the Big G himself appearing on television in Mars Attacks! Tim Burton: A common gure to see in a Burton lm is that of Tim Burton, or rather an idealised version of himself. Many of his lms feature some character that seems to represent Burton and his upbringing. For example, the paleskinned, unruly-haired protagonist of Vincent, the character of Lydia in Beetlejuice, Edward Scissorhands, Richie in Mars Attacks and Willy Wonka.

Style
Stylistically, Tim Burton is undeniably Hollywoods most distinctive mainstream director. Every lm is designed to within an inch of its life, with the mise en scne and visual motifs providing so much of what should be considered typical Burton.There is undoubtedly a wide variation in the look of his lms. Both Pee-wees Big Adventure and Mars Attacks! employ bright and vivid Day-Glo colours, to indicate 21

LE BLANC/ODELL

extremities of scale. Alternatively, in his moribund Gothic lms, gloom and despondency are similarly reected in the colour schemes. In Batman and Batman Returns, despite occasionally garish use of colour, the predominant palette of the lm is dark, almost black and white, or sepia in tone, reecting Batmans brooding nature. Big Fish employs both schemes in order to emphasise the fantastic nature of Edwards stories dark and ominous for the scary wood contrasting with impossibly vibrant colours during his rst visit to Specter. With Ed Wood the black and white lm stock gives a sentimental feel and provides a degree of nostalgic realism, which is appropriate in a biopic. Sleepy Hollow has a tinted feel muted autumnal colours which complement the dead forest and creepy mist. Expressionism is fundamental to the Burton ethos and many of the classics of early German cinema seem to have had an effect on his work, perhaps because of the saturation of images that came from these inuential lms. In particular The Cabinet of Dr Caligari (1919) with its twisted sets, forced perspective backdrops and use of psychological realism over material realism is reected in a number of Burtons scenes. Of particular note are the underground cavern in Aladdin and his Wonderful Lamp, the bike surgery sequence from Pee-wees Big Adventure, the Netherworld from Beetlejuice, the tortured appearance of Edward Scissorhands and Gotham Citys aweinspiring architecture. Willy Wonkas factory is home to numerous twists and swirls from a huge chocolate whirlpool to a lollipop on a stick. This is emphasised by the fact that most of his productions are not lmed on location but on studio sets, often at great expense, which allows Burton complete control to realise these complicated visual ideas. In terms of lm-making techniques, Burtons means of telling a story is fairly conventional and based around traditional Hollywood methods. Most of his narratives are linear, 22

T I M B U RT O N

as bets the telling of a faerie tale or fable, although he does incorporate bookending devices and ashbacks, most notably in Big Fish. In many of his works (particularly Pee-wees Big Adventure, Beetlejuice, Mars Attacks!, Big Fish and even Planet of the Apes) there is an almost gleeful disregard for narrative pacing events form apparently freestyle and merge from one to another. In this respect some of his lms have the lucidity of a road movie (in Pee-wees case literally as well as structurally). Burton rarely employs tension or suspense, which is unusual for works within the horror genre. However, he punctuates the ow of the lms with tangential ourishes. One of these is the Large Marge shot, the sudden scare, as seen in Pee-wees Big Adventure. Pee-wee is picked up by a bulky lorry driver who tells him the terrible tale of the worst accident Id ever seen. When they pulled the drivers body from the burning twisted wreck, it looked like this, before turning to a terried Pee-wee, her eyes out on their stalks, her tongue lolling around and her hair a massive shock of matted fury. Its a shot that gets repeated in Beetlejuice as well as Sleepy Hollow. Although quite shocking, its value is purely comedic. With the exception of Ed Wood, all Burtons movies featured musical scores by the incredible Danny Elfman. His distinctive music perfectly complements the images on screen be they manic, ethereal or haunting. His rhythms can be full of purpose or incredibly complex and his melodies eminently memorable. Elfman was part of a bizarre ensemble band called Oingo Boingo as guitarist, composer and singer. The band had grown partly out of his brother Richard and friends avant-garde project The Mystic Knights of the Oingo Boingo and was dedicated to anything remotely unfashionable.The Boingos mix of jazz instrumentation with rock pop sensibilities werent to everyones taste but Burton was a huge fan and persuaded Elfman to come 23

LE BLANC/ODELL

aboard for Pee-wees Big Adventure. Elfmans manic music was a major step on the ladder of stardom that would see him creating many more outstanding scores, including Sam Raimis Darkman and Warren Beattys Dick Tracy as well as The Simpsons.

24

2. And It All Started Happily Ever After

Timothy William Burton was born in Burbank, California, on August 25, 1958. Burbank is the essence of American middle-class suburbia and also home to many of the major lm studios, the combination of which had a huge effect on Burton. At school his academic record was unremarkable although he did win a poster competition for litter prevention. Young Burton found it difcult to relate to the conformist community in which he lived and turned to lms as a means of escape. His imagination was inspired by pulp and exploitation lms, movies deemed to be lowbrow, cheesy or devoid of artistic merit. He watched horror, science ction and anything that featured Godzilla or his favourite actor Vincent Price. Price was a veteran of many horror icks, but was particularly known for the series of Edgar Allan Poe adaptations made by low-budget supremo Roger Corman in the 1960s. Films such as The Pit and the Pendulum (1961 an inuence on Sleepy Hollow), Tomb of Ligeia (1964) and The Masque of the Red Death (1963) were a combination of colourful widescreen spectacle and morbid obsession with death and decay.This contrast of colour and darkness, art and pulp would fuel Burtons own body of work. Whilst still at school Burton experimented with lming using a Super-8 camera. Like Steven Spielberg and John Carpenter these juvenilia were predominantly science ction lms, monster movies of the sort that sparked his imagination. 25

LE BLANC/ODELL

He also experimented with stop-motion animation in the manner of the great Ray Harryhausen, whose wonderful effects techniques would inspire the look of the Martians in Mars Attacks!. Burton would take his animation further.At the age of 18 he won a scholarship place at the California Institute of the Arts. CalArts was founded by Disney as a means of helping young animators and directors learn their trade. It was a two-way thing. The students would get the education they needed and Disney could pick from the cream of the crop. Burton was recognised as a talent and taken out of CalArts prematurely to work for Disney. At that time Disney was in turmoil. The death of studio founder Walt Disney had led to a number of ill-founded decisions and a relentless spate of insipid lms. But this state of confusion in the Mouse House would ultimately prove benecial for Burton. His rst assignment was on the animated feature The Fox and the Hound (1981), a rather bland buddy ick. He was ill-suited for the project because his skills as an artist were not in tune with its inherent cuteness his own attempts looked like, in his own words, roadkills. Realising that he was not getting on well with the Disney ethos he was given a job as a conceptual artist, designing characters and ideas for use in future projects. One of these was The Black Cauldron (released 1985). On the surface this seemed like an ideal avenue to channel Burtons more outr talents, being concerned with magic, strange creatures and bizarre contraptions, but it was not to be. Burtons drawings from this period are bursting with ideas. The scratchy, fevered sketches, as though from an ancient bestiary, are quirky and macabre, but strangely endearing. It was around this time that he rst drew Jack Skellington, which was the genesis of The Nightmare Before Christmas. Despite the obvious talent behind the ideas, it was again decided that Burtons concepts were at odds with the lm, so ultimately none of the sketches were used for the 26

T I M B U RT O N

nal production. Instead of continually throwing unsuitable projects at him, Disney gave him $60,000 to make a short animated lm based on his own writing and drawings, which he had originally intended to be published as a childrens book. Teaming up with fellow CalArts colleague Rick Heinrichs he used a blend of model and cel animation to realise his vision.

Vincent (1982)
Crew: Director: Tim Burton, Producer: Rick Heinrichs, 6 mins Cast: Vincent Price (voice) Vincent Malloy is seven years old Hes always polite and does what hes told For a boy his age hes considerate and nice But he wants to be just like Vincent Price. Tim Burton Vincent Plot: Young Vincent lives with his mother, sister and pets. But this life is far too normal and Vincent prefers to play in his fantasy world, where he reads Edgar Allan Poe and paints. He dreams about dipping his aunt in wax, creates a horrible zombie from his dog and digs his mothers ower bed up searching for his buried wife, you understand. His mother is particularly perturbed by his peculiarly plaintive perspective and insists that he go out and play in the sun. But Vincent doesnt want to. Hed rather mooch about the house in a melancholy morbid mood. Comment: Originally intended as a childrens story and a tribute to Burtons hero, Vincent came about as a result of 27

LE BLANC/ODELL

Disneys generosity, when his superiors Julie Hickson and Tom Wilhite realised that young Burton needed to nd a creative direction. This delightful six-minute short employs an unusual combination of cel animation and stop-motion model work. Shot in black and white, the lm contains a number of unusual stylistic embellishments, many of which would nd their way into Burtons later feature lm work. It is impossible not to compare Vincent with Burton himself the quiet, shy boy with masses of unruly hair, who is only truly comfortable inside his fertile imagination.What is so striking about the lm is that it deals with themes that crop up time and again within Burtons oeuvre: the young boys rejection of the environment in which he lives, grotesque fantasies about doing evil things to his relations and the mad young scientist in his laboratory.Vincent himself has such style he smokes cigarettes through a holder with panache and experiments feverishly in his bedroom lab wearing large black gloves and a white coat. It is only when elements of normality enter his world that he becomes a disconsolate ordinary little boy. Indeed every transition from Vincent Malloy to Vincent Price is wonderfully executed, the scale within his world reecting his current state of mind. Everything is lmed from a seven-year-olds viewpoint adults are identiable by their legs and furniture is scaled appropriately.When Vincent sits at his desk to write, his tiny head and hands are dwarfed by the enormous quill in the foreground. Burtons use of perspective is remarkable. The lm reects Burtons love of horror lms and literature and is lled to the brim with references Fall of the House of Usher, House of Wax, Frankenstein and Nosferatu. Also remarkable was the involvement of Vincent Price himself the studio sent the storyboards to Price who was immediately impressed with the charm of the story and agreed to provide the voice-over. The opportunity to work with his 28

T I M B U RT O N

childhood hero must have been a signicant inspiration for Burtons future career. Unfortunately, Disney were unimpressed with Burtons rst lm. They could not understand the concept of a little boy who was genuinely morbid and not redeemed by the lms close. They wanted an upbeat ending, where Vincent becomes just like every other little boy. They missed the point. Vincent is a wonderful short lm which was not released by Disney at the time, and had to wait for Burton to become famous.

Hansel and Gretel (1982)


Crew: Director: Tim Burton, Producer & Screenplay: Julie Hickson, 45 mins Cast: Michael Yama, Jim Ishida Plot: Toy business in recession, hungry kids and a partner not conducive to the sound of tiny feet mean only one thing to siblings Hansel and Gretel eviction from the family home by not entirely fair means. The wandering twosome come across a residence of a far more edible nature than their old home: time to tuck into the masonry. But things are not always as they seem, as the owner of the sugary cottage is a witch with a taste for plump little kiddies.Yum, yum. Comment: After Vincent, Burton was conscious that he needed to work with actors.With this in mind he pitched the concept of Hansel and Gretel to Disney as a show for their new cable service The Disney Channel. Naturally though, he was keen to add a twist to proceedings and introduce some elements that interested him, particularly his love of Japanese lms. The remit was to create Hansel and Gretel with an all29

LE BLANC/ODELL

Japanese cast (their fathers toyshop is lled to the brim with Transformer toys cool!), and could end the programme with a big martial arts scrap between the children and the witch. Inspired! The budget of $116,000 for the effects-laden script meant that some of the sequences were a touch hurried, but added a certain amount of charm. Again, Rick Heinrichs utilised a myriad of different techniques to realise Burtons quirky drawings: the skewed candy-covered witchs house, some stop-frame work, front projections and a gingerbread puppet whose powers of persuasion are tested to the max, forcing Hansel to eat him.The design for this puppet is similar to the Red Circus Gang Clowns in Batman Returns with wide, dead eyes and a face-splitting grin. Burton emphasises the scary elements of faerie tales by including creatures gyrating out of cauldrons and a cross-dressing witch. Unfortunately, though this aspect has been a strong part of Disneys best work (Snow White or the Night on Bald Mountain sequence from Fantasia), it is not something that has really survived the companys more wholesome output. Thats a shame, as its the confrontational and mythical aspects of faerie tales that gives them their power. Hansel and Gretel was shown on its intended channel. Once. Late at night.Then Disney locked it away. Where it remains today. Still, Burton learned how to deal with actors and proved he could lm to specication which ultimately led to the greenlighting of his next project.

Frankenweenie (1984)
Crew: Director: Tim Burton, Producer: Julie Hickson, Screenplay: Lenny Ripp, from an idea by Tim Burton, 24 mins Cast: Shelley Duvall (Susan Frankenstein), Daniel Stern 30

T I M B U RT O N

(Ben Frankenstein), Barrett Oliver (Victor), Paul Bartel (Mr Walsh) We wanna be dog like Sparky. Cardiacs Plot: Introducing Sparky, part-time canine thespian, fulltime loving companion to schoolboy Victor Frankenstein. And now, sadly, barking along with the choir invisible following a nasty incident involving a rubber ball and a fast moving vehicle. For most young boys this would be a time for grieving but, following an inspirational science lesson, Victor has a purpose. Digging up his deceased dog,Victor is determined to add credence to Sparkys name by hot-wiring him into the mains of Mother Nature and resurrecting the hound. Reunited, the pair couldnt be happier. Sparky is coming to terms with his neck bolts, Mrs Frankenstein is renewing her sewing skills on the dogs wounds and Victor is his old perky self once more. Such scenes of domestic bliss cannot last forever and, sure enough, the neighbourhood are not impressed by a pooch from beyond the grave.The neighbours are revolting and have Sparky in their sights, hounding him to almost certain death in a aming windmill, determined to bring new meaning to the term hot dog... Comment: Despite Burtons assertion that given more time Frankenweenie could have been extended into a full-length movie, its hard to see how additional material could have improved the piece it remains a perfectly formed short that never outlives its welcome. Frankenweenie looks primarily to James Whales Frankenstein (1931) and Bride of Frankenstein (1935), with the twist that it all happens through a childs eyes. Instead of Frankensteins conventional cemetery, Frankenweenie has a pet one with tombstones for the dearly 31

LE BLANC/ODELL

departed, such as Bubbles the goldsh. The electric buzzing thing so popular in mad scientist lms has been cobbled together from an old blender.The lightning-capturing kite is replaced by a helium balloon and the university downgraded to a junior school. Even the windmill climax has been suitably scaled.The nal reward for a good dog is a mate, which is just what lucky old Sparky gets at the lms close a black poodle with an Elsa Lanchester white stripe in her fur! Its not only Universal lms that get a look in when it is revealed that Sparky is having problems with his stitches, Victors mum comes to the rescue with a needle and thread, biting off the excess twine with her teeth rather like Peter Cushing in an altogether more visceral scene from Terence Fishers Frankenstein and the Monster from Hell (1973). There are other nods too: Sparky stars in Monsters from Long Ago, a pastiche of Willis OBriens The Lost World (1925) and the live action Godzilla lms; Paul Bartel gets to do the Dead Parrot sketch with an amphibian (It is an ex-frog); and theres even a car racing reference to Rebel Without a Cause (1955). Victors experiments resurrecting his dead pet continue the mad scientist theme that started in Vincent (his experimenting on the long-suffering Abercrombie) and continues in much of Burtons work.Victors laboratory may look like his namesakes but is furnished with more mundane items, such as toasters or blenders, and kick-started using an upsidedown bike (although what Pee-wee would make of such sacrilege is anyones guess).Victor himself is another Burton extension a boy with a fascination for the macabre that society does not understand. His neighbours, like those in Edward Scissorhands are reactionary and conservative. Like both Vincent and Edward,Victor has a sympathetic mother gure who, despite being thoroughly domestic, tries to accommodate his peculiarities. Frankenweenie is impossible not to like it is light, funny 32

T I M B U RT O N

and feels good whilst paradoxically keeping all the morbid elements from Frankenstein intact. Disney were surprisingly impressed with the nished result and wanted to give the lm a wide distribution alongside the reissue of Pinocchio (1940) as a showcase of Disney old and new. Wanted to, but didnt. Unfortunately Frankenweenie was slapped with a PG rating by the Motion Picture Association of America, which effectively prevented its distribution with the lower G-rated lm. But again its qualities were recognised by people who counted, one of whom was Shelley Duvall. Duvall had long encouraged the works of up-and-coming directors and had set up a well regarded television series Faerie Tale Theatre. She gave Burton another directing opportunity.

Faerie Tale Theatre: Aladdin and his Wonderful Lamp (1984)


Crew: Director: Tim Burton, Executive Producer: Shelley Duvall, 44 mins Cast: Robert Carradine (Aladdin), Valerie Bertinelli (Princess Sabrina), Leonard Nimoy (Moroccan Magician boo hiss), Joseph Maher (Sultan), James Earl Jones (Genie of the Lamp/Genie of the Ring), Ray Sharkey (Grand Vizier) I dont think that man was your uncle. Of course not he was an evil Moroccan magician. Plot: Aladdin, lazy devil, bit of a prankster, sees the prospect of a life of prosperity in the shape of his hitherto unacquainted rich uncle. The y in this ointment is that uncle is not an estranged relation but a scheming Moroccan mage with designs on purloining an ancient lamp with prodigious supernatural properties a task he assigns to the eager young lad, 33

LE BLANC/ODELL

promising immense wealth and the opportunity to establish a marble shop. However, at the climax of Aladdins underground lching escapade, the boy realises the sorcerers sham and retains the illuminating prize at the inconvenient cost of subterranean incarceration. Aladdin is resourceful and, on his escape, chances upon the reason for the lamps high esteem it contains a genie capable of granting his bidding.A simple life of luxury is assured but when Aladdin catches sight of Princess Sabrina, the fair daughter of the Sultan, he is besotted, raising his expectations to those of regal nuptials and he wins her hand. Pleasant espousal in sumptuous magical palace surroundings beckons, but there is a cloud on the horizon the mightily miffed Moroccan Magician is determined to claim the magical lamp for his own, undoubtedly dubious, purposes and has a cunning plan. New lamps for old, anyone? Comment: Shelley Duvalls Faerie Tale Theatre (note the exemplary spelling) was a showcase for new talent that gave many up-and-coming people their rst shot at working in the lm and TV industry. Using a combination of wellrespected actors and newcomers, the show retold childrens faerie tales in a way that was innovative and non-patronising. To this end it was highly successful but its market was limited primarily to the very young. Unfortunately, while innovation was encouraged, the productions were shot on videotape, which does little to endear them on an aesthetic level. Also, shooting schedules in television are very tight, especially considering that Aladdin is, by its very nature, an effectsheavy story (ying carpets, magical transportations, a mystical palace transported like a rocket ship). In order to realise the project Burton brought along Rick Heinrichs to help construct the sets. There are many Burton touches in these backdrops impossibly colourful skies, swirls on the sets and lines that are anything but straight. 34

T I M B U RT O N

It is easy to criticise the overall result but there is much to enjoy if you accept the limitations of the medium.The most remarkable scene occurs when Aladdin seeks to retrieve the lamp from an underground lair. Ordered not to touch the walls he crawls down a disjointed and ever-diminishing expressionist corridor lined with skulls.The establishing shot initially indicates that this is forced perspective, but the subsequent side-on shot reveals that the perspective is real its a true Burton moment. Likewise, when he reaches the chamber that contains the lamp, the walls are replete with Burton silhouettes (including a spiky precursor to Family Dog), rather like the phantasmagorical spooks from the childs lamp in Sleepy Hollow. On taking the lamp, the pedestal becomes an animated mouth and the walls come alive with glowing red eyes. When he nally realises the Mages treachery Aladdin mopes around, trapped in the cave, chin on hands like a depressed Rodins Thinker gazing upon a similarly-posed skeleton. Another Burton theme comes through the Sultans love of gadgetry. When challenged to come up with the best gadget ever, in return for his daughters hand, the resourceful genie-aided hero devises the inspired solution of a small box that acts like a window on the world. Even in a fantastical mythical past Burton has managed to include a television a gadget that later proves a handy cell for the deviant Moroccan, doomed to be forever prodded with red forks by devils for the Sultans entertainment. Nimoy is great as the long-bearded, wizened baddy. Joseph Mahers Sultan is marvellously vacant (and content with being regularly massaged by four green arms protruding from his throne), but the real star is James Earl Jones as the twin genies of Ring and Lamp. Always appearing in a billow of blue glitter and smoke, the pointy-eared blue Genie of the Lamp alternates (often mid-sentence) between horrible threats of violence and ingratiating smarm an Arabian 35

LE BLANC/ODELL

Nights version of Betelgeuse with a bellowing laugh of sheer insanity.The younger performers cannot match these fanciful characters but the nature of the hero and heroine requires them to be more bland than their larger-than-life counterparts. Tim Burton for pre-teens (get em hooked while theyre young), Aladdin is at best a minor work, but is entertaining and sows plenty of seeds for future projects.

36

3. Look Bike in Anger

With a couple of ne shorts and some TV work behind him, Burton had clearly shown his unusual talent to the world, but was still awaiting his rst foray into the fabulous world of feature lms. It came about quite by chance. Pee-wee Herman was a character created by Paul Reubens, a member of the Groundlings troupe of comedians. Pee-wee had become a surprise hit on a TV special and Warner Bros. were keen to bring the character to life on the big screen, but Reubens had been having trouble nding a suitable director. So he went to a party (as you do) and asked if anyone knew of someone available. One guest mentioned Frankenweenie and recommended it to Reubens. Shelley Duvall, a friend, also enthused about it and arranged for Reubens to see a screening the next day. He knew instantly that Burton was the man for the job, but was told that he probably wouldnt be interested. Still he sent Burton the script, and the pair hit it off almost immediately.

Pee-wees Big Adventure (1985)


Crew: Director: Tim Burton, Producers: Richard Gilbert Abramson, Robert Shapiro, Screenplay: Paul Reubens, Phil Hartman, Michael Varhol, Director of Photography:Victor J Kemper, Music: Danny Elfman, 87 mins 37

LE BLANC/ODELL

Cast: Paul Reubens (Pee-wee Herman), Elizabeth Daily (Dottie), Mark Holton (Francis), Diane Salinger (Simone), Monte Landis (Mario), James Brolin (PW), Morgan Fairchild (Dottie), Dee Snider (himself) Hello girls and boys, And welcome to my toys. Pee-wees Playhouse Plot: Pee-wee Herman, a child in a mans body, lives in his house in the heart of suburban America. Packed with all the latest lifestyle-enhancing gadgets, things are idyllic in Peewees world. His companion Speck has his own interior doghouse with his name emblazoned in neon letters above the entrance. And Pee-wee possesses the bestest toy a boy could have, hidden in the heavily secured secret garage in his garden. Its red and white. Its sleek. Its got gadgets. It is Peewees super-duper bike quite possibly the fabbest thing in the whole wide world and coveted by rich-kid rival Francis. The icing on the cake is that Pee-wees long suffering admirer, the aptly named Dottie, conveniently works in Chucks Bike-O-Rama, so that Pee-wee can get the latest gizmos the millisecond they become available. However, a disaster of cataclysmic proportions strikes. His bike is stolen. Running the whole gamut of emotions from anguish to despair, seething rage to melancholia, he tries everything to nd it. He re-enacts the crime, runs a poster campaign and even confronts his rotund nemesis, currently engaged in bath time Godzilla dramatics. Finally, he seeks the help of Madame Ruby, a fortune-teller who reveals that his precious pedalling pushbike is to be found in the basement of the Alamo. In fact, the bike had been bought by devious Francis, who employed a local thug to purloin it for his own nefarious purposes, but shied away from the stolen goods when the 38

T I M B U RT O N

heat was on. It is now on a journey of its own... Pee-wee decides to hitch-hike to Texas in double-quick time, meeting a variety of strange and fascinating people along the way. Imagine the pain and desperation when Peewee realises that the Alamo has no basement! He then gets into trouble, riling some Hells Angels by accidentally trashing their bikes. Fortunately, a combination of gutsy dancing skills and a description of his own bike woes endears him to them and they loan him a motorbike. But then he has an accident. As luck would have it, though, while in hospital the awful truth about his beloved bike is revealed it is to be given away to a precocious child superstar on the set of his latest comedy lm. But surely Pee-wee wouldnt stoop as low as to stealing his bike back from the hands of a little boy? Of course he would, hes Pee-me-me-me-wee Herman. The question is not would he do it, but can he get away with it? Well one things for sure, its a very big adventure and would make a smashing movie. Comment: The secret word is: aggravating. Tim Burtons rst feature is a non-stop roller-coaster comedy lled to the brim with visual ideas, action set pieces and an almost stream-of-consciousness approach to matters. By mixing slapstick with surrealism the results are exhilarating and occasionally exhausting. Whether or not you actually nd it funny lies on the shoulders of one man: Pee-wee Herman. Pee-wees comic persona is so ingrained that he is billed as himself and not as a role played by Reubens. The combination of an ill-tting suit, pasty face make-up, lipstick and rouged cheeks gives the general countenance of a silent comedian and certainly his physical exaggerations are expressionist rather than realistic. The difference lies in the term silent Pee-wee isnt. Whether Pee-wees irritating giggles and brat-like demeanor (I know you are, but what am I?) 39

LE BLANC/ODELL

bring you tears of laughter or tears of rage are purely a matter of taste. Pee-wees house may well have gestated as an extension of his Playhouse world but it is filled with resolutely Burtonesque imagery and gadgets. When Pee-wee announces Lets have breakfast, the house whirls into action as machines prepare and serve his food. These arent boring toasters and microwaves but Heath Robinson style contraptions that are as much about being machines as having a purpose. In Edward Scissorhands, these devices would be streamlined into charming cookie-makers but here they are far more chaotic. His toast is carried by a Pterodactyl skeleton, eggs cracked by a nodding bird, his orange juice freshly squeezed in the jaws of a tyrannosaurus as he slides down his remans pole to enjoy the food. Hello Mr Breakfast! The cutlery he uses is oversized, further emphasising that he lives in a childs world, and cleaning his teeth is just an excuse to pretend to be rabid. Mad dog! Strangely, despite his childishness, there are no parental gures or authorities to curtail the extravagance. The only counselling he receives in the morning comes from a gadget advising that he should not leave the house today, which he promptly ignores. Loosely this is a skewed retelling of Vittorio De Sicas classic Bicycle Thieves (1948) but treated as a comedy. (This approach was also favoured by Maurizio Nichettis The Icicle Thief [1989].) Indeed, the earnestness with which Pee-wee demands the return of his bike reaches the fevered pitch of De Sicas subtle melodrama, but there is a fundamental difference: Pee-wees need of the bike is purely self-centred. He will not starve if it never returns and remains a spoilt child wailing for his lost toy. In fact the one thing that makes Pee-wees Big Adventure such a difcult lm to watch for those that cant take to Pee-wee is precisely this: he is a 40

T I M B U RT O N

deeply unsympathetic character whose only thoughts are for his own well-being, without an ounce of respect for anything else. That his arch-rival Francis is more loathsome does not excuse Pee-wees behaviour. When Pee-wee discovers his bike is at the Alamo, he heads straight there. He doesnt bother to ensure that Speck is being cared for (fortunately Dottie had the forethought to look after him, canine watchers) and his treatment of his girlfriend is appalling.The only thing she really wants to do is go to a quiet drive-in with him but he will have none of it. Even when he declares over the phone, Ive learnt something out on the road here Dottie humility, he swiftly fakes a crackly line when she suggests going to the movies. That she nally gets her wish is only because the lm they go to see is all about him. How telling. And yet, despite this completely self-obsessed attitude everyone around him seems to love him. Regardless of the appeal of Pee-wee himself, there is still a lot to enjoy.The road movie structure is mixed with surrealist slapstick in the mould of the absurd lm Hellzapoppin (1941) or the extended chase sequences of Buster Keaton and Keystone Cops lms. The major set piece towards the lms close consolidates these themes it is a chase, its surreal and reects the process of making a lm. Pee-wee has nally discovered his bike and sets about reclaiming it by donning a nuns costume on the set of the latest wholesome feel good comedy, starring child brat Kevin Morton. Seizing his opportunity, he makes his escape, but is swiftly pursued through the studio lot, picking up a bizarre entourage of extras, actors and props along the way. He passes twin elephants (one magenta, one cyan), is followed by studio golf carts, bursts onto the set of a cheesy beach movie and enters the spirit of Christmas at the North Pole. He then gets to trash Tokyo along with Godzilla and Ghidorah before improving, sorry ruining, a Twisted Sister video and leaping Tarzan-style across a lake on 41

LE BLANC/ODELL

a vine. During this escalating sequence of mayhem he gets to show off the remarkable array of Bond-like gadgets attached to his bike. The scene is exhilarating and seemingly endless, but the original cut was longer, even nding time to put in a Sergio Leone western! The nest moments of the lm occur whenever there are dreams because these provide the most arresting imagery. They also link into Pee-wees mindset so that on occasion we literally see his view of the world. To get in touch with his surreal and offbeat world, the lm even begins with a dream Pee-wee winning the Tour de France, his frantic pedalling outdistancing the professionals with ease. Later on, bikes appear in his waking dreams as he is tormented following the loss of his own. Waiting near its last known resting place, he watches despondently as, in his mind, everyone has a bike apart from him unicycles, penny farthings, tandems and even a little electric one. His nal bike dream takes this delirium to its logical conclusion. Stuck in hospital and despairing of ever seeing his bike again, he has gone from the optimism of his Tour de France dream into a deranged Bosch-like circus Hell: ambulance clowns cart away his bike, wheeling it to an operating theatre for surgery before sending the metallic wreck straight to the burning furnaces of Hell.These sequences are lit like a stage show with some wonderful use of forced perspective chequered sets that work as prototypes for similar ones in Beetlejuice and Sleepy Hollow. Style and Score: For the music Burton turned to Danny Elfman, whose score is completely in tune with the mad circus events being portrayed and goes some way to explain why many have compared the lm to, of all things, Fellini Satyricon (1969) and 812 (1963)! Elfman would also be responsible for the theme music to Pee-wees Playhouse as well as the (decidedly inferior) sequel Big Top Pee-wee (1988).The 42

T I M B U RT O N

score is used not just as incidental or background music but becomes part of the lm itself. When Pee-wee confronts Francis, the knock on his mansion door is accentuated precisely within the score.Visually the lm is bright, garish and bold.The attention lavished on Pee-wees bike when its rst revealed is similar, not only to the unveiling of the Batmobile, but also the worship of the bike shown in Kenneth Angers inuential underground lm Scorpio Rising (1964), even down to the coloured lighting and dissection of the bikes form. Making Of: The budget, while not minuscule, was certainly tight for the freewheeling scope of the lm. A lot of the props were actually Reubens and some Burtons, but were mainly procured from thrift shops. For the bike-riding scenes Reubens was dragged along the back of a truck but still had to maintain frantic peddling or risk injury. The episodic nature of the lm and the tight shooting schedule meant that each scene, with the exception of the studio chase, had about a days worth of set-ups. Playground: Actor Paul Reubens developed the character Pee-wee Herman in the late 1970s and used him in a standup comedy routine steeped in innuendo and double entendre. (Some suggestive dialogue remains in the lm So is my horn ready yet? he asks Dottie.) The combination of surrealism, childishness and crude gags made for cult viewing. The Pee-wee Herman Show, ran for ve months at the Roxy Club in LA and was broadcast as a HBO special. Peewee put aside the more adult material of his shows following the surprise success of Pee-wees Big Adventure, and transferred them to childrens television in 1986. Freed of the inhibitions of being an adult, the perpetually childlike Pee-wee was wild, free and lived in a Day-Glo playhouse full of strange 43

LE BLANC/ODELL

creatures and cool toys.The show succeeded because it used childish language, full of secret codes, clubs and petty repetition but crucially Pee-wees Playhouse didnt alienate adult viewers. The show ran for ve successful years. However, Pee-wees demise was swift due to an unfortunate incident at a cinema of dubious repute in 1991. Burton gave Reubens a cameo in Batman Returns (as well as a character voice on The Nightmare Before Christmas) and he has since returned to the public gaze in such lms as the atrocious Buffy The Vampire Slayer (1992), Danny DeVitos excellent Matilda (1996) and the underrated comedy Mystery Men (1999). Trivia: Who do you think is in the waving clown costume outside Marios? None other than Tim Burton. The female biker Why dont you let me have him rst? was in fact Elvira, another Groundling. Originally there were supposed to be three coloured elephants, but the yellow one got stuck in transit on the freeway and shooting had to continue without it. Reubens required a shoe polisher who followed him on hands and knees to ensure that his shoes stayed white and shiny for every shot. Not only did they get permission to use Godzilla in the lm they even used some of the original sound effects. Reubens had a hatred of snakes but Burton told him that I cant make it work with fake snakes, on the morning they shot the burning pet shop scene. The resulting reaction was real. Madame Ruby Predicts: The establishing shot of the studio prior to the climactic chase features the original Batmobile. Pee-wees Big Adventure was well received but it meant that Burton was perceived as a guy who made quirky low-key comedies. He wanted to direct another feature, but none of 44

T I M B U RT O N

the offers that came his way seemed quite right. So he returned to TV.

Alfred Hitchcock Presents: The Jar (1985)


Crew: Director: Tim Burton, Screenplay: Michael McDowell, Larry Wilson from the story by Ray Bradbury, Music: Danny Elfman with Steve Bartek, 24 mins Cast: Grifn Dunne (Noel), Fiona Lewis (Erica), Paul Bartel (Art Critic), Laraine Newman (Periwinkle) Plot: Art, that strange and terrifying world which only seems to appreciate you when you are dead. Noel is determined not to let fame creep up on him posthumously, but is not having much success. That is until he comes across a jar whose contents fascinate anyone who gazes upon it. Passing it off as his own he becomes the darling of the art circuit, but at a price. Success breeds contempt resulting in tension between himself and his wife Erica, whose extramarital dalliances and jealous demeanor lead to a spiteful plan to remove the source of her husbands celebrity. But what exactly is in the jar? Comment: Burton directed The Jar for an episode of the revitalised Alfred Hitchcock Presents series. The original series started in 1955 and ran for 10 years, covering a staggering 266 episodes (plus another 93 for The Alfred Hitchcock Hour), and was resurrected during the 1980s for a modern audience. The original productions were book-ended by the master of suspense telling amusing macabre anecdotes and these would be reused (albeit colourised) for the remakes. The original version of The Jar was directed by Norman Lloyd and rst aired on television in February 1964, for The Alfred Hitchcock 45

LE BLANC/ODELL

Hour. Scripted by James Bridges from a short story by the great Ray Bradbury, it follows the themes we have come to know from Bradburys work: small-town America; carnivals; the delight in revealing the dark depths underneath the surface of society; and dire consequences. Sadly, Bradburys combination of innocent nostalgia and blind psychosis is a difcult balance to produce in any medium his work has a fragile nastiness that should, but doesnt, translate well to the screen. Paul Bartel makes a welcome appearance here, his second in a Burton production, and does much to liven up the proceedings. But the irrelevant Nazi connections and liberties with the story take its toll over the acting and the unusual effects. In the end this is a reasonable television production with all the inherent failings of the medium and is not as poor as Burton himself remembers it.At least the twist in the tale remains and its suitably creepy. The Score: One of my few excursions into TV scoring, and my favourite, Danny Elfman Music for a Darkened Theatre Vol 1. What starts out as a pure Elfman score (albeit with a reduced number of musicians) soon becomes a wonderful take on Bernard Herrmann, as themes from classic Hitchcock lms are blended together seamlessly, to produce something that is at once homage and also an in-joke on the theme of the series.

46

T I M B U RT O N

4. Its Showtime!

Beetlejuice came Tim Burtons way via studio executive David Geffen and he immediately took it on board. In a spooky case of coincidence the story was created by Michael McDowell and Larry Wilson, who had written Burtons The Jar. Burton assembled previous collaborators, all of whom helped give the lm that essential quirkiness: Thomas Ackerman had shot Frankenweenie, Rick Heinrichs helped design the lm and Danny Elfman provided the score.

Beetlejuice (1988)
Crew: Director: Tim Burton, Producers: Michael Bender, Richard Hashimoto, Larry Wilson, Screenplay: Michael McDowell,Warren Skaaren, Story: Michael McDowell, Larry Wilson, Director of Photography: Thomas E Ackerman, Music: Danny Elfman, 88 mins Cast: Alec Baldwin (Adam Maitland), Geena Davis (Barbara Maitland), Annie McEnroe (Jane), Maurice Page (Ernie), Michael Keaton (Betelgeuse), Winona Ryder (Lydia), Catherine OHara (Delia Deetz), Jeffrey Jones (Charles Deetz) Plot: The Maitlands are a happily married couple with a beautiful house on top of a hill, no children, no pets and no 47

LE BLANC/ODELL

worries. So what if its a bit twee, they like it that way. Naturally, such a scene of domestic bliss would make for pretty dull viewing so, in the name of dramatic storytelling, it becomes necessary for the Maitlands to face some apparently insurmountable obstacle in order to facilitate a more interesting cinematic experience.And sure enough a problem rears its ugly head, for their nagging friend Jane sells their house to the Deetz family, a ghastly nouveau-riche couple with a misanthropic and long-suffering daughter Lydia. But it seems that the Maitlands can do nothing about their unwanted visitors, nay homeowners, because they are dead. Following a car accident involving a dog on a bridge they nd themselves in the afterlife, forced to remain inside their house as beyond the front door lies a barren desert populated by giant, vicious sandworms intent on masticating upon any passing ghost. Help (of a kind) is available in the shape of The Handbook for the Recently Deceased, a handy tome given out to all newly-deads to aid them in those troublesome early centuries.They nd their way to a bizarre bureaucratic world and discover to their horror that they are doomed to haunt their property for a long, long time. Drastic events call for drastic measures. The Deetz family are intent on destroying everything the Maitlands hold dear with the help of interior designer Otho, whose designs are, how shall we say, radical. For the time being, all they have is their attic room in which to hatch a plan.What do ghosts do for a living? They haunt! But the Deetz family cant see them, except for Lydia who is at least sympathetic to their cause.The situation is intolerable.Then they come across an advert for Betelgeuse, a bio-exorcist. Despite the imploring pleas of every dead person theyve met, they summon him by calling his name three times. Now they have a professional, albeit a manic one whos also an opportunist lecher, and he gets straight to work. Sadly his attempts end in disaster as the 48

T I M B U RT O N

Deetz family nd the concept of a haunted house a sure-re way to become the darlings of their social circuit. Tragic times for our couple. Not only do they have to contend with their house being abused, they have also unleashed a chaotic and insane phantasmagorical force of a magnitude hitherto unimagined. Comment: Beetlejuice, although only a second feature, laid the groundwork for the rest of Burtons career by becoming a surprise hit. Its budget was a mid-range $13 million (by no means a large amount for such an effects-heavy lm), but Burton made the most of what he was given. Despite Beetlejuice generally remaining in a budget-friendly single location, the Maitlands house, it manages to branch out into the most absurd fantasy places. The purgatory sequences in particular have very little basis in real-world logic and provide us with a plethora of strange characters, all apparently victims of violent death.Theres the man who fell asleep with a lit cigarette, a magicians assistant (she may be in pieces but can still respond if someone gets fresh with her) and the amazing shrunken-head man (whose conditions cause is only revealed at the lms close). All are overseen by an ofcious secretary and a hideous numbered ticket system. Heaven isnt short of civil servants, clerks and councillors. Its all very Brazil (1985). Michael Keaton tackles his part with aplomb. Twitching around like someone not entirely in control of his mental faculties, he crouches until ready to spring in a burst of manic energy. When rst summoned he erupts into the Maitlands existence like a cross between an electrocuted cadaver and Tigger from Winnie the Pooh. He is not only a sexist pig, he is also incredibly rude to those who are ultimately his (unwitting) rescuers. Betelgeuses TV advert is a quick-re lowbudget affair. The hard sell and the cheesy graphics coupled 49

LE BLANC/ODELL

with Betelgeuses infectious say it once, say it twice, third times a charm delivery is pure American kitsch. Its an energetic role which, on rst viewing, can be a little hard to take. Keatons ability as a comedy performer has been used to great effect in such lms as Ron Howards black comedy Night Shift (1982) and a remarkable turn in Kenneth Branaghs Much Ado About Nothing (1993) but sadly has failed to turn him into a truly A-list actor. This is a pity because hes incredibly versatile and Beetlejuice demonstrated just how far he could go. In contrast, the Maitlands are subdued, but this is the point they are a happy middle-class couple thrown into a world of turmoil.The contrast between meek and manic has been held as a criticism of the lm but is really what makes it work so well.When they try to scare the Deetz family the results may be macabre (Barbara hung in a closet, Barbara holding Adams head in one hand with a gore drenched axe in the other) but they are also pitiful.They are simply not cut out to be as ruthless as Betelgeuse or the Deetz family. Lydia is, in her own words, strange and unusual for, as Barbara points out, If Id seen a ghost at your age Id have been scared out of my wits. Rather like the Presidents daughter in Mars Attacks! she is the intelligent, insular daughter in an uncouth rich family. She befriends the Maitlands and despite her misanthropic nature remains loyal to them, standing up to Betelgeuse with some courage and wisely refusing to say his name three times... initially. She only capitulates to Betelgeuses advances and agrees to marry him in return for his help preventing the Maitlands being drained of their existence. Of course it all ends happily enough with Lydia becoming an A grade student for her adopted dead parents and Betelgeuse getting his comeuppance. Lydia even manages to do a Mary Poppins impersonation with an awestruck team of dead American football players.What more could a young girl want? 50

T I M B U RT O N

Otho is like a rumbustious Pee-wee, but far more damaging. His clothing, a casual suit with bright red shoes, mirrors Pee-wees but his intentions are decidedly suspect. He uses the Maitlands handbook to manipulate them for his own nefarious purposes. I know just as much about the supernatural as I do about interior design, he reveals. In many ways he is the villain of the piece rather than the psychotic Betelgeuse. He hasnt got the excuse of centuries of festering insanity and his purpose is purely capitalist in motivation. The lm constantly refers to B-movie and horror lm conventions, despite being a comedy. The expressionism inherent in the afterlife corridors features forced perspectives of the kind immortalised in Robert Wienes classic The Cabinet of Dr Caligari.The symbol of the haunted house atop a hill is a common one and a staple of the genre.The house is akin to The House on Haunted Hill (1958), a William Castle lm featuring Vincent Price. There are further Price references. Prior to being summoned, Betelgeuse lived in Adams model town. Luring a y with a big bar of candy he eats the unfortunate insect who, prior to its digestion, manages to squeak out Help me, mirroring the shock ending of The Fly (1958).The title sequence too plays with the conventions of the horror lm with its helicopter shot (The Shining [1980], another haunted house ick) swooping over the countryside, blending into Adams model town before focusing on the model house. Crawling over the house is a huge spider recalling the mutant insect subgenre of horror lms (Giant Spider Invasion [1975], Them! [1954], Empire of the Ants [1977]).What sets Beetlejuice apart from being just an homage is the way it plays with conventions and expectations about the genre. Usually a haunted house lm has the humans being haunted by ghosts, not the other way round. 51

LE BLANC/ODELL

Style and Score: The repeated aural motif is that of Day-O and other calypso numbers. This helps give an otherworldly feel because, along with the house and costumes, it is difcult to place the lm in time.We know it is sort of contemporary, but the use of such archaic recordings places events anywhen. Similarly, Danny Elfmans score is an unusual driving Oom-pah sound that is reminiscent in tempo to his theme music for The Simpsons, further emphasising some of the more cartoon aspects of the lm. The design is inherently Burton, and many of the ideas that made it onto the screen came from his own sketches. He devised Lydias gothic countenance,Adam and Barbaras horrifying transformations and how some of the deceased lost their lives. When Betelgeuse is nally unleashed he becomes an entire horror fairground with merry-go-round hat, bat ears and test your strength hammers on the end of his stripy arms. To the Maitlands, outside the wholesome house is a barren Daliesque desert landscape with howling winds and Dune style sandworms that roam the plains. These are huge stripy beasts with further copies of themselves emerging from their jaws. They resemble the gift-eating snake from The Nightmare Before Christmas and are animated using stop-motion. Making Of: Only $1 million was set aside to realise the special effects work, a combination of in-camera effects, model work, stop-frame animation and extensive prosthetics. This budgetary restriction worked in the lms favour it looks so quaint and organic. The lm is not terribly well closed and the ending was in doubt even after photography had nished. The conclusion nally used came about as the result of audience testing and for want of anything better! Trivia: During the course of one of his many mad turns, pasty-faced poltergeist Betelgeuse transforms his own head 52

T I M B U RT O N

into a miniature merry-go-round. Crowning this delightful ensemble is the familiar head of Jack Skellington. Burtons original choice for the role of Betelgeuse was Sammy Davies Jr. but this was turned down by the studio. It was Geffen who suggested Keaton.Warner Bros. originally wanted the lm to be entitled House Ghosts, but both that and Burtons mocking compromise suggestion Scared Sheetless were mercifully dropped in favour of the original title. Beetlejuice won an Oscar for Best Make-Up. The Afterlife: Considering its budget and the initially lowkey publicity surrounding the lm, Beetlejuice went on to perform excellent box ofce business. Its surprise success, considering it featured no A-list actors and a director still wet behind the ears, led to Burtons rapid rise up the Hollywood ranks. Despite not having much tie-in merchandise on its release you could subsequently buy all manner of toys and even sweets connected with Beetlejuice. This was mainly because the success of the lm led to a spin-off cartoon series. It was produced by Burton but did not feature the voices of any of those connected with the lm and, despite its target audience being children, managed to sneak a fair amount of adult material into the living room. Altering the formula, Betelgeuse has now become a chum to a substantially younger Lydia.The standard 22-minute format saw the programme chalk up four seasons. So in many ways it was two successes for the price of one and, despite its low-key entrance, the character of Betelgeuse has lasted well beyond the connes of his feature lm.

53

5. Holy Budgets, Batman

Tim Burton had been mooted as a possible director for Batman prior to his second feature, but the nancial success of Beetlejuice meant that his involvement was in no doubt. Despite being a kind of 50th birthday celebration for the caped crusader, the gestation period for the lm had been long and arduous. Benjamin Melniker and Michael Uslan had bought the rights to use DCs character in 1979. Peter Guber became involved and they had to decide who would take the directors chair. This happened over several years as Guber changed studios, eventually nding himself at Warner Bros. Several other directors (including Ivan Ghostbusters Reitman and Joe Gremlins Dante) had been attached to the project before Burton nally took it on. Despite production problems, tight deadlines, an incomplete script, rewrites and a budget that spiralled way past its original substantial forecast, Batman was an unqualied commercial hit, becoming the rst lm to net $100 million in its rst 10 days. If that was not enough, Burton had even managed to nd time to fall in love and marry German artist Lena Gieseke on February 24, 1989. Suddenly Burton was big. Seemingly from nowhere this fragile-looking, shaggy-haired kid had produced, at that time, one of the highest grossing lms ever. He was 30 years old.

54

T I M B U RT O N

Batman (1989)
Crew: Director: Tim Burton, Producers: Jon Peters, Peter Guber, Co-Producer: Chris Kenny, Executive Producers: Benjamin Melniker, Michael Uslan, Screenplay: Sam Hamm, Warren Skaaren, Director of Photography: Roger Pratt, Music: Danny Elfman, 121 mins Cast: Jack Nicholson (Jack Napier/The Joker), Michael Keaton (Bruce Wayne/Batman), Kim Basinger (Vicki Vale), Jack Palance (Carl Grissom), Robert Wuhl (Alexander Knox), Billy Dee Williams (Harvey Dent), Pat Hingle (Commissioner Gordon), Jerry Hall (Alicia), Michael Gough (Alfred) The words Gotham City are synonymous with crime. Plot: Gotham City is a sprawling metropolis on the dawn of its 200th anniversary. Celebrations are planned but its hard to work up any enthusiasm when the economy is failing and the balloons havent even been ordered. Compounding the malaise is Gothams rampant crime wave, chief cause of which is Carl Grissom. Even the police force are in the pockets of the crime barons, particularly slimeball backhander Eckhardt. What can halt the tidal wave of fear and oppression? In the underworld tales are told in half whispers of an indestructible vigilante who bursts from the shadows to administer on-the-spot justice to wrongdoers The Bat. They say he cant be killed.They say he drinks blood. But is The Bat for real? And if so, is replacing one form of illegal activity with another a viable solution to the citys problems? Thats the question reporter Knox is keen to discover. He does have an ally in the shapely shape of top photographer Vicki Vale. 55

LE BLANC/ODELL

But who is the mysterious Batman (as he likes to be called) and whats his gripe with the criminal fraternity? He is Bruce Wayne, millionaire eccentric who conducts his own brand of clandestine legal enforcement from the technologically-enhanced depths of Wayne Mansion.Aided and abetted by family butler Alfred, he is still deeply traumatised by the savage execution of his parents in a Gotham alley when he was a child. Riddled with angst he still seeks the killer.That killer is the morally redundant Jack Napier, a dandied hoodlum who works partly as Grissoms left-hand man. Thing is, Grissom realises Napiers potential to usurp his position as potentate of pernicious perpetration and arranges to have the upstart surreptitiously removed by Eckhardt and his boys in blue, in a stitch-up job at Axis chemicals. Bruce Wayne hears about the potential hassles at Axis during a fund-raising party, makes his excuses, dons cape and ies to the scene of unrest. The resulting showdown between good cops, bad cops, villains and Batman ends in a mess with Jack apparently falling to his doom in a vat of highly toxic waste. Would that it were that simple. Jacks resurrection from the bubbling cauldron of noxious liquid results in bleached skin, green hair, a mind warped beyond recognition and an unnaturally wide grin plastered across his face. He has become The Joker, a new breed of supervillain. The Joker quickly takes his place as the head of Gotham City, eliminating anyone who gets in his way and viewing his unifying vision as art rather than crime.Vicki Vale becomes The Jokers object of affection, but theres a snag because shes currently bedding beefy bachelor Bruce. The Jokers masterplan is on a far grander and more sinister scale than pinching Batmans girlfriend though. Under the guise of philanthropy he intends to revitalise the citys agging celebrations, but this is a front for a heinous plan that would see the populace succumb to poison gas, causing them to die 56

T I M B U RT O N

laughing, a grotesque smile permanently etched on their faces. Only one person is capable and rich enough to deal with such a catastrophic occurrence... Batman. But his concerns are of a personal nature too, for the devious Joker has kidnapped the volatile and vivacious Vicki Vale and his intentions for her seem less savoury than merely waltzing atop the bell tower of Gotham Cathedral. Comment: Batman somehow feels less like a typical Tim Burton lm despite sticking to the themes and ideas that run through the rest of his work.Visually it is undeniably his, but appears occasionally at odds with the demands of a commercial blockbuster. Make no mistake Batman was, and is, an event movie.The buzz about the lm suggested it would be popular, but its success was never guaranteed. Warner Bros. took an incredible risk placing a relatively inexperienced young director on such a high-prole movie. Indeed, their very future could have been at stake if the project had failed to ignite at the box ofce. Of course, we now know that this is Burtons most nancially successful lm. In return for being entrusted with such a prestige project, Burton played by the rules and didnt over-indulge his personal vision.The rewards for this approach turned out to be A-List status and far greater artistic freedom in the future a price worth paying. The most obvious departure from his rst two features lies in the pacing and structure of the overall script. While Pee-wee and Beetlejuice are self-contained, narratively closed lms, they are organic and undisciplined in structure, almost stream-of-consciousness and brimming with ideas. Batman is in the more classically rigid Hollywood mould the three-act story. Later Burton lms would certainly be more disciplined than his rst two but would never return to the restrictive rigor shown here.Act One (30 minutes) establishes the setting and ends with a great plot change the 57

LE BLANC/ODELL

birth of the Joker. Act Two (60 minutes) sees the rise of the Joker and escalation of his plans counterpointed by developing character relationships. Act Three (30 minutes) is denouement and resolution. Having been shown the Jokers plan, its now down to Batman to set things right.These acts occur so punctually you can set your clock by them. Much criticism was made of Burtons insistence on Michael Keaton in the role of Batman and that the role is bland compared with Jack Nicholsons Joker. The structure favours the Jokers story arc and he is a substantially more amboyant individual. But this is the point. To have two insane costumed hyperactive characters would have made for far less focused viewing, Batman needs to be calm and rational to be credible as the force of good. To make him manic would fuel the insinuation that he is as bad as the criminals. Not that Batman is without humour, in his guise as Bruce Wayne there are a number of opportunities for Keaton to display a subtly comic talent. But ultimately Bruce Wayne needs to become Batman to deny his responsibilities and to pay for his inability to prevent his parents death. Once he dons the costume he is freed of the burden of his nancial status and his melancholia. Both the Joker and Batman are of the same cut it is implied that the Joker has grown up alone too. Money determines their morality no matter how much donning a mask equalises their class status. This explains the Jokers attack on the art world as reacting against the bourgeoisie he vandalises the classics (except a Francis Bacon!) because he seeks to become what he hates and what he isnt. Another difference in family status between the two opposites lies in the treatment of the surrogate father gure. In the Jokers case, Grissom is the stern face of fatherly authority who realises the danger of Jacks ambition and attempts to execute him. The Joker retaliates by killing him. Batman, on the other hand, has the 58

T I M B U RT O N

responsible, caring surrogate in the shape of Alfred, who looks after the spoilt little rich kid. In many ways Batman is a rallying cry for responsible parenting... When Bruce Wayne becomes Batman he changes psychologically to match his image. It is hard to imagine Wayne being able to kick lowlifes through doors or perform dynamic acrobatics, but once in character he becomes that hero. The suit itself accentuates muscles. It is an external manifestation of the male ego as well as a fetish in its use of black rubber. By putting on his suit he becomes a warrior. Similarly, his vehicles are an extension of this.The Batmobile is one of the most blatant forms of onscreen penis envy committed to celluloid. Batman is clearly a man behind a mask.The Jokers attempts at public relations work because he lies about his mask. I have just taken off my make-up. Lets see if you can take off yours, he challenges, when in fact he has used eshcoloured paint to disguise his mutilated features.While Bruce denounces the Jokers assertion that we mustnt compare ourselves to normal people as justication for his behaviour, he concurs by his actions. He even points out the similarities himself:I made you. You made me rst. Style and Score: The most obviously Burtonesque moments occur in the Citys festival scene, which has a forced perspective image that only a big imagination and a bigger budget can realise. During the celebrations, the Joker plans to unleash toxic gas contained within huge balloons shaped like cartoon characters. These balloons are pure Burton in their exaggerated proportions and use of stripes and vibrant colours. Batman becomes the ultimate schoolboy bully when he wrenches them from the Joker using his Batwing and sets them drifting off into the stratosphere (probably causing excessive environmental damage elsewhere). 59

LE BLANC/ODELL

Danny Elfmans score for the lm is suitably bombastic, as bets a Hollywood blockbuster. Robust and rousing, it helps drive the onscreen action. Unfortunately another Summer blockbuster trend also nds its way onto the soundtrack in the shape of a number of songs by Prince. Normally tie-ins merely irritate while the closing credits are playing (e.g. Titanic [1998] or the otherwise awless Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon [2000]) but instead of one music number, Prince came up with several and they were integrated into the narrative, resulting in breaks in the lms ow. More annoyingly for viewers watching now, it makes the lm seem dated. This last point is unforgivable as the rest of the lm looks timeless, designed to appear as a 1940s vision of the future rather than a late 1980s one. The presence of thencontemporary music shatters the lms alternative now ethos. Making Of: The adoption of Nicholson and the Batman brand name meant that this Batman was inevitably going to be expensive. Because of the strength of the dollar at the time and the availability of large-scale studio facilities, the lm was shot in the UK. Most of the stages at Pinewood were taken over to construct the huge Gotham City sets and a massive disused power station was dressed up to be the Axis Chemicals plant. Production designer Anton Furst (who had built Vietnam in Londons Docklands for Stanley Kubricks Full Metal Jacket) had to co-ordinate a crew of over 200 to realise the project, which also included the Batcave with its Forbidden Planet style matte work. Furst also designed the Batwing and the Batmobile.Virtually all of the effects work on show is of the old school variety, although the quantity of model work necessitated computer-aided camera tracking. This meant that not only did Gotham City have to be built on soundstages so that the actors could be seen walking 60

T I M B U RT O N

around, it also had to be built in scaled-down form to enable the models to be shot and matched to the real world version. Batground: Bob Kanes perennial crime ghter was half a century old when Warner Bros. lm smashed onto the silver screen in 1989. Originally appearing in the pages of Detective Comics, stony-faced superhero The Batman, alter ego of millionaire Bruce Wayne, eventually became the subject of his own comics. He dropped the denite article from his identity and in 1940 teamed up with Robin, the Boy Wonder. Batman was a huge success and complemented DCs other major superhero, Superman. Batman was always the more interesting of the two, precisely because his abilities were grounded in everyday plausibility and physicality. He was human, all too human, without superpowers, X-ray eyes or extraterrestrial jiggery-pokery. His substantial fortune and will to self-improvement provided his primary advantage against his enemies. Pitted against insurmountable odds (he was even occasionally on the run from the police due to his vigilante activities) and a menagerie of bizarre and grotesque foes, Batmans success proved strong enough to branch out into the cinema in the form of two Saturday morning serials (Batman [1943] and Batman and Robin [1948]). However most peoples fond recollection of the caped crusader is of the seminal psychedelic camp excesses of the 1960s TV series (and wonderful 1966 spin-off feature) starring Adam West and Burt Ward. Despite the cult appeal of the show, it was clearly not the direction Warner Bros. wished to pursue. Their Batman needed to be more in tune with modern day sensibilities, but crucially they could not deny the lms wider distribution to a lucrative family audience that would provide all-important revenue from spin-off merchandise sales. The spiralling decline in comic books, both critically 61

LE BLANC/ODELL

and commercially, in the early part of the 1980s had been curtailed by a new breed of American comics that revitalised the market and made reading them no longer a source of embarrassment. One of these was Frank Millers The Dark Knight Returns which deconstructed the Batman myth and reinvented it for a cynical age. Crime is at an all-time high and Batmans antics are questioned as fascistic and anachronistic. Occasionally he fails.This, Batman:Year One and Killing Joke provided the impetus to turn this lm project into something that was more suitable for Burtons skewed view a world of misunderstood mists where the boundaries between good and evil are blurred. Trivia: Taking into account only its takings at the cinema in the US (i.e. regardless of the countless amounts of merchandise sales, video rentals, sell through tapes etc.) the lm earned well over $250 million. Batmans dark and occasionally violent content meant it was destined for a PG-13 rating in the States. In the UK this would have equated to a 15, something that Warner Bros. were not keen on, as a lot of revenue comes from the family market (The UK rating was compulsory rather than discretionary).A new 12 rating category was introduced as a compromise. Production designer Anton Furst won an Oscar for his remarkable realisation of a truly dark Gotham City.

62

6. An Uncommonly Gentle Man

After Batmans enormous success Warner Bros. wanted a sequel, but instead Tim Burton chose to make a personal lm, based upon an image he had created many years previously. He formed a production company with Denise Di Novi and together they produced Edward Scissorhands for 20th Century-Fox.

Edward Scissorhands (1990)


Crew: Director:Tim Burton, Producers: Denise Di Novi,Tim Burton, Assistant Producer: Caroline Thompson, Executive Producer: Richard Hashimoto, Story: Tim Burton, Caroline Thompson, Screenplay: Caroline Thompson, Director of Photography: Stefan Czapsky, Music: Danny Elfman, 100 mins Cast: Johnny Depp (Edward),Winona Ryder (Kim), Dianne Wiest (Peg),Vincent Price (The Inventor), Alan Arkin (Bill), Anthony Michael Hall (Jim), Kathy Baker (Joyce), O-Lan Jones (Esmerelda) Its in the order of their hedgerows Its in the way their curtains open and close Its in the look they give you down their nose All part of decencys jigsaw I suppose. XTC Respectable Street 63

LE BLANC/ODELL

Plot: Ding dong! Avon calling. For Peg,Avon is a calling. She takes her work very seriously even if no one wants to purchase anything. There is one place she hasnt plied her trade and its just at the end of the road a mountain with a huge mansion that overlooks her neighbourhood.With some trepidation she enters the grounds and is taken aback to nd that they are well tended, bright and lled with impressive topiary. Entering the foreboding mansion she comes across the shy sole resident Edward. He has been living alone since his creator, The Inventor, passed away. Whats more, Edward is not complete instead of hands he has long razorsharp scissors. Peg realises the boy is in need of help and takes him to her home. The neighbourhood is buzzing about Pegs mysterious new friend and everyone wants to meet him. Edward meanwhile is coming to terms with a very different lifestyle that includes mirrors, waterbeds and trousers with braces. One thing he particularly likes is the photograph of Pegs daughter, Kim, who is currently out camping with her boyfriend Jim. Kim and Edward get off to a bad start, though, when she returns early and nds him in her room. But Edward becomes an established part of the household and, with one exception, proves to be a hit with the locals. For although Edward has trouble using cutlery at the dinner table, hes a real artist when it comes to hedges, pets in need of fur styling and he is a coiffeur extraordinaire. A brief spell on television raises his prole and the possibility that he can get corrective surgery to become just like everybody else. But Edward is not like everyone else and, as so often happens, the ckle tastes of the general populace turn from acclaim to damnation. Bored housewife Joyce accuses Edward of molesting her after he refuses her advances. But worse is to come. Realising that Edward will do anything for Kim and can easily open locked doors, Jim plans to rob his 64

T I M B U RT O N

tight-sted father using Edwards impressive larceny skills. However the plan is foiled and Edward becomes trapped inside the house, unable to get out until the police have released him in a urry of lights, sirens and handcuffs. Released on bail he is humiliated in the eyes of the community who so recently embraced him, but does nothing to clear his name in order to protect his loved ones honour. Christmas is approaching.The family put on a happy face despite the incredulity of their neighbours, tting up the house in festive splendour. Edward creates an angelic ice sculpture as Bill staples fake snow onto the roof. Meanwhile Kim has realised that Jim is not the guy for her and that true love can sometimes come in the most unlikely of guises. Edwards delicate courtship and unquestioning devotion have won her over. But their worlds are far apart and the neighbours are united in their desire to see Edward ousted from the community... Comment: For anyone captivated by Edward Scissorhands words are inadequate to convey the magic of the lm. Ostensibly a romantic faerie tale, the whole piece works like a gothic version of Its A Wonderful Life (1946) for outcasts and the disenfranchised. Edward Scissorhands is a feel-good weepalong with a streak of despair about modern society running through it. One of its many triumphs is that viewers become aware of societys cruelties and hypocrisies without being lectured. There are good people as well as bad, misguided people and people easily led and while there is internal resolution, there is no denouement for societys intrinsic problems. Its a Wonderful Lifes director Frank Capras great trick was to leave people unaware that they were watching a cynical lm and Burton follows this lead. The lm is, to all intents and purposes, timeless. There may well be colour televisions and modern day malls, but the roots lie in a 65

LE BLANC/ODELL

1950s/1960s past, in the neighbourhoods home of the future style bungalows.This is an alternative now, the now of the faerie tale brought up to date. Bearing this in mind, the technology indicates that the bulk of the lm takes place contemporaneously in 1990, which makes the actual lm (told in ashback by Kim to her grandchild) set sometime around 2040, despite appearing as a mythical Victorian past. Edwards origin is told in a series of ashbacks featuring his loving father, The Inventor. The death of his father is moving and shocking as he tries to use his limited emotional faculties and infant knowledge to comprehend what is happening. Edward, having no source of information about society, relies on the scant remembered advice of his creator. Thus he is a gentleman taught in matters of courtesy, but etiquette is a code that works only if embraced by all. He is placed at a severe disadvantage because of his decency.While his moral code is nave but internally correct it doesnt reect societys opinions. Like the lm, Edward is a product of a bygone age, a mythical better time when people cared for the pleasantries of polite society and not the greed of the modern consumer. Morally, Edward was brought up by a romantically idealised great-grandfather who taught him that etiquette guards us from all humiliation and discomfort even if eventually noting that it is boring, lets switch to poetry. Edward has little grasp of monetary value, itself an oddity in a consumerist society. He cant get credit because he doesnt exist. Most telling is when Bill gives another of his fatherly aphorisms:You cant buy the necessities of life with cookies. This is meant to show Edward the value of money and the requirement for him to charge for services rendered. But idealistically isnt love the real necessity of life? And isnt his heart actually a cookie? Edward can be seen as the way Burton thinks of himself as the misunderstood artist outside of conventional life, 66

T I M B U RT O N

trying to t in but doomed by his very nature to fail in the process. Edward is a compulsive creative. His works of sculpture are grandiose in scale but nave in their simplicity. Like Burtons own art Edwards has a frailty, a sense of wonder about it. But this beauty and simplicity can also be turned into nightmare or grotesque. One of the images that Edward creates is that of the dinosaur (there is a Loch Ness monster in the mansions grounds and he makes a tyrannosaurus and a diplodocus for the community), popular among children and the basis for Godzilla. Edwards sculpture is not limited to topiary as he can also turn his prodigious skills to hairdressing and ice sculpture. Indeed it is in the scenes of hairdressing that we nd Edward at his most creative and alluring. Edward cuts like a pro but with a speed and air that astonishes and excites Joyce curls her toes in ecstasy at Edwards touch. That was the single most thrilling experience of my whole life. When he nishes he stands back to admire his handiwork with a cocky ourish he knows he is good. If Edward is considered strange you should see his neighbours! Almost everyone in Edward Scissorhands falls into the category of exaggerated stereotype, as is betting for a fable. Joyce is the frustrated randy housewife with appalling taste in leggings, who may be rst to recognise Edwards potential, but is also the rst to strike back. Often accompanied by a Tom Jones song (most notably Delilah) we know from the outset that her intentions are anything but honourable. Helen is the perennial gossip, orchestrating the meetings conducted at the street corner. Then there is religious electric organ player and doomsayer Esmerelda who is the rst to point out that Edward is evil (Trample down the perversion of nature) and the rst to say she was right all along. Unsurprisingly her eventual comeuppance reects her fears mirrored back at her her hedge is transformed into the 67

LE BLANC/ODELL

head of a horned demon. Even Peg falls into the saccharine neighbour mould but her persistence and devotion to Edward take her beyond the connes of her stereotype. It is mainly through these female characters that Edward is forced to interact, as they have the time to lavish upon him. The only real contact he has with men are Bill (who tries to explain the mysteries of women), Kevin (who is more impressed by the potential Edward has to deliver killer karate chops and gets him to perform a barnstorming decoupagebased Show and Tell) and Jim. Jim is everything that Edward is not. Jim is abusive, self-centred and representative of normal society. He dresses in football jackets, has a pretty girlfriend, picks ghts, laughs at those less fortunate than himself and is perfectly happy that someone else takes the rap for his misdemeanours. He is the epitome of modern selsh society and his passing at the lms close is a cause for much celebration. Edward Scissorhands again revels in a love for kooky gadgetry. The Inventors laboratory is a paradise with huge machines chufng away to produce, amongst other things, heart-shaped biscuits. Sugar and spice and all things nice do not only little girls make. These intricate but old-fashioned pieces of machinery seem enormously complex but they have both personality and purpose: little robots stamp out the shapes with their cutting feet; the mixture is whisked by mechanical arms; kneaded by disembodied legs; and baked in a smiley-faced oven with bellows for ears. The Inventors greatest achievement is Edward. Plucked from the line of robots, he is elevated to humanity.This is an inversion of the genre conventions of the mad scientist lm. Normally the mad scientist gure is either a maniacal would-be ruler of the world, or a misunderstood genius messing with the forces of nature who unwittingly unleashes a beast.Whilst supercially The Inventor shares characteristics with the latter model, the 68

T I M B U RT O N

Frankenstein model, he doesnt create Edward with any sense of malice or apparent medical breakthrough. He is less of a mad scientist than a Victorian inventor uncle, a sweet crank like Caractacus Potts (Chitty Chitty Bang Bang), and Edward is no monster.Although created from scratch, he is a facsimile of nature not a mockery of it.That the community goes up in arms against him as they did in Frankenstein, is less a reection on him than on mob reaction in general how little things have changed. In Edward Scissorhands snow doesnt merely provide a visual motif or even a shorthand way of linking to the Christmas season but is the very purpose of the lm Edward the artist standing alone at the top of the mountain creating beautiful snow for the town below and sculpting an efgy of Kim dancing.This single image links the bookends, where an old Kim tells her grandchild about the Christmas feeling and the moment when, at their lowest ebb, Edward and Kim nd unbridled happiness. Kim, nally realising she loves Edward, goes outside to see the snow falling and is enchanted when she realises it is of his making. For a few short seconds she dances in pure joy before their world collapses. A few moments perhaps, but worth a lifetime of mediocrity for them both. Edward Scissorhands is a fable, a simple tale of unquestioning love, a moving lm of elegance and beauty. It is modern Hollywoods nest lm, a peerless, perfect example of the blend between art, emotion and the commercial that will rightly remain as one of the select classics of cinema. Some have called it a modern masterpiece. It does not need to be quantied or excused by the expression modern at all. Style and Score: Stylistically Edward Scissorhands represents a continuation of the design ethics of Beetlejuice and Pee-wees Big Adventure in its marrying of the twee and mundane with 69

LE BLANC/ODELL

the gothic and disjointed.The distance between his mansion abode and the suburb below is more than physical it is ideological and aesthetic. The suburban houses with their pastel colour schemes, their individuality within conformist constraints, show the communitys defensive stance against anything that breaks with convention. In contrast, Edwards mansion may be dark and brooding but it is honest and a genuine home. Although unwilling to commit himself Danny Elfman has said that the score for Edward Scissorhands is one of my favourites, perhaps even my favourite but this is far too modest. Recognising the faerie tale, the music reects this in its sweeping trills and ethereal choral work. From tinkling bells to rousing themes, this is the perfect marriage of music and imagery, with Edwards various emotional states being emphasised by his leitmotifs. By the time the closing shot shows Edward bestowing the gift of snow on the town below, you are eternally grateful for Elfmans majestic music. Making Of: Edward represents the alienation that many teenagers feel about tting into society and in some respects this reects Burtons coming to terms with his own childhood in Burbank. In order to realise the idealised version of his home town they lmed in Florida, on the other side of the country. However the blistering heat made things very difcult for both the actors and crew, particularly Johnny Depp who had to perform in full costume and make-up under the blazing sun. The constantly changing skies meant that shot matching was a big problem too. If the heat was bad, the bugs were worse. At certain times of the day everything stopped due to the proliferation of bugs that plagued the area, turning the set into a swarm of black. The shoot took the best part of four months during which time they commandeered an entire town, putting the residents up at a 70

T I M B U RT O N

nearby motel. In order to get the desired look each house was repainted, but when lming was complete they were returned to their former state. Edwards mansion was built full-scale on one of the only inclines in the famously at state but the interior was lmed on soundstages. Burton used the talents of Bo Welch to realise that grand angular interior; including the sweeping staircase and impressive machinery. What is uncommon about Edward Scissorhands is that much of what audiences see onscreen was completed in-camera and not the result of extensive post-production work or miniatures. For example, the Inventors cookie machine was, to all intents and purposes, fully functional with the exception that it couldnt actually make cookies. One of the rst things that was created in pre-production was Edwards hands, in order for Johnny Depp to have adequate time to learn how to use them. Indeed some of the scars on his face are not make-up! Depp did not have an easy time on-set. Apart from the hands themselves there was the costume to contend with as well as the climate. In the barbecue scene where a kebab-handed Edward is fed ambrosia salad, Johnny had to endure the ordeal for a full 20 takes, the result of which was a very sick actor. Making Of You Dont Want to Know: Naturally snow doesnt come every day to Florida so it needed to be manufactured using real ice shavings, bits of plastic and other glittery things to get the required sparkle on lm. For the tear-jerkingly beautiful sequence of Kim dancing in the snow, they lmed partly on location and, in order to get the cold feeling right, partly in a meat freezer. How romantic... The Creation: The concept for Edwards Scissorhands originally came from a drawing that Burton had created in his teens. At that time Edward did not have scissors for hands, 71

LE BLANC/ODELL

merely sharp instruments the character was unable to hold anything that he loved for fear of damaging it. Burton had wanted to do something with the drawing for some time but was unable to nd either the backing or the inspiration to realise it. Eventually he turned to scriptwriter Caroline Thompson who immediately empathised with the character and set about making a story. As Thompson says Its a fable. A fable is a story that people dont necessarily believe but they understand. You understand what its about because what its about is a feeling like you dont belong and feeling like you want to belong and feeling like youre trying to belong and feeling like you should belong and you cant belong. Key to the lms strength is her erudite and freeowing script, and its easy to see why Burton would nd her skills so much in tune with his, for her own tales have centred on the macabre and the outsider. Her novel First Born concerned the adventures of an aborted foetus. Later she would provide the script for The Nightmare Before Christmas. Continuing the combination of strange but loving, she cowrote (with Larry Beetlejuice Wilson) the screenplay for Barry Sonnenfelds nest lm The Addams Family (1991) where Charles Addams family of ghoulish mists are treated as far more preferable to anyone in normal money-grabbing society. This ability to make something generally considered socially unacceptable or disgusting into something that audiences can care about, and even empathise with, is one of her many talents. Thompsons collaboration with Burton has continued to this day, as she has a writing credit on Tim Burtons Corpse Bride. Aftermath: Vincent Prices career had covered over half a century, providing audiences with chills, thrills and humour. Burton had always wanted to work with his hero, indeed if Vincent Price had not been so generous with the directors 72

T I M B U RT O N

rst foray into lm-making (Vincent) his career may well have taken a totally different path. Burtons collaboration with his idol continued after lming Edward Scissorhands as he wanted to show the world Prices versatility and compassion. Conversations With Vincent (as it has been preliminarily named) is a series of interviews conducted by Burton about Prices career. Hopefully this long gestating project will eventually see the light of day. Trivia: At the barbecue there is a cameo by Stuart Lancaster, one of the stars of Russ Meyers Faster Pussycat! Kill! Kill! (1966).When Johnny Depp was given the role he was not an established star or household name. He was at that time known primarily for TV roles and a small role in Wes Cravens A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984) where he fell foul of the man with razors for ngers.

73

7. Bats, Cats and an Army that Quacks

Warner Bros. were trying to keep the ball rolling on their huge superhero money-spinner and had been keen to get Tim Burton on board to do a sequel to Batman. Burton agreed to return to the series if he was allowed to go off and make a personal project. Edward Scissorhands completed, the job of returning to the DC hero became a reality. The intervening couple of years had enhanced Burtons ability to handle huge budgets and crews. He also retained nal cut providing he delivered a lm with no more than a PG-13 rating. Because of this, Batman Returns is the best Batman lm up to Batman Begins (2005) and far more satisfying than the original.

Batman Returns (1992)


Crew: Director: Tim Burton, Producers: Denise Di Novi, Tim Burton, Co-Producer: Larry Franco, Executive Producers: Jon Peters, Peter Guber, Benjamin Melniker, Michael Uslan, Story: Daniel Waters, Sam Hamm, Screenplay: Daniel Waters, Director of Photography: Stefan Czapsky, Music: Danny Elfman, 121 mins Cast: Michael Keaton (Batman/Bruce Wayne), Danny DeVito (The Penguin/Oswald Cobblepot), Michelle Pfeiffer (Catwoman/Selina Kyle), Christopher Walken (Max Shreck), Pat Hingle (Commissioner Gordon), Michael Gough 74

T I M B U RT O N

(Alfred), Michael Murphy (Mayor), Cristi Conaway (Ice Princess), Andrew Bryniarski (Chip Shreck) I dont know about you Miss Kitty but I feel so much... yummier. Plot: Christmas time, mistletoe and crime. Those longsuffering citizens of Gotham city are facing a Christmas without pomp and ceremony. Again the city is under the vice-like grip of urban terrorism and Gotham needs a stronger leader than the insipid mayor. There is one candidate that springs to mind the Penguin. Long considered to be an urban myth, the Penguin was abandoned by his rich parents because of his unique deformities and erratic behaviour. Left to drift in the sewers, he survived in the company of his peers at the zoo. His return to the world above ground is triumphal, rescuing the current mayors child from the hands of an unscrupulous kidnapper. How does he know the kidnapper is unscrupulous? Well, he got him to do the job in the rst place! Max Shreck is a shrewd entrepreneur with big plans for the city, plans that will be mightily benecial to his nancial well-being. By backing the Penguins ascension to power he can get permission to build a power plant with a difference. Most power plants generate power, but Shrecks ingenious plan would see this power plant function as a giant capacitor, soaking up resources to be put to his doubtless nefarious schemes. However, his dastardly plan is unwittingly uncovered by his lonely, bumbling and insecure secretary (sorry, office assistant) Selina Kyle. Stupidly revealing to Shreck that she has gured him out, he chucks her out of his very tall building. Left for dead, she is revived by a group of passing alley cats and stumbles back to her twee apartment.There she works feverishly on a new identity sleek, deadly, amoral Catwoman. 75

LE BLANC/ODELL

The Penguin, meanwhile, has been searching for his roots discovering that he is actually Oswald Cobblepot, son of a rich deceased couple that were pillars of Gothams upper echelons.With the backing of Shreck he is transformed from his raw sh eating, thermal-underweared self into a slick, top hat and suited gentleman, able to hold himself in front of the plethora of television cameras and news photographers. But what, you may ask, of the caped crusader? Well, our millionaire crime ghter is carrying on with business as usual; ghting crime in all its infernal incarnations whenever the sky is illuminated by the bat signal. Things have been a bit hectic recently, especially with the emergence of wild card Catwoman (who is now in cahoots with the Penguin). To facilitate an early election the terrible trio of Penguin, Catwoman and Shreck hatch a plan. Implicating Batman in the kidnap and murder of bubbly but vacuum-brained model Ice Princess, he is disgraced live on television when the Batmobile runs amok, driving indiscriminately into civilians. But Batman is a wily devil and turns the tables on the Penguin, ruining his chances at ofce and reinstating himself as the de facto protector of the common man.Well, Hell hath no fury like a Penguin riled and he launches an all-out apocalyptic attack on the city from which no one, not even Shreck, Catwoman, Commissioner Gordon or Batman, will be exempt. If that were not enough, Bruce Wayne discovers that the woman he loves (Selina) and the woman he loves to hate to love (Catwoman) are one and the same... Batman Returns is not really a sequel to Batman. It doesnt pick up where the rst lm left off...The point was to make it all feel fresh and new. Tim Burton, from the Introduction to Batman Returns:The Ofcial Movie Book. 76

T I M B U RT O N

Comment: Obviously comparisons with the rst lm are inevitable and, once again, it seems as though the titular character plays not second but at least third ddle to the villains. But both stylistically and ideologically this is far removed from the original. Fundamental to the lm is the emotional and physical relationship between Batman and Catwoman, a tempestuous and fetishistic romance of the kind you rarely see in a Hollywood lm. Batman remains an enigma so his presence is always felt but not explicitly seen. He is Gothams omnipotent protector and as such his vigilante behaviour is hidden in the shadows. His nemeses are far more amboyant but ultimately they are similar to him. The exception is Shreck (the only real bad guy), who doesnt don some kind of disguise or have a split personality. To this end he is the most calculating, the most respectable and, with his irrepressible corporate greed, the most dangerous of criminals. Maybe the Penguins wrath unleashed would be more damaging, but it is the result of animalistic instinct, of uncontrollable natural urge. There is a sense that Selinas fate and rebirth as Catwoman is preordained. Indeed there is a streak of fatalism that runs throughout the lm. The characters are so tied up in their own psyches that any deviation ends in tragedy or reversion. Even before she has been unceremoniously shoved out of Shrecks building, Selina is referred to in cat terms (Im afraid we havent properly housebroken Miss Kyle).After her reinvention she takes on the characteristics of a cat; amoral and unpredictable. She wrecks her own furniture and trashes her pad. The tacky neon sign in her otherwise pastel bedroom is smashed to read not HELLO THERE but HELL HERE. She creates her costume from PVC and fashions razor-sharp nails. In contrast to Batmans functional logically-designed suit, manufactured to exacting tailored standards, Catwomans is elemental, intuitive and the result of 77

LE BLANC/ODELL

delirious labour. She causes childlike vandalism in a store, decapitating dummies with a well-aimed whip or contemptuously dealing with security guards before blowing the place sky high by imaginative use of a microwave meow. When she encounters Batman the screen really lights up. Despite (or because of) the fact they are both clad almost entirely from head to toe, the scenes crackle with intense erotic charge. Both are extreme fetishists who dress up to express their sexual drive in a way they nd incapable of doing in their normal everyday guises.Their ghts are thinly disguised sexual play and they relate romantically through mutual pain. Her apparel is that of a Gothic dominatrix who teases her prey. Batman has designed half of his house to be a fetishists paradise he has a dungeon to skulk in and gets there by means of an iron maiden entrance. Alfred just uses the stairs.When Bruce Wayne and Selina nally realise their opposites alter ego there is part relief and part concern as to the future of their sadomasochistic relationship. Indeed Selina declares: Does this mean we have to start ghting? half in hope, half in despair. That they discover each others identities at a masked ball, whilst not wearing their masks, is an irony that is not lost on them. Masks again have a great deal of importance, both as part of their fetish games and to free the id of the wearer. Both Batman and Catwoman function better with their masks on. Thus they are more passionate lovers grappling on rooftops Catwoman licking the face of Batman than they can ever be getting cosy by the re at Wayne mansion or waltzing at a big cheese social event. The Penguin is the real tragic gure of the piece because he is misguided and elemental, another force of nature. Catwoman and Batman can survive dual (or should that be duel?) personalities, but not so the Penguin. Rejected at birth, he is cast from a bridge and ends up in the sewers. These scenes are shot in chiaroscuro style to emphasise the 78

T I M B U RT O N

tortured and gothic start to his unfortunate origins. Despite the fact that Batman is psychologically compelled to become a man-beast there is no physiological reason for him to do so (nor Catwoman for that matter) but the Penguin is forced to live with his horric appearance.As he accurately points out, Im a genuine freak and youre just someone wearing a mask. Like rich kid Batman,The Penguin is not without his toys. The Penguins impressive array of functional yet stylish umbrellas get him out of many sticky situations either as handy guns, a helicopter, gas dispensers or just a means of invoking a really nasty headache. His gadgets are less hightech and more toylike than Batmans, perhaps reecting the childhood he never had. His moving declaration that,I am a man. I have a name. Oswald Cobblepot, is tainted by his realisation that his parents rejected him I was their number one son and they treated me like number two. He concludes the lm, and his life, knowing who he really is: I am not a human being, I am an animal. Style and Score: Thankfully we are back almost entirely in Danny Elfman land and what a relief it is. Bar a few moments in the ballroom scene and a surprisingly average Siouxsie and the Banshees number over the end credits, the bombastic superiority of Elfmans score is all the music you need, energetically conducted by Oingo Boingo guitarist Steve Bartek. Burton turned to Bo Welch to design the extravagant sets and his Disney buddy Rick Heinrichs to contribute to the art direction.The results are breathtaking in their scale as well as design.The Gotham Plaza set alone was a massive 65 foot in height, complete with huge futurist (half-Soviet, half-Nazi looking) statues sculpted by Leo Rijn and 35 foot high Christmas trees dressed with lights. Most of the lm was produced on soundstages which adds an aura of dreamlike unreality that some people nd stagy, others magical. It also 79

LE BLANC/ODELL

allows the lighting cameraman complete control over the environment, where colour and uidity of camera movement are paramount, unshackled by the real world. Burtons lms are often based outside of reality, and many of them are actually lmed outside of reality! Cinematographer Stefan Czapsky proved once again that he is the man to hire if you want snow to look dreamy. Making Of: Having ditched the prospect of reusing the sets from the rst lm, Burton decided to use the Warner soundstages at Burbank to construct the vast sets.The Penguins lair had to be built on the modest 50-foot soundstage and kept lled with 25,000 gallons of water. No animals were harmed and their comfort came before the cast and crew, who had to lm in temperatures just above freezing point. A good deal of effort went into realising the astonishing array of ideas. For example, real penguins were used but, as with most animals, they found it difcult to hit their marks on cue, so many of the shots are a combination of people in costumes, CGI and animatronics. The animatronics were handled by the Stan Winston Workshop. CGI was employed for the crowd scenes of penguins, the swarms of bats and the Batmobiles shield, which had been hand animated in the rst lm. CGI had become more affordable in just a couple of years and could therefore be employed more extensively. More traditional modelling techniques were used to create the Bat-ski and much of the lm relies on the ancient and distinguished art of matte painting to give depth and perspective. Batground: Having dealt with Batmans most famous foe in the original, Batman Returns pits the caped crusader against two other well-known adversaries, Catwoman and The Penguin. In the Adam West TV series, the Penguin was 80

T I M B U RT O N

memorably played by Burgess Meredith. Catwoman was played by three actresses: Julie Newmar, Lee Meriwether (who played in the 1966 feature version Batman) and Eartha Kitt. Both characters had originated in Bob Kanes comics. Catwoman made her rst appearance in 1940 and the Penguin made his debut the following year. Catwoman was originally based on a cross between Kanes girlfriend at the time (whose seamstress skills also fed into the character) and popular actresses Hedy Lamarr and Jean Harlow, while the Penguin came from an inspirational packet of Kool cigarettes. Probably a good thing Kane didnt smoke Camels instead... Trivia: Batman Returns was once again rated 12 in the UK, but this time cuts were made in order to comply with the BBFCs occasionally bizarre policies of the time. First to go were the clowns nunchaku, which were weapons routinely removed from virtually every lm from the mid-1970s to the late 1990s.The other cut was Catwomans use of aerosol cans in a microwave as an explosive device, because of concerns that the action could encourage imitation. As a result the sequence makes little causal sense and Catwomans welltimed Meow seems the work of good fortune rather than a planned outburst. In the States these scenes hardly warranted a mention. They were more concerned about the lms moral angle and the fact that the Penguin spews black bile from his mouth warranting a PG-13 only after substantial cuts. Christopher Walkens Max Shreck character is named after the creepy looking actor Max Schreck who played the titular role in Nosferatu (1922), a seminal German expressionist lm. Burton was not keen to continue making Batman lms after this but did spend some time working on a possible spin-off featuring Catwoman, a character he considered had more 81

LE BLANC/ODELL

potential for moral ambiguity. Sadly the project fell through, only to be revived as a risible Halle Berry vehicle in 2004. Seen briey in the pre-credit sequence the aristocratic Tucker Cobblepot is played by none other than Paul Reubens, aka Pee-wee Herman. His wife is Diane Salinger, who played Simone in Pee-wees Big Adventure. Although Batman Returns smashed box-ofce records for rst weekend takings, its popularity quickly declined because audiences were simply not expecting such a dark vision.This was not a good time for Burton his marriage was not going well. He served as producer on such projects as The Nightmare Before Christmas and Cabin Boy. During the making of The Nightmare Before Christmas he met model Lisa Marie and the pair connected almost immediately.

82

8. Angora, Bela, Cinema: The ABC of Ed Wood


Writers Scott Alexander and Larry Karaszewski had wanted to make a lm about Edward D.Wood Jr. for some time.They had even planned a documentary while they were at Film School, originally entitled The Man with the Angora Sweater. The pair had penned the Problem Child lms but were disgruntled by the studios handling of their material so sought to revive their Ed Wood project, turning to buddy Michael Lehmann, director of the excellent Di Noviproduced black comedy Heathers (1989). Lehmann was interested in directing and passed the treatment to Di Novi who showed it to Tim Burton for his opinion. Burton enthused so much about the project that a deal was struck Lehmann would step down (receiving credit as executive producer) if Burton made the lm as his next project without further development delays.The only snags were that the script itself hadnt actually been written and Burton was in pre-production on Mary Reilly for Columbia. Eventually he managed to get released from that project. Initially Columbia agreed to put up the money for the new lm, but the studio bigwigs were not entirely sure about the subject matter and eventually pulled out once they heard that Burton insisted that it be shot in black and white. Instead Touchstone fronted the budget as they had on their other Burton/Di Novi ventures, The Nightmare Before Christmas and Cabin Boy. 83

LE BLANC/ODELL

Ed Wood (1994)
Crew: Director:Tim Burton, Producers:Tim Burton, Denise Di Novi, Executive Producer: Michael Lehmann, Screenplay: Scott Alexander, Larry Karaszewski, Director of Photography: Stefan Czapsky, Music: Howard Shore, 121 mins Cast: Johnny Depp (Ed Wood), Martin Landau (Bela Lugosi), Sarah Jessica Parker (Dolores Fuller), Bill Murray (Bunny Breckinridge), Lisa Marie (Vampira), Patricia Arquette (Kathy), Jeffrey Jones (Criswell),Vincent DOnofrio (Orson Welles) Can your hearts stand the shocking facts of the true story of Edward D.Wood Jr.? Plot: Writer/director Ed Wood is proud of his play The Casual Company, a war fable with fantasy sequences and lyrical dialogue, and the good work shown by his dedicated actors. Not everyone sees it that way though the reviews are awful. Most people would be disheartened by rejection but not Ed. He has big plans for working in the movies. Spotting an article on the proposed lming of I Changed My Sex, Wood meets producer George Weiss and pitches his desire to write and direct the picture.Weiss is an exploitation producer who lms crap to sell to undiscerning drive-ins and ea pits. Ed reveals that he is qualied to take on the task because he is a transvestite and can understand the motivation for the central character, but Weiss turns him down. As luck would have it, Ed bumps into veteran horror actor Bela Lugosi at a local funeral parlour. Bela hasnt had a job in years and has been shirked by the industry because of his morphine habit, but Ed sees potential in him whilst realising 84

T I M B U RT O N

that he could be the pull needed to get the job. It works and Ed gets together an enthusiastic team to lm the newly retitled (unknown to Weiss) Glen or Glenda, casting himself in the lead role as a man obsessed with womens clothing. If only hed told his girlfriend Dolores the truth behind his personal interest shes not happy to discover why her angora sweaters keep disappearing. Glen or Glenda is a roaring success.To Wood. Everyone else thinks it stinks but, ushed with enthusiasm, he starts on his next project: Bride of the Atom. Ed tries organising fundraising parties with his buddies, including wrestling sensation Tor Johnson and hopefully soon-to-be woman Bunny Breckinridge. All seems doomed until he nds Loretta King, who agrees to fund the picture in return for a lead status, ousting Dolores from a part written specically for her. But Loretta hasnt any money after all and Ed completes Bride of the Atom thanks to a grant given by the owner of the McCoy Meat Packing facility. But this joy is short lived Dolores leaves Ed and Lugosi ends up in rehabilitation, prompting interest from the press for the rst time in nearly a decade. Following his release, Ed begins shooting a new lm with the ageing star, but Bela nally passes away and is laid to rest. The death of your lead is normally a setback, but for Ed the opportunity to immortalise the memory of his friend is too strong.With the help of Kathy, his new beau who he met while Bela was in the clinic, Bunny,Tor, Criswell the psychic, the newly out-of-a-job Vampira and the rest of the gang, they set about creating what will surely be Eds masterpiece, his magnum opus: Grave Robbers from Outer Space.The only thing they need to do before photography can begin is to nd an identical body double for Bela and get baptised... Theres something beautiful about somebody who does what they love to do, no matter how misguided, 85

LE BLANC/ODELL

and remains upbeat and optimistic against all odds. Tim Burton, Cinefantastique April 1994 Comment: Ed Wood takes the biopic formula and subverts it by concentrating on someone who was spectacularly unsuccessful. It is so easy to see how this material could have become a sneering mocking comedy, laughing at someone elses ineptitude, but fortunately it doesnt. Yes, the lm ignores some of the more unpleasant aspects of his tale (the lm wisely covers a brief period in his life from the inception of his rst major lm to his masterpiece) but internally it remains coherent Ed was a dreamer and the lm reects this. All biopics take liberties with the source material and this is no exception. Characters have necessarily been trimmed, amalgamated and altered in the name of narrative purity but there is a sense in which the spirit seems right.The writers take their biggest liberty when Ed meets his idol, Orson Welles. Factually inaccurate, the scene represents the ethos of the lm: despite many setbacks Ed is encouraged to stick to his guns and realise his unique vision. The irony of one of Americas most critically lauded directors (Citizen Kane still, for want of bothering to be controversial, appears at the top of most critics lists) empathising with one of its most despised is not lost. Hollywood failed to understand Welles as much as they failed to understand Wood, for entirely different reasons. Welles points out that Visions are worth ghting for.Why spend your life living someone elses dreams? and Eddie, suitably invigorated, goes to the premire of Plan 9 from Outer Space. That the lm should end on a triumphal note continues in the tradition of the biopic.Thus Ed Wood ends with Eds most gloriously renowned achievement. Ed Wood is an actors piece with roles offering a wonderful opportunity for expression. As Ed, Johnny Depps conviction 86

T I M B U RT O N

and unstoppable enthusiasm burst upon every frame. He is so impassioned that he mouths every line of his dialogue, relishing every poetic nuance, emphasising meaning with expressive eyebrows and nods. Then there is the Oscarwinning performance from Martin Landau (Rick Bakers make-up is so good you dont even realise it is make-up) desperately brandishing a gun, enthusiastically relishing the chance to act or exploding with rage any time someone mentions Boris Karloff Karloff? Sidekick? Fuck you! Similarly, the supporting roles are perfectly eshed out Dolores lack of understanding of Eds needs coupled with his inability to deal with hers. Then theres Vampira, contemptuously accepting her part as though its beneath her, played by Lisa Marie in a wince-inducing corset. Jeffrey Jones is crankily aristocratic as posh-voiced TV psychic Criswell. Patricia Arquette is touching as Kathy, while Vincent DOnofrios Orson Welles is uncanny in likeness and mannerism. But best of all is a show-stopping turn from Bill Murray as Bunny Breckinridge who manages to be decadently camp without over-mincing the part, always surreptitiously eyeing up any passing hunk and splashing around in dismay at his undignied baptism. Its the incidentals and details that make Ed Wood so eminently watchable and quotable. Theres the colour-blind cameraman who, when asked which dress will look best declares, the dark grey one.Then theres the casting of Tom the chiropractor as Belas stand-in because they have similar looking ears... but nothing else alike.Tor and his family.The premiere disaster of Bride of the Atom. Stealing the octopus. Pull de strings! Learning the hypnotic hand trick. Get me transvestites, I need transvestites! The poor TV comedy sketch show that humiliates Bela. Criswell predicts.The hilarious baptism. I haf no home. Ignoring the wobbly sets. Filming the ying saucers on re.Wheres my pink sweater? 87

LE BLANC/ODELL

The party in McCoys meat plant.Theres so much crammed into the running time, and all of it based only on the sworn testaments... Key to the lms humanising angle is the relationship between director Wood and his childhood idol, horror star Bela Lugosi. Burton had, of course, worked with his childhood idol, horror star Vincent Price, and his chosen genre of science ction/fantasy/horror was similar to the elds Wood liked to work in. Both Ed and Tim had worshipped the respective horror stars when they were young boys.Then they had met the actors and nally gotten to work with them at the end of their lives. This gave our movie an emotional foundation which we felt Tim would empathise. Scott Alexander and Larry Karaszewski, Ed Wood, Faber and Faber. Critically Ed Wood is Burtons most well-received lm and with good reason. It won Oscars for Martin Landau (who received many more accolades, including a Golden Globe) and Rick Bakers make-up team who did such a marvellous job bringing Lugosi back to life. The London Film Critics Circle gave a Best Actor award to Johnny Depp and elsewhere Stefan Czapskys cinematography and Howard Shores elegant score were similarly rewarded. Yet despite this, the lm did relatively poor business at the US box ofce, barely scraping together $5 million, including a post-Oscar re-release and enthusiastic reviews. In contrast Batman Returns earned nearly 10 times this amount in its rst three days of release! Perhaps the distribution was to blame or perhaps it was because the public could not be convinced to go and see a black and white lm about an artistic failure who befriends an old drug addict. If so, it is entirely their loss. 88

T I M B U RT O N

Style and Score: To date this is Burtons only feature lm not to have a Danny Elfman score, a situation he commented on:Were taking a little vacation from each other (Burton on Burton). So Ed Wood was left in the capable hands of Howard Shore. Shores prolic output has always been consistently good, but he is possibly best known for his collaborations with David Cronenberg and, of course, the Lord of the Rings trilogy. In Ed Wood the score is grand, as bets Eds ideas, indeed many of the scores themes are derived from Eds lms. This adds immeasurably to the lms earnestness although it is never afraid to trail an accentuating riff whenever something notably comic happens. Most moving is the adoption of variations from Tchaikovskys Swan Lake during the scenes where Ed nds Bela collapsed in a state of drugaddled illness. In many ways, whilst Danny Elfmans music is ideally suited to Burtons other work, its adoption here could easily have overwhelmed the pathos of the picture and reduced the overall impact. One of the key decisions in making Ed Wood was to lm in black and white. Despite being the norm for debut and low-budget indie lms, it is generally frowned upon as leading to box-ofce disaster. Black and white has a nostalgic feel and a contradictory visual reaction between realism (we are used to seeing old documentaries in black and white) and dreamlike (in ction it is detached from the Hollywood norm and brings attention to itself). Ed Woods use of chiaroscuro lighting to increase dramatic tension, especially in the low-angle shots that recall 1950s lm noir, emphasises the psychological states of the characters.When Ed returns in the middle of the night to the pleading Bela following a collapse, the extremity of the angles increases on each visit until nally, when Bela has died, the camera tilts slowly from side to side like a drunk.The emotional horror of the situation is expressed in camera movement and shadow. It would 89

LE BLANC/ODELL

be difcult to convey the same kind of psychology in colour. The titles are perhaps most indicative of Wood as a lmmaker, employing all the elements of his lms in one (apparently) single shot following the Plan 9 style introduction from Criswell in his cofn. Swooping down over graveyards, past underwater octopi and encompassing ying saucers and lightning strikes, the spooky pastiche music and sense of wholesome cheesiness prevail. It ends up on the famous Hollywood sign before craning down to Eds rst theatre production. Cant See the Wood: Edward D.Wood Jr. has gone down in the annals of lm history as the worst director of all time, an honour brought to wider attention in The Golden Turkey Awards written by the Medved brothers. The Medveds combination of condescension and ridicule now seems decidedly mean spirited but ultimately their scornful attitude (Wood was awarded Worst Director and Plan 9 from Outer Space worst lm) has backred because the lms of Ed Wood are now readily available on DVD and have been seen by more people now than during his lifetime. Interest in Wood started in the 1980s, and continues to the present day, as eager fans tried to unearth missing lms, fragments of projects and the prodigious amount of pulp ction he wrote. On top of the lms already known to fans, Night of the Ghouls (1959) was unearthed, paid for (it had remained with the developers when funds were not available to have the print nished) and released. Some of his novels (including Killer in Drag and Death of a Transvestite) were also reprinted. Author Rudolph Grey interviewed the surviving members of Woods entourage to produce a collage of recollections about the man, his life and his lms.The book Nightmare of Ecstasy:The Life and Art of Edward D.Wood provided the background material for Scott Alexander and Larry Karaszewski to develop 90

T I M B U RT O N

their script.There was also an excellent television documentary, Look Back in Angora, which incorporated stock footage along with interviews.Wood had nally made it big time. Ed Woods life was as fascinating as his lms. Born in Poughkeepsie on October 10, 1924, he served in the US Marines during World War II and fought hard in the invasion of Tarawa. During one of Americas most bloody battles he was wearing womens underwear underneath his combats. His valour on the battleeld (only 10 per cent of those going in returned) resulted in a decoration and the loss of his front teeth, smashed out with a rie butt.Wood was a heterosexual transvestite with a particular predilection for angora, but more importantly he was a man who strived to realise his dream of becoming a Hollywood director. A prolic writer, Wood turned his hand to short stories, novels, screenplays and theatre work. He moved from directing unsuccessful plays to directing unsuccessful lms when given the chance to make a cheap exploitation ick about the Christine Jorgensen sex change case.Wood took the opportunity to put his indelible stamp on the project (he even took the title role under a pseudonym, one of the very few times he did use a false name, even when working in the porno industry) turning the lm into a pot-pourri of disingenuous ideas, surreal dream sequences and stock footage. It also marked the start of his relationship with Bela Lugosi. He continued making pictures and writing them, from crime thrillers like Jailbait to his magnum opus Grave Robbers from Outer Space (aka Plan 9 from Outer Space). Following this, his career took a downslide, including work on a bizarre horror strip-ick Orgy of the Dead. By the 1970s he had turned to making porno movies and educational sex lms sold as part-works. He wrote all the time and drank heavily. On December 10, 1978, he passed away. He never knew of the glorious renaissance of his work. 91

LE BLANC/ODELL

When initially watching Ed Woods lms the criticisms about his lm-making (day and night intercuts, ropey sets, dubious acting etc.) are easy to scoff at, but a number of things strike you once youve become immersed in his world. The stories, no matter how preposterous, are always engaging.The dialogue (often quoted as appalling) occasionally touches brilliance, but ultimately works better written down. Despite any shortcomings they are innitely more interesting and watchable than the slew of relentlessly average low-budget lms made in the same period. Ed Woods lms engage even at their worst and are undeniably stamped with the mark of their author. He was an American auteur who at least realised part of his dreams.

92

9. Do Not Run,We Are Your Friends

Mars Attacks! (1996)


Crew: Director:Tim Burton, Producers:Tim Burton, Larry Franco, Screenplay: Jonathan Gems, Director of Photography: Peter Suschitzky, Music: Danny Elfman (with the inestimable aid of Slim Whitman and Tom Jones), 101 mins Cast: Jack Nicholson (President Dale/Art Land), Glenn Close (Marsha Dale), Annette Bening (Barbara Land), Pierce Brosnan (Professor Donald Kessler), Danny DeVito (Rude Gambler), Martin Short (Jerry Ross), Sarah Jessica Parker (Nathalie Lake), Natalie Portman (Taffy Dale), Jim Brown (Byron Williams), Lukas Haas (Richie), Michael J Fox (Jason Stone), Lisa Marie (Martian Girl), Rod Steiger (General Decker), Tom Jones (Himself), Sylvia Sidney (Grandma Norris), Paul Wineld (General Casey), Pam Grier (Louise Williams), Poppy (Poppy) Aakk. Aaaakk ak-ak-akk, aakk akk-aak. Plot: It is a moving and deeply signicant day in the history of humankind because we are not alone there is life on Mars. Thousands of super-technological spaceships hover around our fair planet.Top scientist Professor Donald Kessler 93

LE BLANC/ODELL

reects an optimistic view that this is a race so advanced, so intelligent, so enlightened that they must be peaceful, wanting to extend the hand, paw or tentacle of extraterrestrial friendship. The instruments to perform rudimentary translation are ready and the location for the momentous rst meeting between man and Martian is set Pahrump in the Nevada desert. The President of the United States sends the sympathetic General Casey to welcome the Martian emissary and hordes of reporters, the military and ordinary people arrive to get a glimpse of the alien entourage. The majestic metallic ship lands and unfurls a silver ramp like a giant tongue, down which the resplendent ambassador descends, attended by his guards.We come in peace, he declares to the jubilant throng. A dove is sent heavenward and ies majestically into the beam of a Martian ray gun that decimates its feathery body and unceremoniously dumps its smouldering corpse in front of a horried crowd. Then the little green fellows unleash molten Martian mayhem, massacring the powerless gathering, reducing human bodies to smoking green skeletons. Sorry. Sorry. Big mistake. Cultural misunderstanding, if you will. The aliens arrange to address Congress as partial atonement. This is to be a strictly no bird affair, mind, you cant be sure what will affect alien sensibilities. But the world watches live as the venerable group are turned into human kebabs. Call it a Congress searing. The President manfully tries to put a brave face on it: two out of three branches of the government are working and that aint bad. It seems as though nothing can stop the nefarious designs these intergalactic terrorists have for our world. Nothing is taboo, nothing too devious. The good Professor, as well as irty reporter Nathalie and Poppy the dog, are subjected to deranged medical experiments. The Martians inltrate the White House. They mercilessly crush boy scouts, vandalise 94

T I M B U RT O N

shopfronts and decimate sites of special heritage. The Eiffel Tower? Gone. Big Ben? Will chime no more.Taj Mahal? You get the picture. Perhaps there is one nal drastic course of action left: all-out nuclear confrontation. The President nally decides to obliterate the invading horde, surely a sorry end to a noble race. Nope, the bombs are absolutely useless. The invasion continues with renewed vigour. Goodbye Mr President. So, no hope for the world.The end is nigh. Hey, hang on, just because the top brass havent sorted out a solution it doesnt mean that no one else can.There are a lot of plucky people out there who love the world too. Theres Donut World worker Richie and his senile grandma, estranged couple Byron and Louise Williams (their kids have managed to whoop Martian butt and save the White House) and top singing sensation Tom Jones.With heroes like these surely the future of the world is in safe hands? Comment: Mars Attacks! may differ on the surface from the rest of Burtons canon but it retains elements that are clearly his.The basic story concerns the outsiders as the most important gures.The President is insignicant compared with the disenfranchised ordinary folk the hard-working mother, her ex-boxer husband with his strict moral code, a wheelchairbound OAP (who talks lovingly to her stuffed cat called Muffy), the Presidents daughter who actually cares for her countrys history and a gangly store worker who dreams of a non-militaristic US.Also, the appreciation of horror lms that runs throughout Edward Scissorhands (quality) and Ed Wood (bargain basement) sees its fullest expression here, as does Burtons lifelong love of Godzilla lms. Indeed, Mars Attacks! features a clip of the big G in one of his more recent excursions (Godzilla Vs. Biollante) to emphasise the connection. Like the Japanese lms, Mars Attacks! features the audience-pleasing 95

LE BLANC/ODELL

thrills of seeing major cities wiped out for no reason other than to entertain. Mars Attacks! was often compared with Independence Day (1996) which follows the President and a large entourage of bit players from all walks of life coping with a violent alien invasion. What that lm also contains is scene after scene of jingoistic rhetoric, dialogue that is only witty when delivered for macho posturing purposes and contains the most shameful patriotic rallying speech since Henry V. At least Mars Attacks! has the decency to acknowledge its forbears whilst injecting copious and much welcomed humour, rather than acting as bland propaganda masquerading as entertainment. Another key element to the lm lies in its adoption of the ensemble disaster movie structure so popular in the 1970s. The premise is simple: take a very large cast, add a series of ever-escalating disasters, sit back and watch the resulting mayhem. In such lms as The Poseidon Adventure (1972) or The Towering Inferno (1974) much of the entertainment was derived from the juxtaposition of big stars and big peril, not knowing who would make it to the end. Of course, in these lms a few of the headliners survive and this is where Mars Attacks! pays huge comedy dividends it is the little guys who pull through, not the big cheeses.The fun of not being indestructible is clear. After all, what actor doesnt relish a good death scene? Jack Nicholson even gets two deaths, giving balanced comedy performances that are easily his best since Ken Russells Tommy (1975).As the President his role is nely tuned, recalling Peter Sellers part(s) in Kubricks Dr Strangelove (1964) especially in the war room sequences. Another loud person doomed to a nasty death is the Rude Gambler played by ex-Penguin Danny DeVito. All these characters have to vie for screen time so naturally are less than three-dimensional and work better for it Nicholsons crass businessman keen for the Martian dollar, Michael J 96

T I M B U RT O N

Foxs long-suffering proper reporter or Martin Shorts sleazy publicist with an unhealthy libido.Amidst all this we nd the most inspired cameo from Tom Jones, who not only gets to sing Its Not Unusual twice, but does so to adoring animals. This, too, is in the tradition of the lower end of the sci/horror market where any contemporary teen idol would be hurriedly lmed to bolster sales.The fact that he pulls this off is a miracle in itself. The heroes offer another example of the disenfranchised family. Both Richie and Taffy have their full complement of parents and, despite being totally opposite ends of the social divide, share a common bond. Richies family reject him because he isnt a mindless patriot while, despite Taffys upbringing, her feelings and concerns are ignored by her family. The dysfunctional families survive the ordeal, rather than end up victims. Sure, the Williams house is all but demolished by the lms close but the family are back together again. Louise has proven to be a determined, erce and good mother. The two kids have fought valiantly for their country. Big Byron has risen from the doldrums and single-handedly beaten a battalion of aliens in hand-to-hand combat. The main focus of audience interest lies with the Martians themselves, mischievous imps whose sole purpose is to have fun. These are not the faceless alien masses of Earth vs. The Flying Saucers (1956) or War of the Worlds (1953) but animated characters whose mannerisms cause the viewer to smile rather than grimace. This can be gleaned from the opening, where the Warner Bros. logo is inltrated by a Martian ying saucer followed by a stampede of barbecuing cattle.When we rst set eyes on a Martian it is via a broadcast interrupting television signals. This is lmed in exactly the same manner as the Criswell Predicts opening of Ed Woods Plan 9 from Outer Space.The little rascals read Playboy, perhaps in a nod to 97

LE BLANC/ODELL

Mars Needs Women (1966), and later mock the world by inhaling a nuclear explosion as though it is helium. This is wish fullment at its fullest the ultimate kickback against authority and conformity. Yes, they are an evil disruptive inuence that threatens our very survival but boy, do they know how to party. Like a cat playing with its food they are inventive in their curiosity and cruelty. Experiments on board their ship see them dissecting cows, clowns and even swapping the head of dippy fashion reporter Nathalie with her dog, although even in canine form she manages to continue her irtatious relationship with Professor Kessler. The humans have no qualms about dissecting Martians but at least wait until they are dead. As this is a major motion picture (Dr Strangelove bravely attempted the less commercial route by destroying the Earth) these anarchists must be defeated, and the aliens demise is as gory and ridiculous as any: the music of Slim Whitman provides the ultimate weapon of mass destruction. The fact that the Martians explode to Whitman is hardly surprising because it is such a hideous cacophony, but it is the preferred music of someone disenfranchised by society, in this case the elderly.Those who scoff at Whitman in place of reactionary C&W are just as conservative as those who hate Marilyn Manson its just a matter of perspective. Style and Score: The lm employs the stunning and vividly colourful cinematography of Peter Suschitzky who is best known for his expressive low-key work on David Cronenbergs lms, so in some ways he would seem to be an odd choice. However Suschitzkys early work shows foundations of a bright colour palette, specically on the cult musical The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975) and Ken Russells hugely underrated biopic Lisztomania (1975). Despite the remit to make a lm steeped in B-Movie 98

T I M B U RT O N

aesthetics, the cost and detail of the effects work was suitably big budget. While the spaceships look like a giant hubcap (another reference to Plan 9 from Outer Space) and have structural similarities to the more upmarket Forbidden Planet (1956) or The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951, the pacist answer to Mars Attacks!) they are nonetheless state-of-the-art, despite their retro look. This can also be seen in the title sequence where the alien spaceships take off from Mars and begin their voyage towards Earth. The planet, the ships and the formations are beautifully 1950s, both in use of extreme Technicolor contrasts (Mars is as red as red can be) and in ship design and movement.They even have an almost imperceptible wobble. But count the number, look at the overlaid formations, marvel at the planetary detail (built to huge scale) and the expense is clear. Danny Elfman provides a pounding pulsating score with lots of whoops and Theramin-style sirens in the very mould of those classic inspirational movies. Making Of: Key to the lms success lay in the way that the Martians were portrayed. Initially the intention was to use stop-frame animation blended with live action. Stop-motion is one of the most painstaking animation methods to realise properly, but the results are worth it. This is the technique used in Nightmare Before Christmas but here the models were to be integrated into live action, as pioneered by such effects geniuses as Willis OBrien (King Kong, Mighty Joe Young) and Ray Harryhausen (Seventh Voyage of Sinbad). In particular, Harryhausens work on Jason and the Argonauts (1963), which has a renowned skeleton ght, was to dene the way that the Martians would move organic yet otherworldly. Indeed much of the architectural destruction on show harks back to Harryhausens exemplary stop-frame work on Earth vs The Flying Saucers, even down to the toppling of the Washington Monument. Manchester-based Mackinnon & Saunders were 99

LE BLANC/ODELL

hired to deal with the intricate stop-motion work, as well as supply life-sized Martians for set dressing and the autopsy scenes. It was agreed that the Martians should not be seen as men in rubber costumes. Models were made and each Martian head was cast with a number of different expressions, hand sculpted to show the various reactions required. All the components were in place when the bombshell struck. At the last minute Burton decided that stop-motion, while creating an authentic period feel, was too risky and time-consuming. A problem with mega-buck pictures is that they have cash to throw at a project but not time. Naturally Mackinnon & Saunders were more than a touch disappointed but their work is still evident in the nal lm. Accurate measurements and details from the models were sent over to the new effects company on board: George Lucas Industrial Light and Magic (ILM). ILM took the model data and used this, and the handpainted colour work to render the intergalactic imps as CGI models. Thus the production had gone from traditional methods to contemporary, accentuating the ethos of having complete aesthetic control to convey the impression of schlock. It could so easily have gone wrong and denied the lm any charm but fortunately ILM stuck to the remit and the Martians bounce around with manic glee and betray occasional jerkiness of movement. Background: There have been many bizarre sources for adaptations in the history of Hollywood.Weve had cartoon spin-offs (Popeye), comic adaptations (Superman, Batman), computer games (Super Mario Brothers) and even 19th Century literature (Sense and Sensibility). Surely though Mars Attacks! beats the lot because it is based on a series of bubblegum cards. Topps are an American institution, bringing the concept of trading cards to the nations youth with football 100

T I M B U RT O N

and baseball statistics. In 1962 they launched a new series: Mars Attacks! a set of 55 lurid colour cards depicting alien atrocities.The level of gore was extreme at the time but not without precedent a previous series of cards about the American Civil War was similarly brutal, but justied as history. Mars Attacks! revelled in schlock versions of HG Wells War of the Worlds with sensationalist descriptions as people were crushed and maimed. Despite the slaughter of so many humans, the most notorious card remained Number 36: Destroying A Dog where a wailing child pleads to no avail as a Martian warrior blows his pet pooch away. The cards were withdrawn and have since become collectors items. Burton remembered these vaguely from his youth and, with Jonathan Gems, set about bringing them to the big screen. They had met previously when Batman was in production and began working on another screen version of The Fall of the House of Usher by Edgar Allan Poe, a favourite of the early surrealist directors, Eastern European animators and Roger Corman. Sadly that project fell through but the colour, opulence and style of Cormans lm carried forward into Mars Attacks!. Trivia: Mars Attacks! is the rst Burton feature lm that doesnt incorporate the main characters name in the title. The Aftermath: Mars Attacks! was not a success. Unfortunately many people didnt get the joke and, despite saturation advertising campaigns and some of the coolest tie-in merchandising ever, the result was a nancial op.

101

10.Tackling the Classics Head On


Sleepy Hollow was a long time coming after Mars Attacks! and for good reason it was originally not going to be Tim Burtons follow-up to the gleeful black comedy. Instead Burton spent about a year working on Superman Lives!. Superman was seen as DCs rival character to Batman and had enjoyed a number of incarnations both on lm and television. Superman (1978) was the blockbuster of its year while the TV series The New Adventures of Superman continued to be popular well into the 1990s. The recent success of TVs Smallville, stories based around Supermans teen years, continues the fascination with the character. With the guy who made Batman such a smash, what could go wrong? Superman Lives! had spent a long time not getting onto the screen.Various scriptwriters were involved with the project, notably Clerks writer/director Kevin Smith whose screenplay was rst rejected as being too expensive to make (ironic since Smith, a lifelong comic fanatic, has made a number of popular lms for virtually peanuts) and then by Burton as being unsuitable. Eventually Warner Bros. pulled the plug on the project, getting concerned that the necessarily monumental budget would be difcult to recoup at the box ofce. Fortunately for Burton he had a pay or play deal, which meant that he got his fee regardless of whether the lm actually went into production. However, with this incarnation of Superman Lives! effectively dead, Burton turned to Sleepy 102

T I M B U RT O N

Hollow.The screenplay was penned by Andrew Kevin Walker who had written David Finchers gloomathon serial-killer lm Se7en (1995). Walker was clearly an acionado for the same kind of horror lms that Burton loved. Se7en was based, for all its noir overtones and total absence of kitsch tongue-in-cheek Grand Guignol, on the Vincent Price Dr Phibes lms (The Abominable Dr Phibes [1971] and Dr Phibes Rises Again [1972]) and the hysterical black comedy Theater of Blood (1972). For Sleepy Hollow though, the inuence would come from another British horror institution: Hammer lms.

Sleepy Hollow (1999)


Crew: Director:Tim Burton, Producers: Scott Rudin,Adam Schroeder, Co-Producer: Kevin Yagher, Executive Producers: Francis Ford Coppola, Larry Franco, Story: Andrew Kevin Walker, Kevin Yagher, Screenplay: Andrew Kevin Walker, Director of Photography: Emmanuel Lubezki, Music: Danny Elfman, 100 mins Cast: Johnny Depp (Ichabod Crane), Christina Ricci (Katrina Van Tassel), Christopher Lee (Burgomaster), Miranda Richardson (Lady Van Tassel), Michael Gambon (Baltus Van Tassel), Lisa Marie (Ichabods Mother), Richard Grifths (Magistrate Philipse), Casper Van Dien (Brom Van Brunt), Christopher Walken (Hessian Horseman), Jeffrey Jones (Reverend Steenwyck), Michael Gough (Notary James Hardenbrook) Eliminate the impossible and whatever remains, no matter how improbable, must be the truth. Arthur Conan Doyle 103

LE BLANC/ODELL

Plot: Twenty years ago a Hessian mercenary plied his bloody trade in the vicinity of Sleepy Hollow.When nally killed he was dumped in an unmarked grave, his face frozen in a grimace, his yellow led teeth mockingly deant. His legacy remains, instilled deep in the psyche of the local community as the Headless Horseman, a relentless decapitator on his jet black steed. Rural superstition? Youd think so. But three executions in the last week, all bodies found dead without head, warrants some scrutiny.This is where stern-faced rationalist Ichabod Crane comes in. Crane may well be a city boy unused to the ways of the isolated community, but he has a remit to get to the bottom of the brutal murders. Arriving at Sleepy Hollow Crane sets straight to work. Residing in the home of the afuent Van Tassels he becomes drawn to their daughter Katrina. Local man Masbath becomes another victim (his son is later adopted by Ichabod as an assistant) and Cranes rigid belief in the human origin of the murders is soon shattered when he witnesses the gruesome beheading of a very frightened Magistrate Philipse. It seems as though nothing can stop the tide of atrocities affecting the little village. Matters are not helped by the community scallywags playing ghoulish jokes on Ichabod. One such individual is Brom but he has special reason to dislike the outsider he too has been courting the fair Katrina. Still, any real concerns about rivalry are swiftly curtailed, for Brom becomes another ex-villager, torn asunder in front of Ichabods very eyes after the horseman has performed a particularly nasty hat-trick of assassinations. Despite Ichabods initial scepticism regarding events he is now utterly convinced that the spectre is real, deadly and has a purpose.This last conclusion came with Broms death the horseman did not care for the headstrong farmers boy until provoked into battle. It could mean only one thing the horseman is controlled by someone who has something very 104

T I M B U RT O N

dear to him... his head. Ichabod, young Masbath and Katrina, assisted by a prophetic woodland witch, nd the Tree of Pain at the end of the Indian Trail, the nal resting place of the Hessian rider. They nd the missing heads in its roots. They witness the ferocious cranially-decient equestrian ride forth from the bowels of the Earth, his mighty steed scattering forest debris in its wake, doggedly focused on the next terrible assignment. Accepting the supernatural should not have been difcult for Ichabod, as his mother was a witch, tortured to death to save her soul. Katrinas deceased mother was also one, but Katrina embraced her mothers esoteric ways and engages in arcane practices a trait that Ichabod is reticent about condoning, especially when he discovers glyphs etched in purple chalk under his bed. What has this to do with Van Garretts Last Will and Testament? Why is Lady Van Tassel engaging in amorous nocturnal encounters? It all becomes too much for Ichabod. Baltus Van Tassel meets a horrible end at a public meeting, Katrina is incensed with Ichabods blinkered reliance on logic, and even Lady Van Tassel appears to have come a cropper whilst picking arrowroot her nibblesome neck neatly knocked in two by the horsemans searing blade.Time to leave. But wait! Are things really as they seem? Could Katrina be a good witch and not a bad one? And what if the deceased are not as dead as they seem? Comment: Burtons assertion of Sleepy Hollow is that It felt good... to feel like youre making a Hammer horror lm. This gives key indications to the lms aesthetic direction and provides understanding as to why, suddenly, he decided to make a period horror lm. Although it has British horror sensibilities, it is based rmly in American literature, the emphasis being to evoke the nostalgia of the sort of lms Burton enjoyed as a child, not necessarily to recreate them. 105

LE BLANC/ODELL

Hammer lms have had a bit of a renaissance in recent years and are generally seen as quaint exploitation.The majority of the macabre and supernatural happenings were founded in a distant past or distant climes (normally somewhere in Eastern Europe) which enabled them to be viewed more sympathetically by the censors hands, allowing more sex and blood than was normally permitted for a British lm because it was in some way heritage gore. Hammer further managed to detach themselves from the more lurid end of the market by telling adult faerie tales. Sleepy Hollow is in just such a tradition. It gets away with quite savage violence because the threat is purely fantastical. Indeed it warranted no more than a 15 rating in the UK, a sign that for all its decapitations, witchcraft and autopsies, it is ultimately harmless. Despite the fantastical slant there are many horrors that go decidedly beyond the pale, but these are generally not depicted explicitly. Two scenes in particular stand out by their implication.When the midwifes family are slaughtered we see the horseman kill the husband directly before descending upon the screaming wife, while phantasmagorical projections emanating from their childs lamp spin around the room.The young boy cowers beneath the oorboards as the horseman decapitates his mother off screen. But her head drops onto the oor and cold eyes stare at him through the gaps in the wood.This is disturbing enough, but the horseman returns to complete his task, smashing the oorboards to capture the child.The only indication that he has taken the childs life is in the slight tightening of his headbag.The scene, for all its implied horror, is indicative of the kind of violence thats acceptable, and towards which kind of person. The other implied horror sequence occurs when Ichabod discovers the fth victim and performs his rst autopsy. The implication from the sword wound in the belly of the pregnant Winship is that the Horseman also 106

T I M B U RT O N

decapitated her foetus.There are exceptions to this however, with some scenes being designed to confront and shock. Of particular note is the iron maiden sequence, when Ichabod remembers the origin of the marks on his hands as he discovers the fate of his mother. The iron maiden slowly opens and out ops his mother, gushing oceans of blood. In post-production Burton decided that the scene seriously lacked gore and extensive CGI work was required to add the missing viscera. One scene that is straight out of Hammer is the climactic windmill ght.Although many have commented on its similarity to the closing of James Whales Frankenstein (as it is), the dynamics, lighting and pace are straight from the exhilarating climax of Terence Fishers Brides of Dracula (1960). Ichabods character is ostensibly based on a rationalising form of Hammers van Helsing, so memorably played by Peter Cushing, but there are signicant differences which also give Sleepy Hollow much of its humour. The main point is that, unlike van Helsing, Ichabod is wrong. His demeanour approaches Cushings portrayal and his tasks are similarly macabre, but no matter how much Ichabod tries to exhibit the sang froid of a scientist, he recoils at any atrocity with patent queasiness and unease. The lm plays a great deal with the rational and the fantastical, with Ichabods character dening the dichotomy. He denies the existence of the supernatural, but perhaps it is because he could never follow in mummys footsteps and squeeze the lifeblood out of bats or chop off ravens claws.Yet his concepts of deductive reasoning and the evolution of forensic science verged on heresy for the time. He is sent by the authorities to solve the crimes not so that he can prove his theories, but so he can fail. Finding the area (as in Irvings story) awash with superstition and deep-rooted belief in witchcraft, his open-minded attitude in the city becomes 107

LE BLANC/ODELL

blinkered.You are bewitched by reason I am beaten down by it. It is also a reection on his childhood trauma. Style and Score: Visually there are many similarities to The Nightmare Before Christmas. The lm opens with a pursuit through the cornelds ending with a murder in front of a pumpkin-headed scarecrow, that becomes daubed with the blood. These pumpkin jack-o-lanterns are in many of the external scenes, but the spirit of Jack Skellington extends further than that.The Tree of Pain is described by Ichabod as a bridge between two worlds rather like The Nightmare Before Christmas forest trees.Then there is the snow. Here the story begins and ends chronologically with snow the Hessian riders tale is set in winter and Ichabods return to New York is heralded by snow.This later shot (the last in the lm) indicates that Sleepy Hollows 20-year autumn is over and that winter (always a season for aesthetic joy) is here.The daytime colour palette is denitely autumnal, with muted colours, misty elds and bare, barren trees in the forest. Burton describes Depps performance as of a silent star quality and this extends to the rest of the cast.This is not to say it is stagy but rather expressionistic, where the looks and actions convey the meaning.The lm is set 200 years in the past so this approach gives the characterisation a quality that feels like the time. To emphasise this, the instruments used by Ichabod look as though they could have been contemporaneous but, as with other Burton lms, this is an otherwhen, a time outside of normal history. Ichabods instruments look closer to torture devices than scientic gadgets, but their detail makes them fascinating with a resemblance to the devices designed by the Mantle brothers in Cronenbergs Dead Ringers (1988) and the eyepieces recall the steam-punk costumes of Jeunet and Caros City of Lost Children (1995). 108

T I M B U RT O N

Making Of: In realising Sleepy Hollow Burton travelled to England. Partly this was due to the suitability of the countryside to reect an idealised upper state New York (and the weather, ideal for muted browns and overcast lighting...) and partly because many cast members were British thespians, some of them performing rep in the evenings after shooting had wrapped. The sight of respected British actors hanging up their severed heads after a long days decapitation to play Shakespeare was something that particularly amused Burton. The heads themselves were painstakingly realised by Kevin Yagher Productions and each was carefully moulded from the actors features with every piece of hair or stubble woven into the resulting cast by hand. For the scene where Magistrate Philipse is decapitated such that his head spins atop his neck before toppling to the oor, a fully armatured body was built to crumple after the blow. The carriage chase towards the climax took three weeks to lm. Like much of the movie, it was shot indoors on soundstages. Although this method creates some problems (not least of which are galloping horses in a closed environment) and can be more expensive, it gave Burton greater control over the lighting and colour matching. It also meant that the forest could be populated by dead trees, giving it a further eerie edge. Full soundstage shooting for external locations is nothing new, but its use in this context (tracking action suspense) has its roots in the Jacques Tourneur/Val Lewton classic Cat People (1942). Although the headless horseman is the raison dtre for the tale, Christopher Walken generally only played the character with head intact.This is not to say he got off lightly as his scenes were very physical and required him to wear excruciating contact lenses and dental ttings. Then there were the horses. Being a city lad, Walken was not too comfortable with the beasts. A pity because he had to spend 109

LE BLANC/ODELL

some time looking as though he was procient with them. That Johnny Depp was not at ease either didnt matter his character was meant to look uncomfortable. One of the solutions was to use a mechanical horse for some of the close-ups they found the one originally used by Elizabeth Taylor in National Velvet (1944), and it still worked! However, when it came to wielding axe and sword Ray Park took the swordsmans role. He also played Darth Maul in The Phantom Menace (1999) and Toad in X-Men (2000). How did they get him to look like Christopher Walken? By making him wear the same costume and hiding his face a similar technique to the Tom the Chiropractor/Bela Lugosi substitution in Plan 9 from Outer Space.The difference between that classic switch and this one is that here they didnt just hide the face (similar ears or not) but took it off completely by blue screening a hood and digitally painting in the background.The result? A genuine-looking headless horseman. Background: Washington Irvings The Legend of Sleepy Hollow is one of the stalwarts of 18th Century American literature and is still enjoyed to this day. The reason for this lies in its reader-friendly length and spooky campre-tale style that epitomises the traditional horror story. Irvings tale is a simple one... Ichabod Crane, a well-educated man, makes his living in a Dutch farming community by teaching the children. Paid by donations, he lives by simple means, wandering from home to home. Being educated in the ways of etiquette and possessing hands unsullied by hard labour, he is a big hit with the ladies and often the topic of gossip. He is a superstitious man, steeped heavily in the legends and lore of the areas witchcraft and black arts. But the community is situated near Sleepy Hollow, home of the headless horseman. One night, after Crane has tried to woo the hand of the rich and daring (she wears dresses where you can occasionally 110

T I M B U RT O N

glimpse her ankles hussy!) Katrina Van Tassel at a dance party, he has the unfortunate pleasure of confronting the Headless horseman... The Legend of Sleepy Hollow had been lmed before, most notably in an animated version by Disney. In Burtons lm some of the names of the characters and settings have remained, but the tale is more of a springboard from which a new story can be told. Irvings eponymous hero Ichabod Crane has undergone a signicant transformation in his cinematic interpretation. He is no longer a schoolteacher and certainly doesnt engage in minor farm chores. Most signicantly, the new Ichabod is no longer an expert on the occult but is a man of uncommon science and reason a precursor for deductive methods and forensic expertise. Trivia: Apparently one of the most difcult aspects of the shoot involved the difculty of nding a Cardinal (a red bird, not a member of the Catholic church) in Britain. One suggestion offered for this unusual problem was to use a pigeon, and paint it red! In the end they settled on the metaphor of the bird and its cage in the form of an optical trick given to Ichabod by his mother, representing the illusory nature of freedom. Rick Heinrichs won an Oscar for his superb art direction.

111

11. Monkey Business


The road to Tim Burtons Planet of the Apes was not an easy one and he was not the rst choice for the lm. Plans for a new Apes lm began in 1993 when Oliver Stone was mooted to helm the project either as director, producer or both. Matters escalated as a series of directors and scriptwriters joined and left the project. Thus audiences could have faced the prospect of Chris Columbus, James Cameron, Peter Hyams or even Phillip Noyce in the directors chair. All of these fell through until Fox were left with Frank Darabont or Tim Burton. Following the success of Sleepy Hollow Fox plumped for Burton, but even then the journey from script to screen was not easy.Already the basis of the lm had changed substantially over the preceding years and, whilst William Broyles screenplay The Visitor (the lms working title) was favourably received, it was deemed far too expensive to lm, necessitating a urry of additional rewrites to bring the budget down to a manageable $100 million.

Planet of the Apes (2001)


Crew: Director:Tim Burton, Producer: Richard D. Zanuck, Screenplay: William Broyles Jr., Lawrence Konner, Mark D. Rosenthal, from a novel by Pierre Boulle, Director of Photography: Philippe Rousselot, Music: Danny Elfman, Production Design: Rick Heinrichs, 120 mins 112

T I M B U RT O N

Cast: Mark Wahlberg (Capt. Leo Davidson), Estella Warren (Daena), Tim Roth (Thade), Helena Bonham Carter (Ari), Michael Clarke Duncan (Colonel Attar), Paul Giamatti (Limbo), David Warner (Sandar), Kris Kristofferson (Karubi), Lisa Marie (Nova), Rick Baker (Old Ape No. 2), Charlton Heston (Thades father) Plot: On the Oberon Space Station Leo Davidson conducts experiments to improve the co-ordination and intelligence of monkeys, aiming to facilitate safer deep-space travel. His colleagues generally treat the monkeys less like monkeys and more like, well, guinea pigs. Following a strange electromagnetic storm beaming long past television signals back from a distant galaxy, Davidsons nest subject, a chimpanzee, is sent on an exploratory mission in pod Alpha, human life being too important to risk. Davidsons chagrin at this inhumane attitude is reected in his decision to follow his fur-covered protg in pod Delta (Im gonna get my chimp never send in a monkey to do a mans job.) Big mistake. Davidsons rescue mission goes banana shaped and he is ung far into space, landing on alien soil... ...Well, actually, not so much landing on alien soil, more like crashing headlong into an alien lake. On dry land he encounters a tribe of humans being pursued by a marauding band of ape militia. Captured with the rest of the humans he is carted off to the apes city where his suspicions are conrmed this is a world where humans are subservient and intellectually bereft, and the various breeds of ape rule the planet. Not all apes are quite so species-ist though the Senators daughter Ari has been a devout human rights activist since she was a little girl and recognises Davidsons intelligence almost instantly. She is not alone. Her potential suitor, the megalomaniac monkey militiaman Thade, also singles out the extraterrestrial as worthy of attention but for 113

LE BLANC/ODELL

entirely different and not so wholesome reasons. It is imperative therefore that the plucky humans escape their treeclambering captors and try to make a new life outside the tyrannical rule of the apes. For Davidson an extra bonus would be to escape the planet altogether, preferably without one of the painful looking brandings that the apes seem so keen on dishing out. As chance would have it, once they have escaped the connes of their immediate captivity they spot a signal on Davidsons portable communication device, a signal that means the space station Oberon is online and presumably still searching for the errant Captain. The signal emanates from the Forbidden Area, a part of the planet that is off-bounds to humans and is the sacred site of the apes creation. There is nothing to lose as our intrepid band of humans and apes scurry their way to the evolutionary foundation of ape supremacy and their own uncertain destiny... Comment: In many respects Planet of the Apes seems to be a studio response to how Mars Attacks! should have been made subdued, with earnestness and virtually lacking in humour. It is the most anonymous of Burtons lms, virtually lacking any of the bizarre ourishes that have come to epitomise his nest work. Were it not for Danny Elfmans marvellously percussive score and some occasionally striking design work from Rick Heinrichs, audiences may well have felt that they were simply watching an above average summer blockbuster. Many of Burtons themes are present in Planet of the Apes, but they are not pushed to the fore. Ari is the intelligent daughter of the Senator (like Taffy in Mars Attacks!). She has opinions that she is not afraid to voice and has been active in human rights since childhood. When Leo explains the concept of the zoo to Ari, she is shocked and considers that 114

T I M B U RT O N

apes on earth choose not to talk, given the way you treat them. Planet of the Apes also adheres to the Burton love of the outsider with Captain Davidson who, despite being a clean cut, all-American hero, is the extraterrestrial in a world he doesnt understand and which doesnt understand him. The fact that he is essentially dull compared with any of Burtons other protagonists is exactly the point the twisted world sees not just a reversal of contemporary evolutionary hierarchy but also of the denition of the outsider. Additionally, the apes themselves are beyond our perception of a dominant species and, while this gives Burton the opportunity to ridicule human traits by having them parodied (notably in the instance where a card shark reveals that he has a card up his third sleeve causing his opponent to yell Cheater, recalling Tarzans cheeky monkey Cheetah), it is clear that the apes provide far more fascination than their human counterparts.They offer all the foibles we recognise in humanity but their traits are augmented due to their superior dexterity ape guitarists can simultaneously tap and strum,Ari can write with her feet, and they all have wide-ranging emotions and desires. Indeed, despite the humans prodigious speaking abilities (after a period of muteness early on, you cant shut them up) they are resolutely bland and vacant. By the time Davidson is prepared to leave for Earth, he has helped the humans rebel and created the template for a society where apes and humans can co-exist as equals, but he has only really forged a bond with Ari. It then comes as some surprise when Daena gives him a huge kiss, because at this point you are expecting any form of emotional interaction to come from Ari. Indeed one persistent rumour that had been mooted is of a more physical encounter between ape and man, a scene that comically almost happens in the book (if only he wasnt so unattractive!). For whatever reason (it is asserted that the scene is just a hangover from a previous screenplay) we dont 115

LE BLANC/ODELL

get to see any ape on human action. Strangely, despite the books emphasis on human experimentation and its parallels with animal experiments on Earth, Burtons lm only contains eeting references to this aspect of the story.This is a pity because it would have been a golden opportunity to resurrect the mad scientist/Vincent Price theme that pervades most of his other work. The nal showdown seems half-hearted, but perhaps this was intended. Weve seen the extent of the apes dominance and contempt for the human race but also their wellfounded fears of human intelligence. Thades dying father (played by Charlton Heston, star of the original 1967 Planet of the Apes, directed by Franklin J. Schaffner) realises, as all the apes do, that if the humans harness technology then any hopes of continued ape dominance are shattered. Their ingenuity goes hand in hand with their cruelty. The extent of the humans almost pathological need for destruction is illustrated when Ari, who helped them escape and risked her life for them, reveals the apes fear of water to Daena. Daenas response? Thats why we pray for rain, as she looks with utter hatred at her saviour. In the battle, only the rst wave of the ape army is sent to attack the humans, which is decimated by Oberon Stations last drops of fuel and brute strength. The apes capitulate because they do not know the technology that wiped out their troops and that this phenomenon cannot be repeated. It is far better for them to live together as equals and not provoke any further wrath. As they bury the bodies the union is conrmed: They will be mourned together, as it should be from now on. The original Planet of the Apes lm ends memorably, with the discovery of the Statue of Liberty half buried in the beach, and Burton takes the opportunity to play with this most poignant of 1960s images. When his party goes to the Forbidden Area and comes across the remains of Davidsons 116

T I M B U RT O N

space station, the way it is initially shot recalls the spikerimmed head of the Statue of Liberty (and also, curiously, Gaudis Sagrada Familia). Later, at the very close of the lm when Leo has returned to Earth he crashes through Americas National Mall, past the Washington Monument and nds himself at the foot of the Lincoln Memorial only now simian features stare down upon our despondent traveller.This is a similar return to home that faced the protagonist in Boulles original novel (albeit in Paris) although the desecration of a respected national monument into alien form comes straight from the Martian improvement of Mount Rushmore in Mars Attacks! Style and Score: Visually, of all Tim Burtons lms this somehow feels the least Burtonesque and perhaps the most disappointing aspect of Planet of the Apes is the cinematography. At individual moments (the battle scenes with the background veiled in dust, the Forbidden Areas warning efgies or the crimson tents of the apes camp) we are shown classic Burton iconography, but generally the colours are so muted and grainy that you wonder why they bothered.The backdrops are dull and the overall look rejects contrast in favour of a dank, leaden landscape of depression and misery. Burton is associated with dark or Gothic countenance but here there is a rejection of contrast or interest. Danny Elfman was under a good deal of pressure to write the score, as the lm was still being completed while he was composing! Its another great soundtrack, very rhythmic and tribal with a variety of percussion instruments dominating the proceedings. It is totally in tune with the lack of technology on the planet and blends perfectly with this aspect of the lms ethos that The smarter we get the more dangerous our world becomes the Burton concept of feeling a lm rather than analysing it. 117

LE BLANC/ODELL

Making Of: Much of Planet of the Apes relies on updated versions of traditional effects rather than creating everything in a CGI environment. Many of the stunts and riding work were performed by the actors themselves for greater realism, although obviously the more dangerous or specialised stunt work was body-doubled.The stars of the lm are clearly the apes, who blow the humans away in terms of screen personae. Make-up supremo Rick Baker was the man responsible for the remarkable ape masks and had only three months to create 500 apes of varying degrees of complexity. In addition to the exemplary make-up work, the actors movements were extensively choreographed. Terry Notary, ex-Cirque Du Soleil, helped the actors get in touch with their inner ape and mimic the movements of our ancestors in a way that makes the lm seem believably simian. This even included training the extras in the background to imitate monkey mannerisms.The results are no more apparent than during the nal battle when the rst wave of ape troops descend upon the primitives on all fours and galloping in an entirely convincing manner. One major problem facing the lm was the speed with which it was necessary to make it. It went into production in November 2000 with a rm release date of July 2001. As scriptwriter Mark Rosenthal commented, For this movie, everybody jumped off a cliff and on the way down we gured out what it should be. (SFX: Planet of the Apes Special 2001) Background: The original lm version of Planet of the Apes was one of Hollywoods more successful attempts to make a thought-provoking science ction lm that also had the action and adventure that audiences crave. Its a strange mix of space travel gone wrong, humour, evolution, a critique on race/class issues and it even nds time for a touch of 118

T I M B U RT O N

romance. Although a little heavy-handed it is a solid two hours of entertainment. It works even today, thanks to the astonishing make-up (John Chambers quite rightly won a special Oscar for his teams outstanding work) and, of course, the shock ending. Not only was the lm a critical success but a commercial one, spawning a plethora of (increasingly inferior) sequels (Beneath [1970], Escape [1971], Conquest [1972], Battle [1973]), television series, books, toys and comics. The original lm was based on a novel by Pierre Boulle (whose most famous work remains The Bridge on the River Kwai lmed by David Lean in 1957). The novel La Plante Des Singes, published in the UK as Monkey Planet, provided the loose basis of the lm. Although the lm lacks the discourse and irony of the novel, it is nonetheless one of the more interesting mainstream lms of the 1960s.The main points of departure from the book are that the lm is set entirely on Earth, as shown by the Statue of Liberty climax (the book sees a return to Earth where the Eiffel Tower is still intact but the apes are in control) and the technological capabilities of the apes are far more advanced in the book. The franchise provided healthy returns with a substantial amount of income generated from merchandise tie-ins of the sort that seem very familiar to post-Star Wars lm fans. Planet of the Apes was being completed right up to the day of release, to the extent that studio executives only saw the completed lm days before it was due to premiere.The rst time they showed me the poster and on the bottom it said: This lm has not yet been rated, Burton said. I said why not be accurate and say This lm has not yet been shot? (The Guardian, August 3, 2001). Eventually the lm opened as planned. The initial weekends grosses broke all nonholiday records (although the record was superseded but one week later) and exceeded its budget within a fortnight. For Burton this meant another palpable hit and a continuation of 119

LE BLANC/ODELL

his A-list status. Planet of the Apes is ne enough when viewed alongside the standard popcorn-munching fare that a summer blockbuster is expected to provide, but as a Tim Burton lm it is found wanting. Trivia: The only ape with a gun in the lm is Charlton Heston, former president of the National Rie Association. When the humans escape and Davidson demonstrates the power of his gun, Limbo realises his position as slave trader is untenable and tries to pacify the situation cant we all just get along?, a line thats virtually identical to the Presidents nal speech in Mars Attacks!, just before his unfortunate demise. During the shoot Burton became close to Helena Bonham Carter, and eventually his relationship with Lisa Marie ended. Burton and Bonham Carter now live in adjoining houses in London and their son Billy Ray was born in October 2003. Burton loves being a father but considered the birth experience very strange: Thats the weirdest thing Ive ever seen. Its like an alien movie. I started crying, it was so emotional. (Source: Times Magazine 16 July 2005).

120

12. Like Santa Claus and the Easter Bunny Combined


Screenwriter John August had read Daniel Wallaces Big Fish: A Novel of Mythic Proportions in proof form some months before publication and optioned it for the big screen. Several directors were interested in the project, one notable name being Steven Spielberg. However, he started work on Catch Me if You Can (2004) and when August learned that Tim Burton was interested in the script he knew hed found the ideal director for the lm.

Big Fish (2003)


Crew: Director: Tim Burton, Producers: Bruce Cohen, Richard D. Zanuck, Dan Jinks, Screenplay: John August, from the novel by Daniel Wallace, Director of Photography: Philippe Rousselot, Music: Danny Elfman 125 min Cast: Ewan McGregor/Albert Finney (Ed Bloom), Billy Crudup (William Bloom), Jessica Lange/Alison Lohman (Sandra Bloom), Helena Bonham Carter (Jenny/The Witch), Matthew McGrory (Karl the Giant), Steve Buscemi (Norther Winslow), Daniel Wallace (Econ Professor) Danny DeVito (Amos Calloway)

121

LE BLANC/ODELL

Most men, theyll tell you a story straight and true. It wont be complicated but it wont be interesting neither. Plot: William Bloom has a problem: his father Edward. Edward is a compulsive storyteller, never short of tall tale and always the centre of attention. Even at Williams own wedding Edward cannot resist the opportunity to spin a convoluted and far-fetched yarn about the birth of his son. For straight laced and po-faced William this is the nal straw. He doesnt speak directly to his father again for three years. However the seeming immortality of the fable spinning pater familias now seems in doubt. Edward is dying. For William this is the nal opportunity to connect with his father and try to understand the man he never really knew. Thwarting every attempt is his fathers dogged determination to stick with the ction rather than the facts. But are his outlandish tales as ludicrous as they rst appear or is there more to Edward Blooms life than that of a normal man? Edward always knew he was destined for bigger things.As a child his body grew out of all proportion in record time resulting in him being connected to bizarre machinery for three years. His hometown was never going to realise the heights of his ambition. Having saved the town from the misunderstood and misanthropic Karl the Giant, Edward and his sizable companion set out for a life in the wide world. Edwards bravura and general joie de vivre lies partly with a vision that he had many years before, gazing into the glass eye of the towns notorious witch. In the vision he foresaw his own death, and therefore knows that until that moment nothing can permanently put him out of the picture. He takes the creepy path through the dangerous forest leading to the pretty but strange village of Specter where happy shoeless townsfolk, including young Jennifer 122

T I M B U RT O N

Hill, pass their time away in blissful homeliness, enjoying good pies and soft grass. Edward nds Karl a job in an environment that appreciates his stature, Calloways Circus. Inadvertently this also provides Edward with a career for three years, for he sees the girl of his dreams and he is forced to work for information about her, information hard won by mucking out the elephants, becoming a lion tamer and even a human cannonball. Hes only released from his contract when he discovers Calloways dark secret, a very canine one at that. He finds his dream girl, Sandra Templeton, but learns, to his chagrin, that she is engaged to marry schmuck Don Price. Unperturbed he set about wooing Sandra, gaining a sound beating from the incensed Don, but winning her hand.Then he nds to his horror that he has been drafted into the US Army, but takes on every dangerous mission to secure an early release. Parachuting into Asia he rescues conjoined singers Ping and Jing and heads home. Determined to provide his wife with a beautiful home with a white picket fence, Edward pursues a career as a travelling salesman, selling the ubiquitous Handimatic device to crowds across the American countryside. His nationwide exploits lead him to run into Specters poet Norther, whos actively engaged in armed robbery, but will eventually turn to more respectable corporate crime in the big city. This sets Edward reminiscing about the time he spent in Specter, and he returns (this time too late) to nd the town in disarray; a dusty and decrepit shadow of its former self. Determined to set matters right, Edward buys the whole town, except for one crooked house. Inside there resides Jennifer Hill, dreaming of a past that never existed. Despite his fathers infuriating habit of exaggeration, William discovers artefacts that corroborate some of the tales. But is it too late? Edwards now in hospital, his death not far away. Is there a possibility that his glorious exit from 123

LE BLANC/ODELL

this world can be realised after all? And are all the friends he has met in his long and colourful life waiting to pay their last respects to a very big sh? Comment: Big Fish is a poignant and at times delightful lm about a storyteller and his almost ludicrously straight son. As such it contains many elements of fantasy, surrealism and the absurd, that are associated with Burtons oeuvre. But its very grounding in the real world, not the idealised pastel pseudo-1950s of Edward Scissorhands or the imposing futurist megalopolis of Batman, makes it strangely dissociated. Thematically this is familiar territory, albeit one that contrasts the fantastic with the mundane in polarised segments of the lm. In Burtons other worlds the fantastic and mundane collide with either tragic or comic results (in Mars Attacks! both) while, with the exception perhaps of the lms closing moments, Big Fish seems determined to keep these two worlds distinct. Edward Blooms world is mythical and real but separated from Williams mundane and real one. Edwards world is one of wonder, where anything is possible. In many senses his nemesis is his own son who views his fathers tales with resigned contempt and even outright hostility he sees the world as a real physical place with no room for frivolity or elaboration. This, frankly, makes him a deeply dull character but ultimately this is the point. William represents the serious face of modern life, he can see no intrinsic worth in the myths and legends of the past, of ights of fantasy, or imagination. In many ways William is almost a cinematic critic of Burton and his works, a detractor who would consider elaborate fancies or fantasy as somehow unworthy of his attention as it is not based on real life. But fantasy and myth have been an important part of the development of the human race.William has taken the modern world as superior to that of his forbears, and that seriousness somehow renders 124

T I M B U RT O N

myth obsolete or irrelevant. To Burton, as it is to Edward, fantasy provides a means by which we can understand the world and escape from its dull and dreary preconceptions and boundaries.Who cares if the facts arent true, as long as the lies are interesting? Edwards lies arent so much fabrications as grandiose elaborations Karl is indeed gigantic just not quite as gigantic as Edward tells it; there are twin Asian singers, but they are not conjoined and many of the events in his life his being declared dead in action, for example are provable.The point is: why does it have to be provable? Like most Burton heroes, Edward hides behind a mask. Unlike Batman its not a physical one, but rather a fantasy one that mythologises his past and creates a pantheon that will live after his death as an oral legacy of, if not greatness, at least great things. Like other Burton heroes he is in many senses psychologically unbalanced, has had physical traumas in childhood (three years strapped to a machine) and sets out beyond the cosiness of his home to confront the world.Where he differs is in that for all his outsideness that his journeys entail, for all the fabulous and wondrous sights he sees, he is ultimately far from misunderstood in his world. He is not hung up by his psychosis but revels in it.To this end he can be seen as an Ed Wood character in his boundless enthusiasm for anything, no matter how outlandish, or the free spirit of Pee-wee Herman, but without the conicts that these characters have with those who dont understand them. The nearest Edward comes to conict is with Don Price an ill dened bully (rather like Jim in Edward Scissorhands) whose psychological hang-ups come from being in Edwards shadow but nowhere near his league for ambition. He is dealt with in a humiliating way, dying, porno-mag in hand, on a toilet. Perhaps the more Burtonesque heroes lurk in the side-lines DeVitos circus-master with his lycanthropic tendencies is more of an outcast (It was that night I discovered that most things you consider evil or 125

LE BLANC/ODELL

wicked are simply lonely, and lacking in the social niceties), the Witch is certainly misunderstood but perhaps most so is Karl the giant. Like many Burton heroes Karl is an outsider (in the book it is revealed he was deliberately abandoned by his own mother) who is shunned and feared by the townsfolk because they make no effort to understand him. Big Fish is a lm about opposites and twins literally in the case of rescued double act Jing and Ping, joined at the waist and forced to sing salacious songs to communist troops. Fantasy contrasts with reality, fact with ction, young with old, introverted with extroverted. Indeed, Burton has noted the similarities between Edward (extrovert) and William (introvert) with The Joker (extrovert) and Batman (introvert). In many ways their lives are tied up in mythologies, one through fantasy and one through the harshness of reality. Most of the characters have mirrors and younger selves, with many of the roles being played by two actors. The younger Edward contrasts with both his older self and his son.William is physically capable of matching his fathers younger self, the irony being that he lacks the ability to soar to heights of imaginative fancy, despite his career as a writer. Jennifer Hill is even more elusive. As played by Helena Bonham Carter and Hailey Anne Nelson, she represents the innocence that Bloom inspired but ultimately failed he arrives at Specter too early initially, and then too late for her. Her life changed because the intervening time has seen Edward fall for another woman (although in the book Edward is seen to be having an affair with Jennifer, the lm appropriately stays in romantic territory by having Edward remain a monogamous husband). Jennifer eventually becomes a third character, the witch, and the story becomes circular the witch of Edwards youth is created by his inadequate older self. Even though the lm has a fairly involved ashback structure its nature is similar to the free-form anarchy of Pee-wees 126

T I M B U RT O N

Big Adventure, Beetlejuice or Mars Attacks!. In particular Peewees road movie with its series of disjointed events has many parallels in Edward Blooms chaotic life-story. Style and Score: Despite its frequent dalliances into the surreal, the overt Burton look is occasionally muted, partly because of the subject matter and partly, one imagines, because of the absence of regular collaborator Rick Heinrichs. Edward wears a Nightmare Before Christmas style swirly tie in his eld of daffodils, the forest is suitably Sleepy Hollow and there is, of course, a circus. These in themselves point to Burtons style but this also is a lm about light and colour, of making the surreal wholesome, almost garish, rather than gothic and macabre. The only times matters get dark are in the forest (connected with Jennifer) both in the Witch sequence with its jumpy black cat and overgrown house, and on the path to Specter. Even here though the emphasis is on humour rather than menace the trees attacking, with their gnarled Sleepy Hollow look are more The Wizard of Oz (1939) than The Evil Dead (1981). More familiar are the machines that make a welcome addition the growth bed, the egg frying machine at the science fair (actually the machine from Pee-wee Hermans house in Peewees Big Adventure) and the mechanical Handi-matic that resembles a cross between Edwards scissor hands and a Swiss army knife just without the scissors. Danny Elfman provides the score once more and this is complemented by contemporaneous music. Making Of: Compared with large budget lms such as Planet of the Apes, Big Fish had a relatively tight purse (about $70 million) and consequently a tight shooting schedule.This is all the more remarkable given the sheer number of sequences and settings in the lm. Because the bulk of the 127

LE BLANC/ODELL

lm was shot out of synch it was decided to lm the framing device rst the dying Edward and his son trying to reconcile in order to allow the actors to get into their parts.The fantasy elements were added later once they had established their roles.This also makes sense in that Big Fish, despite the relative simplicity of the story, is temporally complex as Edward skits through the events in his life, but not necessarily in chronological order. Also the budget forced creative decisions that ultimately beneted the lm despite some CGI (the popcorn, some of the jumping spiders) the majority of the effects work was done in camera and on location. Although the town of Specter was built from scratch many of the other locations are real the witchs house for instance is a real location, albeit one enhanced by a matte painting. In line with Edwards exaggerated truths Karl really is a very tall guy, 7 6, just not as tall as the lm makes out in the fantasy sequences, where he is 12. Although some compositing was needed when full body shots were shown, much of his extra height was achieved by careful camera placement, pedestals and sleight of hand changes from real to model props.When Karl upturns the cars in the lms climactic sequence, real cars are replaced by scaled down models between shots to give the illusion that hes ipping them like pancakes. The scenes with DeVitos werewolf are a combination of real wolves and Ewan McGregor wrestling a highly detailed puppet. Overall these effects are more organic than, say, the CGI werewolves of Van Helsing (2004) and better suited to the lms faerie tale feel an ambiance it shares with Terry Gilliams fantasy lms in its love of scale, wonder and timelessness. Big Fish: A Novel of Mythic Proportions: The books structure, with William visiting his dying father, is similar to the screenplay but the tales themselves are more fragmented 128

T I M B U RT O N

snippets and anecdotes of various lengths that, for the most part, provide a picture of the man but no overall narrative thrust. Interestingly the book concludes on a more fantastic note than the lm but both endings work better in their respective media. The lms ending provides a narrative handing the baton to William that shows Edwards death as a freeing and enlightening event, whilst the book is more based on a spiritual realism that probably wouldnt have translated to the big screen. Trivia: Matthew McGrory (Karl) was in the Guinness Book of World Records for having the worlds largest shoe-size. Big Fish author Daniel Wallace has a cameo in the Specter scene. The actor Billy Redden playing Duelling Banjos as Edward enters town is the same one who played the same role as a child in John Boormans Deliverance (1972). The circus was real as were the performances, including the leaping cat and the human cannonball! The actresses playing Ping & Jing were extras on Ed Wood. Confederated Products, manufacturers of the Handi-matic are also known for their oh-soreasonable fake perfumes and copycat goods as sold by pyramid marketers in the John August scripted Go (1999).

129

13. Life Had Never Been Sweeter

Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (2005)


Crew: Director: Tim Burton Producer: Brad Grey, Richard D. Zanuck, Screenplay: John August from the novel by Roald Dahl, Director of Photography: Philippe Rousselot, Music: Danny Elfman, 115 min Cast: Johnny Depp (Willy Wonka), Freddie Highmore (Charlie Bucket), David Kelly (Grandpa Joe), Helena Bonham Carter (Mrs. Bucket), Noah Taylor (Mr. Bucket), Missi Pyle (Mrs Beauregarde), James Fox (Mr Salt), Deep Roy (Oompa Loompa), Christopher Lee (Dr Wonka) So please, oh please, we beg, we pray, Go throw your TV set away Roald Dahl, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory Plot: People can disagree about many things the football team they support, the music they like, the best way to get to Gotham City by bus but one thing is universal. Everyone, but everyone, loves chocolate.And who makes the nest, most innovative, most popular chocolate in the whole wide world? Of course its none other than the elusive reclusive Mr Willy Wonka. Wonkas consummate confectionery captivates 130

T I M B U RT O N

children and adults alike but the genius behind these yummy delights has remained enclosed behind the huge imposing gates of the Wonka factory, apparently in response to corporate pilfering of his highly prized sweet-making techniques. That would go some way to explain the hysteria surrounding Wonkas unique opportunity for ve lucky individuals, chosen by nding a Golden Ticket inside his candy bars, of not only a lifetimes supply of sugary goodness but also a guided tour of the most secret, most highly guarded place on Earth. No, not Area 51, but the mysterious depths of Wonkas magical factory. With millions of bars sold worldwide, who will be the lucky ve? Well its the rich kids, it always is: disgustingly fat glutton Augustus Gloop, nasty spoilt brat Veruca Salt, chewing-gum-chewing Violet Beauregarde and square-eyed video game geek Mike Teavee. Only one Golden Ticket remains, and it seems very unlikely that poor Charlie Bucket can ever nd it and full his dream of seeing the factory; after all his standard quota of chocolate is just one bar a year his only, and much prized, birthday present. But sometimes dreams do come true. Charlie does nd a Golden Ticket and, along with Grandpa Joe, joins the lucky crowd of children outside the factory gates at the appointed time. Wonka the sweet-making sensation, the amazing chocolatier may well be thoroughly eccentric, but he has a multitude of wonders to show his lucky guests.The tour begins... The factory is a wonder, a paradise dedicated to confectionery in all its forms. However the odious children start misbehaving, as spoilt brats are wont to do. But factories can be dangerous places and its not long before hasty tantrums and greedy kids result in a series of sticky demises. The Oompa Loompas (the factorys diminutive and cheeky workers with a penchant for spontaneous and elaborate musical mockings) are as restless as the squirrels. With the number of children diminishing rapidly and Wonkas 131

LE BLANC/ODELL

increased bouts of psychosis, it seems unlikely that anyone will make it through to claim Willys special prize, reserved for the tours winning entry or, as seems more likely, its sole survivor. Comment: The most successful childrens literature always had a streak of cruelty, menace or the macabre to it and consequently so have many of the best childrens lms. The better adaptations of Roald Dahls work have retained the sense of threat seen from a childs perspective. Charlie and the Chocolate Factory continues this tradition whilst retaining all the elements that typify the best of Burtons work. Charlie and the Chocolate Factory is basically a slasher lm for kids a group of children go somewhere apparently nice and the ones who dont abide by a moral code get picked off in inventive and bizarre ways until just the good one remains. Of course we root for Charlie the other children are so vile. They are so grotesque that their fates match their egotistic transgressions: Gloop is punished for his gluttony by almost drowning in chocolate;Veruca is brutally savaged by irate squirrels and dumped in the rubbish unit; Violet is turned into a giant blueberry and Teavee is miniaturised and then stretched for his violent impertinence. Charlie remains apart from them because he thinks of others, not just himself. Again Burton uses the different, the fantastic, as invading the real world. Wonkas factory towers over the ostensibly normal town like the castle in Edward Scissorhands but Charlies world is also distinct from the norm, his ramshackle house set apart from the day-to-day. Like Edward Scissorhands before him he lives in an attic room with a leaking, open roof. Charlies family are loving but almost unfeasibly poor, surviving on cabbage soup even when Mr Bucket has a job (putting the caps on toothpaste tubes). Things get worse when industrialisation makes his post redundant. That his 132

T I M B U RT O N

familys fate is tied tightly to the actions of Willy Wonka seem to have bypassed them all. Grandpa Joe lost his job when Wonka closed his factory, as a result of corporate espionage and the rise in toothpaste sales following Willys cavityinducing confectionery led to the modernisation of the toothpaste factory and Mr Buckets sacking. Key to the success of the lm lies in the casting of Wonka himself, a difcult character to get right with his combination of childlike wonder, genius and frankly disturbing characteristics. Johnny Depp plays Wonka as reclusive, psychologically scarred, manic and unhinged (as Burton says in the making of documentary people-phobic in a certain way). He is prone to sudden ashbacks, running from moments of mania to completely vacant, and is a frequent babbler of apparently insane dialogue. Good morning starshines, the world says hello, he cryptically greets the winners before an Its a Small World pastiche exhibition sparks up and nishes like the ending of the Vincent Price 3D classic House of Wax (1953).What becomes apparent early on is that Wonkas generosity to the ve children is part of a wider scheme, he isnt prone to acts of random philanthropy. Indeed his very attitude towards the kids is shockingly dismissive (Im Violet Beauregarde, announces the ingratiating brat I dont care, is Wonkas reply), almost casually announcing that Veruca should be ne in the garbage chute because they only turn on the incinerators on a Tuesday. It is Tuesday. When the tour party enter the magical chocolate room he gleefully announces that everything is edible, even the people, but notes thats called cannibalism and is frowned upon in many societies. Depp has claimed Howard Hughes as inspiration for the character and this certainly bears out with the glove-obsessed cleanliness and the pathological aversion to physical contact. His awkwardness is explained by the lms only major departure from the book, which depicts 133

LE BLANC/ODELL

Wonkas genesis under the rm and oppressive grip of his domineering dentist father. The father role is played with gravity by Christopher Lee who hooks his candy-deprived child up to elaborate Helnwein-style dental monstrosities. Willy naturally rebels and becomes a confectioner. However, the emphasis is changed in that ultimately Wonka is reconciled with his father in a nal link of father-son relationships that have snaked through Burtons other lms, from the rejected Oswald Cobblepot, the orphaned Edward Scissorhands and Batman, through to the more down to Earth (but only just!) drama of Big Fish. The Oompa Loompas are cuddly answers to the Mars Attacks! Martians they similarly get pleasure out of abusing cows, here whipping them in order to create the whipped cream required for Wonkas secret recipes. In an inspired move lifted from the book these little rascals (all played by Deep Roy) mark the demise of the errant children with an arresting song and dance number each chronicling the vice and downfall of the departed child, the lyrics taken from Dahls original poems. Charlies calm normality is necessary to balance the insanity of Wonka and the precocious egotism of his youthful rivals. As in the Batman lms, Edward Scissorhands and Big Fish, it is the normal people in society who are the most grotesque and nasty. Mike Teavee has undergone a slight transformation from his literary counterpart; in the book Mike has an unhealthy obsession with television whereas the focus has shifted to video games here.As television plays such an integral part in Burtons world view it would have seemed incongruous to depict such a negative atittude. Augustus Gloop comes across as a successor to Pee-Wee Hermans arch-nemesis Francis and the two girls are cringe-makingly excellent. 134

T I M B U RT O N

Style and Score: Burtons penchant for elaborating his sets with swirls is given delirious excess here: from the whirlpools of chocolate to the blue and white spiral of the nut room, it seems as though everything from the lollipops to the head of Wonkas cane is a swirl. Similarly the love of outrageously complex machinery, to produce very little of substance, is rife in every room with high-tech chocolate wrappers and waterfall churned chocolate confectionery bustling with life. Wonkas device for transmitting chocolate by television involves a huge slab of chocolate to produce a tiny bar in the screen it is no coincidence that the slab is introduced to the strains of Strauss Also Sprach Zarathustra and that it ends up being a monolith worshiped by apes from Kubricks 2001:A Space Odyssey (1968). All the vocal parts for the Oompa Loompas musical numbers were performed by Danny Elfman in a variety of ranges and in a number of varying styles from calypso and disco to jazz and heavy metal. The dance choreography also involved a number of genres, most notably an homage to Busby Berkeleys Gold Diggers lms. Making Of: Rather than rely entirely on CGI, many of the scenes were shot on huge sets so that the actors really were engulfed in the environment. An enormous set was constructed at Pinewood Studios in England, home of the James Bond stage. Burton had produced the original production sketches, which were then turned into Wonkas wonderful factory. The chocolate river was 270ft-long and contained 200,000 gallons of fake chocolate-looking liquid. It took technicians several attempts to get the texture just right.The chocolate waterfall seen in the lm was created on stage and not digitally as would be normal practice. Unfortunately the production had a slight setback when an improperly secured camera lens ended up drowning in the brown sticky gloop. Burton also insisted upon real squirrels 135

LE BLANC/ODELL

for the nut room scene to accompany the more passive puppet variety. Ironically, though the squirrels were real the walnuts they were sorting were plastic! Background: Author Roald Dahl wrote Charlie and the Chocolate Factory in 1964.The idea came from his schooldays when he and his chums were occasionally asked to test new products for the chocolate manufacturer Cadbury.The book became a bestseller and has been read by millions of children worldwide.The book has been lmed before, as Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory (1971) with Gene Wilder in the title role.To some extent Wilder is an unusual choice and doesnt quite t the persona of Wonka. Its a difcult part to play Wonka is undoubtedly a subversive character, but somehow Wilder portrays him as simply creepy. Despite being a success, Roald Dahl was not happy with the lm and Burton didnt like it either:I dont want to crush peoples dreams but the original lm is sappy, (The Times, 19 July 2005). Burton felt that he wanted to explore the darker interpretation of the book. Felicity Dahl, Roalds widow and an executive producer of this version, is sure that the author would have approved. Trivia: Jack Skellington can be spotted on the wrapper of one of the Halloween sweets that Dr Wonka throws into the re. Roald Dahl wrote screenplays based on two books by Ian Fleming: You Only Live Twice (1967) and Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (1968). Christopher Lee, who played the part of Dr Wonka, is Flemings cousin.

136

14. Other Skellingtons in the Closet Burton as Producer

Family Dog (1987-1993)


Crew: Producers: Tim Burton, Steven Spielberg, Dennis Klein, Music: Danny Elfman with additional music by Steve Bartek. Plot: Take one selsh family who blatantly ignore the needs of their pet. Make said pet a touch of a scallywag. Blend. Watch as ensuing mayhem and japes occur before your very eyes. Comment: Family Dog was originally broadcast as a one-off animation in 1987 as part of Steven Spielbergs Amazing Stories and proved successful in its offbeat character designs and humour. With Burton becoming hot property after Batman and Beetlejuice, a series based upon the characters was green lit for Spielbergs Amblin Entertainment.With Burton and Spielberg as executive producers (as well as Dennis Klein who provided most of the stories and scripts) it was felt that it would naturally be instantly successful. On top of that, the original cartoon had the involvement of Brad Bird, a friend from Burtons days at Disney who later worked on such classics as The Simpsons, The Iron Giant (1999) and The Incredibles (2004). Danny Elfman and Steve Bartek provided the music. 137

LE BLANC/ODELL

Unfortunately only 10 episodes were made and broadcast. Only the Amazing Stories pilot was ever available on video in the UK but the series can still be obtained on NTSC in the States where it is currently enjoying a (very) small renaissance. Not as bad as might be expected for a TV show, but expectations were high and merely average was presumably not good enough.

The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993)


Crew: Director: Henry Selick, Producers: Tim Burton, Denise Di Novi, Screenplay: Caroline Thompson, Music, Lyrics and Score: Danny Elfman, Visual Consultant: Rick Heinrichs, 76 mins Cast: Danny Elfman, Chris Sarandon, Paul Reubens, Catherine OHara (voices) Plot: Jack Skellington, the Pumpkin King, is having a bit of a mid-death crisis. Despite his position as guiding gurehead of Halloweentown, he feels that there is something missing. A chance discovery of a door in a tree in a secret glade in a spooky forest leads Jack into a new world of colour, snow, happy faces and the spirit of Christmas. Inspired, he gets straight to work, trying to distil the essence of Christmas in his laboratory. Jack plans to be the next Santa and distribute all the lovely presents he has made for the good little boys and girls. However his idea of nice toys doesnt quite agree with popular opinion, as the children nd out on Christmas morning when their gifts of dolls and train sets have become giant snakes or a gruesome severed head. But his esteem reaches an all-time low when his philanthropy is met with hostility. He and his skeletal reindeer are shot down by considerable artillery re. Dejected, the only things that can 138

T I M B U RT O N

help him are the restoration of normality in his world and true love, which is where the delightful but detachable Sally comes in. It is more beautiful than I imagined it would be, thanks to Henry and his talented crew of artists, animators, and designers. Tim Burton, The Film,The Art,The Vision Im more upset about how much credit Tim Burton received on The Nightmare Before Christmas... I think his contributions cannot be denied. But I was the guy who made the lm for close on three years of my life. Henry Selick, Projections 5 Comment: This delightful telling of Burtons poem remains the pinnacle of commercial animation. Despite the title Tim Burtons Nightmare Before Christmas is not a Burton lm, it is a Henry Selick one, yet it looks and feels far more Burtonesque than these credits would suggest. This boils down to the characters being created from Burtons original drawings and the sets almost as though a Tim Burton lm is designed rather than directed. Its also a timeless musical masterpiece that manages the rare feat of being both romantic and macabre. Danny Elfman composed an outstanding soundtrack that really lifts the lm, and sings the Jack Skellington parts, providing the nest set of singalong numbers to grace a modern musical. Burtons themes are evident throughout: the misunderstood outsider who is basically good but rejected by so-called respectable society, and the love of the Gothic. Once again, there are very few evil creatures in the whole of Halloweentown. Only the Boogeyman and Sallys cruel creator represent genuine threats. Everyone else is basically decent, if grotesque. Far less 139

LE BLANC/ODELL

likeable is Santa Claus himself a rude, pompous, selfcentred bore whose bright red clothes are at odds with his humourless personality. At least Jack wants to spread happiness.You get the distinct impression that Santa is just doing it because thats his job. The characters design is nothing short of astonishing. All are given equal care and attention: the monster band that accompanies the soul-searching moonlit numbers, the swivel-headed jittery major, the buglled Boogeyman, the three mischievous double-crossing Santa-nappers Lock, Shock and Barrel. Surprisingly, for what is basically a childrens lm, there is hardly a scene that goes by without something gross or disgusting happening, but it is all handled in such a gleeful manner that it never offends. A modern classic that will continue to entertain and delight many years after current avours of the month have been forgotten. Making Of: The Nightmare Before Christmas was actually conceived while Burton was working at Disney 10 years previously. The idea of creating a feature-length lm using stop-frame model animation was not new but examples are rare due to the immense time required and the considerable expense (other examples include Ladislaw Starewiczs Tale of the Fox [1931] and Jiri Bartas Pied Piper [1985]). Disney invested a large sum into the picture and treated it in a hands off manner which allowed the more grotesque elements of the (animated) cast to pass through unscathed. In Burtons original illustrated poem there were only three characters (Jack, Zero and Santa although the denizens of Halloweentown and Christmas Town are described collectively) so when the lm got the go-ahead for production the concepts were ready, but needed eshing out.The collaboration between all the artists involved was quite complex. Danny Elfman composed all the songs using Burtons 140

T I M B U RT O N

sketches as a basis for character development and Caroline Thompson used these to form the script. Henry Selick had the monumental task of pulling it all together as well as coordinating the entire production process.Technically this was a hugely ambitious project and key to Selicks ability as an animator lay in his enthusiasm for mixing media (cut-out, live, cel and model work) to produce a fantastical view of this world. The Nightmare Before Christmas shows the benets of relying on old school stop-frame combined with state-ofthe-art computer tracking.The results are a perfect blend of the old and new charming and timeless. The models are incredibly complex, each needing armatures, costumes and facial expressions and over 200 puppets were used in the lm.The main centre of attention though remains Jack, a real labour of love each perfectly lip-synched mouth movement made from a separate moulded head, and brought to audio life through Danny Elfman.

Cabin Boy (1994)


Crew: Director:Adam Resnick, Producers: Denise Di Novi, Tim Burton, Screenplay: Chris Elliot,Adam Resnick, Music: Steve Bartek, 80 mins Cast: Chris Elliot, Russ Tamblyn, Ricki Lake Plot: Schools out for ever! Nathaniel, spoilt rude rich kid with ill-tting trousers, contemptuously departs from his meagre academic career to help run his fathers hotel chain in sunny Hawaii. However, Nathaniels failure to recognise the vitriol his inappropriate aristocratic outbursts iname in fellow human beings leads him to board The Filthy Whore a smelly shing vessel instead of the luxurious Queen Catherine. Naturally, Nathaniel endeavours to turn The 141

LE BLANC/ODELL

Filthy Whore to the land of Hoopla girls but only manages to steer the dirty lady of ill repute galleon to Hells Bucket; a notorious stretch of water where no ships dare go. Unimpressed with his navigational attempts, the salty sea dog crew cast him adrift to go slowly mad. Instead he is rescued by Chocki, an unpredictable half-Viking/half-shark. Their adventures are only just beginning Nathaniel saves (read screws up a world record swimming attempt) Trina and falls in love. Then theres the ice monster, a seductive six-armed temptress, and her irate husband Mulligan the giant. Will Nathaniel ever nd Hawaii? Will he ever nd true love? Will he ever grow up? Comment: A real missed opportunity, Cabin Boy supposedly mixes surreal comedy with bawdy humour. It attempts a cross between Pee-wee Herman and Monty Python the nave man-boys bizarre encounters amidst deliberately self-referential and unrealistic sets. It should work its set in the past but contains anachronisms (chocolate milk, tins of beer, microwaves), the dialogue is based upon contemporary scientic thinking, the sets are great and the lighting extreme in a comic book style. Likewise, the knowingly camp effects are suited to the production Nathaniel hallucinates a talking cupcake, mythical creatures come to life via blue screen or stop-frame and the ships are clearly models in well-lit sets. There are several references that pepper the lm and for lovers of Jason and the Argonauts more similarities than entirely healthy (the living gurehead, Mulligan reprising the Talos role, the stop-motion ice creatures). The problem is that it is just not funny Chris Elliot, playing the central character, is less sympathetic than Pee-wee Herman and virtually beyond redemption. It doesnt say anything about the class system, the place of the rich or provide any worthwhile statement on anything. The plot just ends, the conclusion is unsatisfactory, 142

T I M B U RT O N

its less smutty than a Carry On lm but tries to make up for that with gratuitous swearing and rewards someone irrefutably odious with a future of afuence. Still Steve Bartek provides a super score, the opening credits are nice, Russ Tamblyn is the nest half-Viking/half-shark offspring to grace cinema and at least its all over quickly. Cabin Boy was a commercial failure on release, too weird for most and too average for anyone else.

Batman Forever (1995)


Crew: Director: Joel Schumacher, Producers: Tim Burton, Peter MacGregor-Scott, Screenplay: Lee Batchler, Janet Scott Batchler, Akiva Goldsman, 121 mins Cast: Val Kilmer (Bruce Wayne/Batman),Tommy Lee Jones (Harvey Dent/Harvey Two-Face), Jim Carrey (Edward Nygma/The Riddler), Nicole Kidman (Dr Chase Meridian), Chris ODonnell (Dick Grayson/Robin) Plot: Harvey Two-Face has become obsessed with his archnemesis, Batman. No plan is too devious for this dual delinquent as his increasingly bizarre attempts to catch the Dark Knight see him raiding Gotham Citys bank and even attempting a daring bomb heist at the circus. This later escapade results in the tragic demise of all but one of the Flying Graysons.The sole survivor, Dick, saves the day at deep personal loss. Enraged with vengeance, he seeks Two-Faces death but requires the help of multimillionaire Bruce Wayne. Bruce too is having a tough time of it hes got the hots for psychiatrist Dr Chase Meridian but shes unsure as to whether she wants to commit to him or the crime ghter.Then theres Edward Nygma. Edward is a brilliant but confused scientist who takes Bruces rejection of his immersive entertainment 143

LE BLANC/ODELL

technology to heart and reinvents himself as punmeister supervillain The Riddler.When The Riddler joins forces with Two-Face, the denizens of Gotham City have their cerebral capacity hoovered up by Nygmatechs insidious intellect incapacitator, and the prospects for a morally fortuitous conclusion seem remote. Comment: Both Warner Bros. and Burton faced a Riddlersized conundrum when it came to the third of the Batman series. Burton had grown tired of large projects and was keen to pursue other ventures. The studios realised that Burtons reputation helped boost the lms but were keen to produce something with a lighter tone especially after the dark, twisted Batman Returns. So the solution was to make this a Tim Burton Production but hand the reins over to someone who could deliver frothy eye-candy. So after two dark fantasies, the Batman franchise returned to the neon drenched Day-Glo excesses of the Adam West 1960s TV series. Out went Keaton and in came Val Kilmer, complete with badly-timed puns and excruciating delivery. In came Robin, his adoption by Bruce Wayne harking back to the original comics. One aside to Burton remains: when we see The Riddler, in the depths of Arkham Asylum, one of the white-coated observers asks him, Dr Burton tells me you know who Batman is. As a lm this aint great, but as camp excess it can do little wrong. No camera angle is left untilted. The colours are so intense they are headache-inducing. The only traces of depression lie in Batmans dreams of his parents death, which are detached and swift enough not to overwhelm the sense of fun. Instead of being a sequel to Tim Burtons Batman lms this is almost as though they had never happened, despite the familiar faces of Commissioner Gordon and Alfred the butler. Gotham City has transformed from a huge 144

T I M B U RT O N

brooding noir setting to a bigger glitzy circus, dominated by gaudy kitsch trappings and gigantic statues. Burtons characters are psychologically scarred mists who turn to fetishism to externalise their feelings. Schumacher uses the process of dressing up to emphasise sexual identity rather that express their emotions. Almost invariably the film embraces the connection between machismo and homosexuality, the Dr Meridian romance notwithstanding, to create a Felliniesque parade of gimp mask-wearing henchmen, heroes in rubber suits, bulging codpieces and double-entendre laden dialogue. Carrey is unbelievably camp when freed of the shackles of his day-today engineering job, mincing around like a drag queen. Ultimately this raises the lm from tedium into entertainment although its a decidedly brains-off kind. As shallow as a thin crust pizza but savoury nonetheless.

James and the Giant Peach (1996)


Crew: Director: Henry Selick, Producers: Denise Di Novi, Tim Burton, Screenplay: Karey Kirkpatrick, Jonathon Roberts, Steve Bloom, 79 mins Cast: Paul Terry (James), Joanna Lumley (Spiker), Miriam Margolyes (Sponge), Pete Postlethwaite (Strange Old Man) with Simon Callow, Richard Dreyfus, Susan Sarandon, Jane Leeves, David Thewlis Plot: Poor little James Henry Trotter. Having his parents brutally killed by an enormous rhinoceros was bad enough, now it looks like hes got to spend his life doing unpleasant chores for Aunts Spiker and Sponge. He is even forced to eject his only friend, a spider, for fear of it being killed by the nasty hags. One evening he meets a strange old man who 145

LE BLANC/ODELL

gives him a carton lled with crocodiles tongues. Tragedy strikes and the tongues escape, one causing a peach to blossom on the gnarled dead tree that sits in his aunts gnarled dead garden. And what a peach it is, swelling to enormous size and great prot for his entrepreneurial relatives. Not for long. The nal renegade tongue nds its way into James stomach and before you can say Aaaaggghhh! the peach rolls through the countryside, before launching off a cliff and into the sea. What a rush! And whats more, James now has companions, all ready to sail to New York City: a dapper monocled grasshopper, a cigar-smoking Brooklyn centipede, a motherly ladybird, an old glow-worm, a myopic paranoid earthworm and, yes, his spider, now a sultry noirish femme fatale. They have many dangers to face if they are to nd fame and freedom in the Big Apple, on a Giant Peach. Comment: Roald Dahls books have provided endless entertainment for children of all ages and have produced a surprising number of great lms. The best of these (Matilda, The Witches and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory) have beneted by retaining the sadistic and revolting aspects of Dahls work as well as the fantastical and magical moments, which also reects Burtons outlook. Spiker and Sponge are truly nasty, grotesque caricatures of narcissism and repugnant ugliness (played with malignant vitriol by Lumley and Margolyes).They enjoy their power over James and deliberately malnourish him: Ive nished my chores, What a coincidence, weve nished the dinner. Whats worse they mock his deceased parents and threaten him with the dreaded rhino. Their place in the lm lies in the live action sequences that bookend the central, stop-frame animated journey but are no less fantastic. When the animation kicks in the colours suddenly become magical and impossibly bright, as bets the incredible journey. Unrestrained by the 146

T I M B U RT O N

tight, gothic, internally logical (but perfectly balanced) world of The Nightmare Before Christmas, Selick creates a barrage of exciting and dynamic images: the scary mechanical shark with countless rows of rotating razor-sharp teeth, the ock of seagulls pulling the peach through the golden clouds and an arctic wasteland of ghost ships eerily quiet in the bleach white cold. The later scene sees the repentant drowsy centipede committing pesticide to recover a compass from a pirate ship only to face Jack Skellington and his demon shipmates. Even more bizarre is James dream, animated in a curious cut-out fashion similar to Selicks earlier experimental shorts. The only problem with James and the Giant Peach is a handful of Randy Newman songs, but at least the relentless visual imagination is put on overdrive during these numbers and pulls you through to the next enchanting scene. And, if you need to be told, stay until the credits have nished its worth the wait.

147

15.Whats This? Other Projects

Singles (1992)
Crew: Director: Cameron Crowe Cast: Bridget Fonda, Matt Dillon, Bill Pullman,Tim Burton Plot: A group of friends and neighbours fall in and out of relationships with each other in search of that indenable thing called love. If they can be bothered that is. Comment: Cameron Crowes lm is an amiable little romp through the lives and loves of a group of people in 1990s Seattle. A touch heavy in the soundtrack department, this is a pleasant enough way to pass 90 minutes or so. Sort of slacker lite, this laid-back (lots of direct to cameras speeches, monologues and hip dialogue) lm features a Burton cameo. His character, Brian, is a director who works at a singles agency making videos for people seeking a partner. His contribution is two syllables long: Ten bucks extra and Brian will shoot your video. Twenty. (Brian) He doesnt even know me, protests Debbie. Debbie, hes only like the next Martin Scorsese, before he disappears, never to be seen again. 148

T I M B U RT O N

Adverts
Many directors have tried their hands at advertising and Burton has also made some that are typically eclectic. It is difcult to incorporate plot and characterisation while selling a product and still have change from 60 seconds, but therein lies the art of the ad. Hollywood Chewing Gum (1998): A chewing gum brand that, unsurprisingly perhaps, does not originate from Hollywood but is popular in Europe. Burtons ad for the product is a real stormer known as The Gnome. Our hero, a plucky little gnome, tires of his job standing in a garden and dreams of a better life. A quick shin over the garden wall and hes off, weaving between legs in a shopping mall, hiding in the shadows and eventually jumping on a passing car. Dropped off near his destination, he pounds his way through the undergrowth until he comes across a beautiful grotto with a bathing siren. Spurred on, he dives in as the camera tastefully pulls focus onto a packet of Hollywood Chewing Gum. Fast, funny and exciting, this bizarre little ad has music courtesy of prolic advert sound design wizard Claude Letessier. Timex (2000): Currently the latest of Burtons advertising projects, the rst of these proved so successful that a second was commissioned. Both are to plug Timexs easy-to-use watches and are chiaroscuro pieces with asides to The Matrix and Blade Runner.The second advert stars Lisa Marie hiding in a dummy warehouse while sinister operatives search for her whereabouts, decapitating dummies as they go. Impressive wirework kung-fu and a driving Matrix-style soundtrack make for invigorating if somewhat derivative viewing. Both adverts are available to view online at www.timex.com and include a brief documentary as well. 149

LE BLANC/ODELL

Stainboy
An absolute must, this is Tim Burtons online cartoon series, extending the character from his book The Melancholy Death of Oyster Boy and Other Stories. You can download Stainboy onto your desktop, to catch his series of bizarre and gory adventures. Written and directed by Burton these short (about three minutes each) animations also feature the music of Danny Elfman. Facing the shocking Staregirl (and bringing very rough justice to the poor mite), Matchgirl (voiced by Lisa Marie) or Toxicboy hes never far from another gripping and cynical mission.

150

16. Resources: Burton Books and Bookmarks


The following is a selected bibliography of recommended reading, recommended DVDs and web sites.

Books by Burton
The Melancholy Death of Oyster Boy & Other Stories by Tim Burton,William Morrow & Co, ISBN: 0688156819 The Nightmare Before Christmas by Tim Burton, ASIN: 0786810149 Tim Burtons Nightmare Before Christmas: A Pop-Up Book by Tim Burton, ASIN: 0453031323 Tim Burtons Nightmare Before Christmas: A Postcard Book, ASIN: 1561383406 Tim Burtons Nightmare Before Christmas: An Animated Flip Book by Tim Burton, ASIN: 1562827758 Tim Burtons Nightmare Before Christmas: A Novel by Daphne Skinner, Caroline Thompson, Tim Burton, Touchstone Pictures, ISBN: 1562825925

Books about Burton


Tim Burton: An Unauthorised Biography of the Film-Maker by Ken Hanke, Renaissance Books, ISBN: 1580631622 Burton on Burton, ed Mark Salisbury, Faber & Faber, ISBN: 151

LE BLANC/ODELL

0571176704 Tim Burton: The Life and Films of a Visionary Director by Helmut Merschmann,Titan Books, ISBN: 1840232080. Tim Burton A Childs Garden of Nightmares, ed Paul A Woods, Plexus, ISBN: 0859653102 Tim Burton (Virgin Film S.), Jim Smith, J. Clive Matthews, Virgin Books, ISBN: 0753506823 The Films of Tim Burton, Alison McMahan, Continuum International Publishing Group, ISBN: 0826415679

Books about Burtons Films


The Art of Sleepy Hollow, Andrew Kevin Walker (Editor),Tim Burton (Introduction), Pocket Books, ISBN: 0671036572 Sleepy Hollow: Including the Classic Story by Washington Irving by Peter Lerangis, Tim Burton (Introduction), Pocket Books, ISBN: 0671036653 Tim Burtons Nightmare Before Christmas:The Film,The Art,The Vision by Frank Thompson, Hyperion, ISBN: 156282774X Mars Attacks! The Art of the Movie by Karen R Jones, Ballantine Books, ISBN: 0345409981 Batman: The Ofcial Book of the Movie by John Marriott, Hamlyn, ISBN: 0660565874 Batman Returns: The Ofcial Movie Book by Michael Singer, Hamlyn, ISBN:0600574938

DVD & Videos


All of Burtons features and related lms discussed (to Big Fish) are available on DVD and VHS. Note, however, that you will need a Region 1 player to enjoy Pee-wee on DVD. Be especially aware of earlier Region 2 versions of Nightmare Before Christmas and make sure its the special edition this 152

T I M B U RT O N

includes (despite what it says on the box) Vincent and Frankenweenie among the copious extras. Batman (D012000/ S012000) Batman Forever (D015100/ S015100) Batman Returns (D015000/ S012691) Beetlejuice (D011785/ S011785) Big Fish (CDR34933/C8228521) Edward Scissorhands (01867DVD/01867CS) Ed Wood (D888599/CC7842) James and the Giant Peach (P8870DVD/ G8870S) Mars Attacks! (D014480/ S015424) The Nightmare Before Christmas (D888339/ D241932) Pee-wees Big Adventure (Reg 1. ASIN: 0790749408/ S011523) Planet of the Apes (22080DVD/22080S) Singles (D012410/ S012410) Sleepy Hollow (P8986DVD/ P8986S)

World Wide Web/Internet


There are scores of sites out there for those thirsty for more information. Some specialise in more speculative stories such as upcoming projects, whilst others concentrate on the body of work already completed. Below are sites that all come highly recommended, there are many more. The Ofcial Tim Burton Page www.timburton.com At the time of writing this just contains a picture of Stainboy. The Tim Burton Collective www.timburtoncollective.com Crisp and fast site offering lots to read (over 150 articles from newspapers alone) and all the latest news. Economic design belies the fact that there is a lot to be found here including plenty of multimedia content and even the Timex adverts to download. Fab. Mars Attacks! (Ofcial Site) www.marsattacks.com Very 153

LE BLANC/ODELL

silly site with lots of colour and a few shockwave games.The shooting gallery is totally pointless but hysterically funny. Dans Denitive Tim Burton Page (aka Tim Burton: Auteur or Marketing Concept) -www.euronet.nl/users/bramb/dan/ burton/title.html A little old (it covers up to Mars Attacks!) but interesting prcis of Burtons career looking at the contradiction between money and art. Follow the train of thought by either thematic (expressionism, horror lms, the outsider) or chronological means. Tim Burton FAQs www.rit.edu/~elnppr/faqs/tbfaq.html Short but sweet page of snippets and rumours about Burton.

154

Index
Brosnan, Pierce, 93 Burton,Tim, 1, 3, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 18, 19, 20, Aladdin, 20, 22, 33, 34 21, 22, 23, 25, 26, 27, 28, Animation, 26, 27, 28, 52, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 99, 137, 139, 140, 146 36, 37, 39, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 49, 52, 53, 54, 55, Baldwin, Alec, 47 57, 58, 59, 62, 63, 65, 66, Bartek, Steve, 45, 79, 137, 67, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 76, 141, 143 79, 80, 81, 82, 83, 84, 86, Basinger, Kim, 55 88, 89, 93, 95, 100, 101, Batman, 9, 10, 14, 16, 17, 19, 102, 103, 105, 107, 108, 20, 22, 30, 44, 54, 55, 57, 109, 111, 112, 114, 115, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 74, 80, 116, 117, 119, 120, 121, 81, 88, 100, 102, 124, 134, 124, 125, 126, 127, 130, 137, 143, 144, 152, 153 132, 133, 134, 135, 136, Batman Forever, 153 137, 138, 139, 140, 141, Beetlejuice, 9, 11, 14, 16, 18, 143, 144, 145, 146, 148, 20, 21, 22, 42, 47, 49, 53, 149, 150, 151, 152, 153, 54, 57, 69, 72, 127, 137, 154 153 Big Fish, 10, 16, 17, 22, 121, Cabin Boy, 10, 82, 83, 141, 124, 127, 128, 129, 134, 142 152 CGI, 80, 100, 107, 118, 128, Bonham Carter, Helena, 135 113, 120, 121, 126, 130 20th Century Fox, 63 155

INDEX

Charlie and the Chocolate 40, 63, 65, 69, 71, 73, 74, Factory, 10, 12, 17, 19, 95, 124, 132, 134, 153 130, 132, 136, 146 Elfman, Danny, 23, 37, 42, Christmas, 20, 41, 65, 69, 75, 45, 46, 47, 52, 55, 60, 63, 79, 138, 140 70, 74, 79, 89, 93, 99, 103, Comic (books), 39, 58, 61, 112, 114, 117, 121, 127, 89, 100, 102, 124, 142 130, 135, 137, 138, 139, Czapsky, Stefan, 63, 74, 80, 140, 141, 150 84, 88 Faerie Tale Theatre, 9, 20, 33, Dahl, Roald, 130, 132, 134, 34 136, 146 Family Dog, 10, 20, 35, 137 Davis, Geena, 47 Finney, Albert, 121 Depp, Johnny, 63, 70, 71, 73, Fox, Michael J, 93 84, 86, 88, 103, 108, 110, Franco, Larry, 74, 93, 103 130, 133 Frankenstein, 17, 28, 30, 31, Design, 18, 30, 47, 51, 52, 69, 107 69, 79, 99, 114, 140, 149, Frankenweenie, 9, 20, 30, 31, 153 37, 47, 153 DeVito, Danny, 44, 74, 93, 96, 121, 125, 128 Gadgets/Gadgetry, 19, 38, Di Novi, Denise, 63, 74, 83, 40, 42, 79, 108 84, 138, 141, 145 Gambon, Michael, 103 Disney, 26, 28, 29, 33, 79, Ghosts, 14, 48, 51 111, 137, 140 Godzilla, 21, 25, 32, 38, 41, Dogs, 20 44, 67, 95 Duvall, Shelly, 30, 33, 34, Gorey, Edward, 13 37 Gothic, 9, 52, 65, 70, 79, 127, 147 Ed Wood, 10, 14, 19, 22, 83, 84, 89, 90, 95, 125, 129, Halloween, 11, 136 153 Hammer lms, 103, 106 Edward Scissorhands, 9, 15, Hansel and Gretel, 9, 29 16, 17, 18, 20, 21, 22, 32, Harryhausen, Ray, 15 156

INDEX

Heinrichs, Rick, 27, 30, 34, 47, 79, 111, 112, 114, 127, 138 Hollywood, 9, 11, 12, 21, 53, 57, 60, 69, 77, 86, 89, 91, 100, 118, 149 Horror, 13, 14, 15, 23, 25, 28, 48, 51, 52, 84, 88, 89, 91, 95, 97, 103, 105, 106, 110, 123, 154 Jack Skellington, 17, 18, 26, 53, 108, 136, 138, 147 James and the Giant Peach, 10, 145, 147, 153 Jar,The 9, 45, 47 Jones, Jeffrey, 47, 84, 87, 103 Jones,Tom, 67, 93, 95, 97 Keaton, Michael, 41, 47, 49, 50, 53, 55, 58, 74, 144 Landau, Martin, 84, 87, 88 Lee, Christopher, 103, 130, 134, 136 Lugosi, Bela, 19, 84, 85, 88, 91, 110 Mad scientist, 17 Marie, Lisa, 82, 84, 87, 93, 103, 113, 120, 149, 150 Mars Attacks!, 10, 14, 15, 16, 17, 19, 21, 26, 50, 93, 95, 99, 100, 102, 114, 120,

124, 134, 152, 153 Martian, 17, 18, 93, 96, 100, 101, 117 McGregor, Ewan, 121, 128 Murray, Bill, 84, 87 Nicholson, Jack, 55, 58, 60, 93, 96 Nightmare Before Christmas, The, 10, 26, 44, 52, 72, 82, 83, 99, 108, 127, 138, 139, 140, 141, 147, 151, 152, 153 OBrien,Willis, 15, 32, 99 OHara, Catherine, 47, 138 Oingo Boingo, 23, 79 Oscar, 53, 62, 87, 111, 119 Parents, 16, 50, 56, 58, 75, 79, 97, 144, 145, 146 Parker, Sarah Jessica, 84, 93 Pee-wee Herman, 14, 37, 38, 39, 43, 82, 142 Pfeiffer, Michelle, 74 Planet of the Apes, 10, 20, 23, 112, 114, 117, 118, 127, 153 Poe, Edgar Allan, 13, 15, 25, 27, 101 Portman, Natalie, 93 Price,Vincent, 25, 27, 28, 51, 63, 72, 88, 103, 116, 133

157

INDEX

Reubens, Paul, 37, 38, 39, 43, 44, 82, 138 Ricci, Christina, 103 Richardson, Miranda, 103 Ryder,Winona, 47, 63 Science Fiction, 15, 25, 88, 118 Selick, Henry, 138, 139, 141, 145, 147 Shore, Howard, 84, 88, 89 Sleepy Hollow, 10, 14, 15, 16, 17, 19, 20, 22, 25, 35, 42, 102, 103, 104, 105, 108, 109, 110, 112, 127, 152, 153 Snow, 20, 65, 69, 70, 71, 80, 108, 138 Stainboy, 150, 153 Stop-motion, 12, 26, 28, 52,

100, 142 Stripes, 59 Swirls, 18, 22, 34, 135 Television, 19, 20, 21, 33, 34, 35, 43, 45, 46, 64, 76, 91, 97, 102, 113, 119, 134, 135 Thompson, Caroline, 63, 72, 138, 141, 151, 152 Toys, 19, 30, 38, 44, 53, 79, 119, 138 Vincent, 21, 27, 28, 29, 32, 73, 153 Wahlberg, Mark, 113 Walken, Christopher, 74, 81, 103, 109, 110

158

POCKET ESSENTIALS FILM STOCK TITLES


1903047005 1903047463 1903047676 1903047587 1903047129 1903047579 190404803X 1903047811 190304703X 1903047196 1903047633 1903047080 1904048080 190304748X 1903047943 1904048013 1904048145 1904048110 1903047382 1903047102 1903047951 1903047242 1903047374 1903047250 1903047668 1903047595 1903047846 1903047641 1903047927 1903047048 1904084366 1903047560 1904048102 1903047897 1903047277 1904048072 1903047013 190304782X 1903047145 1903047625 190304717X 1903047935 1903047056 1903047471 Alfred Hitchcock NE Paul Duncan 4.99 Animation Mark Whitehead 4.99 Audrey Hepburn Ellen Cheshire 3.99 Blaxploitation Films Mikel J Koven 3.99 Brian de Palma John Ashbrook 3.99 Bruce Lee Simon B Kenny 3.99 Carry On Films Mark Campbell 4.99 Clint Eastwood Michael Carlson 3.99 Coen Brothers Cheshire/Ashbrook 4.99 Doctor Who Mark Campbell 4.99 Film Music Paul Tonks 3.99 Film Noir Paul Duncan 3.99 Film Studies Andrew M Butler 4.99 Filming on a Microbudget NE Paul Hardy 4.99 George Lucas James Clarke 3.99 German Expressionist Films Paul Cooke 3.99 Hal Hartley Jason Wood 3.99 Hammer Films John McCarty 3.99 Horror Films Le Blanc/Odell 3.99 Jackie Chan Le Blanc/Odell 3.99 James Cameron Brian J Robb 3.99 Jane Campion Ellen Cheshire 3.99 John Carpenter Le Blanc/Odell 3.99 Krzystzof Kieslowski Monika Maurer 3.99 Martin Scorsese Paul Duncan 4.99 The Marx Brothers Mark Bego 3.99 Michael Mann Mark Steensland 3.99 Mike Hodges Mark Adams 3.99 Oliver Stone Michael Carlson 3.99 Orson Welles Martin Fitzgerald 3.99 Quentin Tarantino D.K. Holm 4.99 Ridley Scott Brian Robb 4.99 Roger Corman Mark Whitehead 3.99 Roman Polanski Daniel Bird 3.99 Slasher Movies Mark Whitehead 3.99 Spike Lee Darren Arnold 3.99 Stanley Kubrick Paul Duncan 3.99 Steven Soderbergh Jason Wood 3.99 Terry Gilliam John Ashbrook 3.99 Tim Burton Le Blanc/Odell 4.99 Vampire Films Le Blanc/Odell 3.99 Vietnam War Movies Jamie Russell 3.99 Woody Allen Martin Fitzgerald 3.99 Writing a Screenplay John Costello 4.99

Available from all good bookshops or send a cheque to: Pocket Essentials (Dept SS), P.O. Box 394, Harpenden, Herts, AL5 1XJ. Please make cheques payable to Oldcastle Books, add 50p for postage and packing for each book in the UK and 1 elsewhere. US customers can send $8.95 plus $1.95 postage and packing for each book payable to; Trafalgar Square Publishing, PO Box 257, Howe Hill, North Pomfret,Vermont 05053, USA email [email protected] Customers worldwide can order online at www.pocketessentials.com

You might also like