Hello! My friend Hannah and I started a podcast :) it's called Rehash, and it's all about social media phenomenons that once took the world by storm, only to be quickly forgotten! We're releasing episodes weekly, which you can find here (and wherever you get your podcasts): anchor.fm/rehashpodcast
@SevenEllen2 жыл бұрын
Are you going to make a video discussing Wednesday?
@Murph1102 жыл бұрын
👍👍👍👍
@jonathanruiz8662 жыл бұрын
Your trippen people just restrict him from his amazing work Disney is good at that
@zerimaraicirtap3222 жыл бұрын
Can you talk about Guillermo del Toro?
@uncleanfilms97292 жыл бұрын
@Broey Deschanel where did you get your information? because it sounds like you just read it off of Wikipedia. just to let you know that they are not a reliable source because anyone can just go on there and write whatever they want.
@danderson84312 жыл бұрын
I was a HUGE Burton fan, but as a Black person, I was VERY offended that he would never want a person who looks like me to soil his image of a perfect world. He goes out of his way to exclude anyone of color from his films. That turned me off real quick. Now, I rarely watch his films that I actually liked, and I have no interest in any of his new works. I’m not saying that a Black person needs to star in every film, but to not even have any as side characters or in the background takes a determination of exclusivity. (I acknowledge the exception of Mars Attacks, and that’s actually my favorite of his.) And, yes Tim has the right to create his art how he wants, I have the right not to support him anymore.
@DCoop19822 жыл бұрын
Same. Grew up watching and re-watching Pee Wee’s Big Adventure, Beetle Juice, Batman… so disheartened by his statements😢
@batguy392 жыл бұрын
OOF
@rhonnichan2 жыл бұрын
Bigggg same!
@JC-yy8iv2 жыл бұрын
And his reasoning was just insane (his aesthetic doesn’t generally “call for” people of color), made me feel like in private he’s one of those racist goths I’ve spent 15 years arguing with online who says goth isn’t for Black people
@2eachaccording2 жыл бұрын
It was disappointing...like black people will mess with your aesthetic? All these movies about the "othering" of individuals based on group expectations and he didn't catch the irony of what he was saying there 🤦🏻♀️
@darkninjafirefox2 жыл бұрын
Fewer things annoy me more than when people credit Henry Selick's work directing Nightmare Before Christmas and Coraline to Burton. The man has made good movies but those two aren't his
@silyknow2 жыл бұрын
Thank you! I’m so tired of seeing TNBC be credited solely to Burton. Yes he created the original poem but literally every good thing about the movie was implemented by Selick. I love Selick’s work and he just created a movie that was released a few days ago, and I recommend it heavily.
@atelierofwitchhat2 жыл бұрын
same
@silyknow2 жыл бұрын
@@jonathanlgill yea!
@0x8080FF2 жыл бұрын
Burton did create the concept of Nightmare Before Christmas; the story, the world, and characters are mostly his ideas. Selick's technical mastery in stop-motion was vital in helping him realize these ideas, but I don't think he deserves all the credit either. All films are collaborations, and that film would not be what it is without the great work of Burton, Selick, Caroline Thompson, Danny Elfman, and many others. Burton had nothing to do with Coraline though so anyone who says that is just confused.
@MadameTamma2 жыл бұрын
To me when thinking about the creative team behind The Nightmare before Christmas, multiple names come to mind but the first one is Danny Elfman. I just feel so much of his soul in the work, especially in his performance of Jack.
@upperechelon56922 жыл бұрын
Danny Elfman helped Burton more than people are aware. Much of his best work was immortalized through the sound.
@nuclearcatbaby11312 жыл бұрын
He practically wrote the script to Nightmare too. Well technically it was his girlfriend Caroline Thompson but her script was based largely on Elfman’s lyrics from the songs which were the first part of the movie that got made. And it’s clear if you compare the original poem to the song lyrics how much he influenced Burton’s characters, in particular Jack Skellington. Elfman wrote some movie scripts that he planned on directing and even got so far as to recording the demos (look up “Little Demons” and “The World of Jimmy Callicut” if you want to hear) before Disney scrapped his projects.
@Jane-oz7pp2 жыл бұрын
Take Elfman, Depp and Helena out of his movies and you don't really have much left tbh
@CommentPoster102 жыл бұрын
Batman is carried almost entirely by the music
@hagerty19522 жыл бұрын
Just like Spielberg and John Williams.
@ofthegrayfortress2 жыл бұрын
I think they all bounce off each other they all use one another and it ultimately works
@Feesh322 Жыл бұрын
Tim Burton's career reminds me of The Simpsons...counter-cultural and edgy for a while until the culture changes around them and they become the culture, whether they know it or not. The dog lost his teeth a long time ago and still thinks he's the toughest on the block, while anyone who's been around a while humors him out of affection because they still remember how he could bite.
@terewonself11 ай бұрын
I seriously love this comment. That’s all I wanted to say, I just love the way you phrased this.
@Δ-Δ-Δ-Δ10 ай бұрын
You deserve a pat in the back for this comment. Yes, this is what I've been thinking, too.
@blossom_generosty-9 ай бұрын
wtf dont insult dogs out of your own ignorance what a shitty comparison
@kevinw7128 ай бұрын
I've been thinking a lot lately about whether or not success is the death of creativity. Especially you initially started out making art really centered in the "common experience", if you will. That then the more successful you become, the more privileged your life will inevitably get, and can you fight your perspective changing for the worst.
@JenSell16268 ай бұрын
@@kevinw712I think the terms artistic success, commercial success, and specifically Hollywood success need to be handled deftly in parsing that out
@Mimikinn2 жыл бұрын
As soon as I got to the part where Tim is talking about his high school reunion, I knew where this was going. Some people just never grow up past 18 and it’s not always the jocks and cheerleaders.
@DC_let_the_Waynes_be_happy2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, the way he described feels icky to me, idk how to explain it well
@libRteedude2 жыл бұрын
Dude became a multimillion dollar Hollywood director and he still held grudges over high school. Is it safe to say he might be a tad insecure?
@parkchimmin7913 Жыл бұрын
@@DC_let_the_Waynes_be_happy Nah, I understand. He comes off as smug and petty. “Oh looks at these people now; they’re not as successful as me. They only peaked in high school.” Like ffs, you’re all adults now. You’ve had time to mature and develop, so let bygones be bygones.
@edithputhy4948 Жыл бұрын
@@parkchimmin7913 all he did was prove that they still live in his mind rent-free even decades after they graduated
@parkchimmin7913 Жыл бұрын
@@edithputhy4948 EXACTLY
@BroeyDeschanel2 жыл бұрын
UPDATE: Burton announced a few days ago that he likely won't continue to work with Disney, expressing his dislike with how homogenized their output has become and stating, ""I realized that I was Dumbo, that I was working in this horrible big circus and I needed to escape." So that's a hopeful turn :) Also - I'm considering doing a video in the future on Henry Selick and his influence on children's films, because I rewatched Coraline recently and, wow, that man is a treasure. He is first and foremost the man who brought Nightmare to life, so he really deserves a video all on his own. Lastly - this video is a bit different from many of my other videos in that it's much more opinion heavy, and rooted in my own personal relationship to Burton's work. I am not trying to tell anyone they aren't allowed to like the films I criticize, only to draw attention to a trend that myself and others I've spoken to have noticed with him. CORRECTION: Charlie returns an everlasting gobstopper not a fizzy lifting drink (something I realized way too late into editing in a tight deadline and could not fix unfortunately). I knew while making this what Sleepy Hollow was a fan favourite. Again, why I say this video is based on personal opinion. I watched it for the first time this year with some friends, and maybe there was no nostalgic connection, we really didn't like it at all! We also all found Ichabod's mom to be bizarrely s*xualized considering all of the scenes she occupies are with a child who is meant to be her son. The camera focuses on her exposed chest for very long amounts of time, intercut with shots of Ichabod's smiling face looking up at her. The subtext was pretty easy to draw for all of us - and I'm not someone who typically reads into things so crudely. I don't think our initial reaction was so far a reach - I'm sure it's not what Burton intended, but due to the fact that he and Lisa Marie had an intimate relationship at the time it appears he let that influence his depiction of her rather than the character she was supposed to play. IMO!
@Chikadulce102 жыл бұрын
Would love a video on Henry Selick! Nightmare before Christmas and Coraline are two of my favorite movies ever😄
@MyssBlewm2 жыл бұрын
YES PLS Please can we have some time to give Henry Selick some praise? His works are so clever and from the BTS stuff he seems like such a collaborative person. Giving kudos to the craftspeople who bring the whole project to life.
@stigoftdump2 жыл бұрын
I love hearing your personal take on work, more of this please! Loved it!
@Nkanyiso_K2 жыл бұрын
Especially now that he's made a new film I think more people need to hear the name Henry Selick
@sweetsnejinka94112 жыл бұрын
I had no idea Nightmare wasn't Burton's work, so I'd love a deep dive on selick.
@ch3rry__b0mb2 жыл бұрын
i always accredited his downfall to del toro becoming a household name as well. someone who almost has the same identity of being outcasted for who they were, but del toro writes it better because he’s not afraid of being emotional like burton was. del toro made macabre beautiful & heartbreaking & comforting all at once which i always felt burton really failed at
@myrtaleellery2 жыл бұрын
I think Del Toro's success is caused by his empathy: he greatly emphasizes with all his characters, even the villains. In "Pan's Labyrinth," he could've written the General as heartless and cold and with no purpose but that of being a villain, but he didn't: the General has his personality, his malice and evilness is not something innate, but rather, something that his traumatic past gave him. This doesn't excuse him, but it makes him a far more rounded out character than any other villain. The same can be said about the Sharpe Siblings in "Crimson Peak."
@lindanorris24552 жыл бұрын
NO> BURTON got way tooooooooooooooooooooo mixed up with the organization that "WALT" created. MONEY! MONEY! MONEY!
@lindanorris24552 жыл бұрын
DEL TORO IS A FABULOUS DIRECTOR.
@damoncurrie71032 жыл бұрын
@@myrtaleellery nicely put
@aidafuentesv2 жыл бұрын
And Guillermo has this personal trait of not demeaning others people work just because it's popular. He appreciates every form of art and entertainment. He always talks about the otherness as he calls it but in a very philosophical and respectful way and not just in a superficial manner which is what I think Burton. When you watch an interview with Guillermo you feel like you're understanding the world in a magical way, like if he was giving you a hug, when I watch an interview with Burton I just feel like he's mad.
@0x13horizon4 Жыл бұрын
This is just speculation, but I think Burton is largely a visual arts and spectacle kind of director, but that most of his better films when it comes to storytelling can be largely attributed to the people he worked with. He’s not a good director, he’s a good art director, and him trying to fill the shoes of a director has its pitfalls and inconsistencies.
@fernandomaron87 Жыл бұрын
I feel the same way about Baz Luhmann
@balderramices Жыл бұрын
I think you’re both correct!
@Mattwest1985 Жыл бұрын
This makes total sense!
@TheHonestPeanut11 ай бұрын
@fernandomaron87 good song though.
@pennywise566210 ай бұрын
That and he never grew out of the goth pozer faze. He likes an aesthetic and thinks it makes him an outsider but it just makes him like every other artist with a quirky sense of style. He likes the feeling of being the outcast but doesn't actually have anything to say. And from all accounts if he ever does figure out what he really thinks he'll probably be a fascist. I get Rodger Water vibes from him, it might be a mental disease actually, artist that goes with the outsider approach always seems to get fascist in old age. I mean Hitler never got to be the artist he wanted to be originally.
@IskandarTheWack2 жыл бұрын
He never was counter culture, he just was counter imagery. He’s adopting the aesthetic and nothing more.
@freeloading_toad2 жыл бұрын
Eggs-fucking-actually
@darnellmajor88952 жыл бұрын
I would say he was counter culture but without being in-your-face or political about it. You just had to notice it.
@someperson21592 жыл бұрын
He was counterculture. Counter white-christian culture.
@lordskeletor4812 жыл бұрын
@@darnellmajor8895 You can't be counter culture without being either of those things, the first is making yourself palatable to the culture you intend to counter, which inevitably makes you a part of that culture by ensuring your ability to be accepted by it, and the latter is literally what counter culture is. You cannot be counter culture without knowing the culture you are countering, and that includes the political landscape!!! That's why counter culture movements see resurgences during times of political unrest, because politics shape society and society shapes culture and counter culture attacks all three of those. If you are not doing both of those things, then as the OC said, you are just taking the aesthetic and nothing more. Counter culture is literally "Fuck you, I won't do what you tell me, and I will not shut up about it" (affectionate)
@lordskeletor4812 жыл бұрын
@@someperson2159 Was he??? Because if he were counter white-christian culture, why is everyone white and american or british (two cultures with dominant christian religions)? Like the number of nonwhite characters in tim burton movies can be counted on one hand; 1. So idk, seems pretty pro-white christian culture to me, it's just moreso that he doesn't like certain individuals. He's not against a culture, he's against the people who made fun of him in school. EDIT: Sorry I did not realize that this comment was sarcasm.
@badbabybear12 жыл бұрын
One of the problems with Burton is he became someone who stuck to his comfort zone and never tried to grow or challenge himself. His stuff was novel at first but over time, as people grew used to his style, his shortcomings became clear. He made the same film over and over again. The constant focus on feeling like an outsider feels tiresome and immature after a point, particularly when he makes big-budget films that have obviously commercial leanings. He's ultimately someone that comes across as self-indulgent.
@stellaanderson72462 жыл бұрын
That's my feeling too. He's got himself locked into his "weird, misunderstood outsider" schtick in a way that probably isn't psychologically healthy and prevents his work from developing.
@Dm344212 жыл бұрын
He’s a one trick pony just like Sam Levinson.
@beanbean83752 жыл бұрын
Paused the vid at the halfway mark to comment on this. To connect this with the point made about Burton being uncomfortable with Big Fish's emotional scenes set in reality: if he learned how to sit with the discomfort of raw emotional honesty, I think he might still have a shot at breaking through the box he's made for himself. Imo there will always be a need to tackle topics of how people are othered and become outsiders, but as you've highlighted, he keeps on making the same film. Surely there are other ways, angles, and perspectives available for that particular theme that can make it interesting?
@heropath34.vaselisc.352 жыл бұрын
Tim Burton... Aesthetic is indeed a curse for him... :(
@delsingray59232 жыл бұрын
Misunderstood outsiders need representation, too.
@Shenaldrac2 жыл бұрын
"Do you think being a father will influence your film making?" "No, but I do think my films will be darker because of it." My dude. Tim. Timmy. Timothy. _That means being a father is influencing your film making._
@offsewingdragons91422 жыл бұрын
My dude. My man. Tim. Timmy. Timothy. Timster. Timothy jimothy. The big J. J man. *That means being a father is influencing your film making*
@Shenaldrac2 жыл бұрын
@@offsewingdragons9142 Thank you this made me smile the biggest smile.
@J0SHUAKANE Жыл бұрын
So you figured out the joke, good job😐👍
@chicka-boom7540 Жыл бұрын
I think this line actually illustrates his pubescent-like overall meaningless rebelliousness very well. "Am I going to make more innocent movies because I'm a father now? No... Actually, since you asked, I'll make them *darker* out of spite. That's what you people get for assuming things about *me*, the utterly unpredictable."
@Shenaldrac Жыл бұрын
@@chicka-boom7540 Peak contrarian: Dies of asphyxiation after someone told him he needs to breathe air and he held his breath in a fit of pique to prove them wrong.
@JagoHazzard Жыл бұрын
I remember there was a time when Tim Burton wasn't a brand. I mean, sure, he had his favourite actors and he had a distinctive style that he used a lot, but you never really knew what to expect from him. I can't imagine modern Burton doing something like Mars Attacks! or Ed Wood.
@Exalted_in_Venus Жыл бұрын
Edward scissor hands will always be a favourite of mine. The score, the sets, the aesthetics, the story. There's so many of his earlier films that are just wonderful. Beetlejuice, The original Frakenweenie (never saw the full length) Edward scissor hands, I like sleepy hollow, corpse bride, nightmare was his producing and story not his directing so idk if it counts here. Mars attacks! Is so funny.
@elderscrolls694209 ай бұрын
In RedLetterMedia’s video on Pee-wee’s Big Adventure, they compare scenes from the original (Burton’s debut!!) with what they imagine he’d do now. Even though they’re only describing what they imagine it would look like now, it feels soooo spot on since his visual style has evolved into almost a parody itself. The ‘Burton’ aesthetic (which honestly with the rise of CG I think has gotten pretty ugly lol) is so recognizable that I think it takes away from the films where it once added character. It doesn’t feel like there’s any intention or care in any of his aesthetic choices now.
@DianaAmericaRivero2 жыл бұрын
I rewatched Beetlejuice recently and was struck by how sweet and family oriented it is at its core. The Maitlands are a childless couple hounded by their nosy local realtor into selling their gorgeous home because "it's too big for just the two of them," and when they die, said home is sold to a couple of neurotic New Yorkers who seriously neglect their teen daughter. By the end of the film, the Maitlands and Deetzes become a kind of blended family to co-parent Lydia. It's all very cute and I love it.
@imjustdandy97992 жыл бұрын
I think that's one of the reasons why it holds up better, like Big Fish, it has a more meaningful emotional core to it.
@blackdiopside52612 жыл бұрын
Beetlejuice is the only Tim Burton film I've continued to enjoy into adulthood. Nightmare Before Christmas interested me as a kid briefly mainly for the aesthetic. Edward Scissorhands and Sleepy Hollow I grew out of by my early teens. Big fish was interesting but by then I noticed that he stuck to his style so much his movies seemed repetitive. And it annoyed me that his main characters and their love interests were mostly the same types of personalities and relationship dynamic.
@iamV10010 Жыл бұрын
@Anti SJW I adored the cartoon. Loved how he took Lydia to the underworld where he was from. It feels like a fever dream now.
@fishbrain9591 Жыл бұрын
@@blackdiopside5261 There needs to be billboards across the world telling people that Nightmare Before Christmas was WRITTEN by Tim Burton, but DIRECTED by Henry Selick! There's a reason why that movie was so good and I guarantee that it wasn't because of Tim Burton, he just got all the credit.
@elimidd66264 ай бұрын
This! I rewatched it recently and was struck by how *normal* the Maitlands are. It's the Deetez that bring in the dark aesthetic, it represents the Maitlands world being turned upside down. Once everything settles and the two families start getting along that normal, farmhouse aesthetic is restored. I can't imagine the Tim Burton we know today using that kind of visual story telling.
@najah77812 жыл бұрын
He just never outgrew his "not like other girls"/"I'm more special because I am UNIQUE unlike the popular, well-adjusted kids" phase.
@reesafield74012 жыл бұрын
I hate that lollll as someone who has been fed those lines by males, my peers, etc. my whole life it IRKS me. There are billions of girls in the world, there is STATISTICALLY no way that I am that special.
@najah77812 жыл бұрын
@@reesafield7401 i think most of us went through that phase, I certainly did haha
@hollyro46652 жыл бұрын
It does seem that way. Everyone has the usual angst about school usually peaking within the first year of leaving. But then people tend to have a life to get on with beyond all that. It’s weird to me that he seems so stuck there. Surely in all the years since he went to school, he has had enough other experiences in life to move on or at least focus some of his art on them occasionally. I can’t tell if he just needs a massive amount of therapy or if it’s just, I hate to say it but, a bit pathetic really.
@kissarococo24592 жыл бұрын
@@hollyro4665 He said at his class reunion how popular kids peaked in high school. Ironically he did not see how he did too as most outcasts eventually realize that popular kids are just as complex too.
@hollyro46652 жыл бұрын
@@kissarococo2459 yeah! His entire ideal of peaking and outcasts is built around Highschool. So when he says they’ve peaked it says more about his ideals than it does theirs. To him being on top in high school is as good as it gets so whatever their lives are now were never gonna live up to his standards of peaking. He also puts the outcast thing on a huge pedestal. His own personal ideal. And as a result he’s gonna think they failed in life unless they went on to reject societal norms and become just like him. He has no concept of them having their own dreams and ideals outside of his very rigid view of popular in Highschool or social outcast being all there is.
@pomegranatejelly97672 жыл бұрын
I'm a massive Alice in Wonderland nerd and was kind of saddened by how much Burton's adaptation ignored all of the interesting, potentially deep or dark elements of the original novel, and went for a weirdly generic hero's journey/girlboss story. It made me start to reanalyze the films he made that I adored growing up, and I'm just so glad to see someone voice my criticisms of his work and so much more with way more depth and clarity than I could pull off. You put words to how empty his more recent films, especially his adaptations feel. Thanks for this, it helps give a bit of closure.
@Cheetahgirl_Studios2 жыл бұрын
While I do like his work, I always found that bizarre too. To be frank, I think American McGee’s Alice games have a more Burton feel than Burton’s Alice in Wonderland adaptation itself. They delve into just how twisted the source material could be, all the while offering a mystery within our world outside that of Wonderland. If you want a darker take on the tale, I’d recommend giving Alice in Wonderland: Madness Returns a look. I will say it handles the like of SA and other touchy subjects, but it’s a really good game and story to boot.
@faildabortion2 жыл бұрын
I'm glad American McGee's Alice games exist because what Burton did didn't satisfy me as HUGE alice in wonderland fan (of the book, and i also loved disney’s animated version of it as a kid and as a teen too!)
@kessler59022 жыл бұрын
That's how I felt about his Charlie and the Chocolate Factory film. I know people say Roald Dahl would've like his interpretation (especially over the 1971version, which Dahl hated), but even so it isn't as faithful to the book as people say. It's way more Burton than Dahl.
@N03_032 жыл бұрын
I think it needed a better screenwriter who understood the material
@WereScrib2 жыл бұрын
Alice in Wonderland was ridiculous because like, he absolutely managed to make a saccharine, moralistic, by the books and uninteresting tale out of a book that is fundamentally about not that. Carol wrote with a lot of religious metaphor and a desire to teach actual lessons, but had an idea that children needed to have lessons taught in a more indirect fashion to open up their mind to things in a non-patronizing way. Comically, Burton turned a book obsessed with not patronizing children into one that patronizes everyone that watches it.
@angeldelich9765 Жыл бұрын
I think Wendell & Wild was a big “screw you” to Tim Burton from Henry Selick and Jordan Peele. His exclusion of people of color contradicts the core beliefs he supposedly holds. Peele and Selick show you that not only does diversity fit into that world of the “whimsical outcast” - people of color have been involved in alternative subcultures always. The soundtrack featuring many black punk artists - newer like Big Joanie, or older like the nod to Pure Hell - really solidified that point too.
@dopaminedreams1122 Жыл бұрын
How ironic your complaining about Burtons exclusion of non whites (which he doesn’t even do btw have you never seen Wednesday?) while celebrating Peele who openly doesn’t cast white people as any kind of lead or non villain role, the only difference is your delusional views consider it fine to exclude whites people but never poc. Such lines of thinking will only ensure racism continues. Jordan Peele fans HATE white people, Burtons fans don’t hate anyone
@Your_friendly_racist_neighbor Жыл бұрын
Well there's no such thing as black goths. Sorry. Goth is a European thing.
@COrraThereal0ne Жыл бұрын
@@Your_friendly_racist_neighborWow what to expect from this account
@Your_friendly_racist_neighbor Жыл бұрын
@@COrraThereal0ne where does goth come from? Europe.
@Your_friendly_racist_neighbor Жыл бұрын
@@COrraThereal0ne trying to mix hip-hop culture with tim burtony goth is a dumb combination. For as much as a one trick pony tim Burton has become Jordan Peele is a hack for windell and wild. Trying to rip off tim Burton but make a black version.
@jeness2 жыл бұрын
Burtons feeling of being an outsider and outcast is interesting since throughout his career he has admited on not wanting to improve on the lack of diversity in his films (which is a shame because it’s not even his movie extras are any different from the main cast.) Which is interesting because he’s now become the person that casts outcasts aside when he is so vocal on how that has affected him.
@jeness2 жыл бұрын
@@treborkroy5280 sorry, poor choice of words. I mean “improve on the lack of diversity” fix in a sense
@dessy07132 жыл бұрын
@@treborkroy5280 People bruh
@ros99222 жыл бұрын
@@treborkroy5280 calm down trebor
@st4rchrry132 жыл бұрын
@@treborkroy5280 not reading allat
@tiwaanawo8162 жыл бұрын
@@treborkroy5280 stfu 🙄 omg other people exist and it isn't to much to ask for us to be represented in popular film.
@lifeiscomplikated2 жыл бұрын
It's hilarious to me that he mentioned LOTR when talking about over-using tech... Those movies have so many minute, practical details that, unless you watch the special features, you'd never have noticed but in the end it made the films SO incredible.
@whalesharko4465 Жыл бұрын
Yeah a very strange franchise to pick as an example of high tech films
@LeoMidori Жыл бұрын
@@whalesharko4465 Seriously, Star Wars was right there, even if many of its practical effects in the prequel trilogy are very understated compared to the oversaturated CG effects
@whalesharko4465 Жыл бұрын
@@LeoMidori Yeah exactly, star wars prequels and sequels are very high tech Although the OG is mostly puppets from what I know, I don't know that much tbh
@Chuck_EL Жыл бұрын
@@LeoMidori as a star wars fan since i was 3 , when i hear that "overuse cgi" arguement it makes me chuckle....because the prequels actually had less digital effects than the original trilogy
@friendlyspaceninja2 жыл бұрын
The way he lost his touch really hurts my inner child. Sleepy Hollow was elite to me growing up.
@Imyourcherryybomb2 жыл бұрын
I remember watching that movie solely for my crush Christina Ricci.
@PaolaCarlos2 жыл бұрын
omg hi king
@reneedailey16962 жыл бұрын
HARD same.
@teresarivasugaz23132 жыл бұрын
You, Wendigoon and Broey should collab!
@skriisi2 жыл бұрын
Sleepy Hollow will always have a place in my heart, because the art direction is immaculate. I don't care that the story doesn't make sense, the costuming and sets are right at the perfect edge of historical peppered with fantasy. I wish that he had done Sweeney Todd exactly like that and not in the stripey-sock mall goth style we got.
@Justin_Leone Жыл бұрын
Excellent analysis. I think seeing Alice in Wonderland was what triggered my plummeting opinion of Tim Burton. The 1951 cartoon always evoked such strong feelings of alienation and disorientation for me, with every new character encountered (even the relatively friendly ones) making Alice feel like more and more of an unwelcome outsider. Wonderland was a world without any clear order or direction to it, so Alice's (and by extension our own) presence there builds tension. I'm not typically a purist when it comes to retelling stories, but when you strip all that away, then what's the point of it? There are countless ways to compellingly present a "Mad" hatter, but reimagining him as a "Very Understandably Aggrieved" Hatter just isn't one of them.
@AoiUsagiOtoko Жыл бұрын
agreed, i feel like giving a backstory/explanation to anything in wonderland kinda ruins the whole thing. i don't watch an alice in wonderland movie to hear about how the mad hatter is secretly the sad hatter, i'm there to watch weird stuff happen and have fun with it
@Pandazillaaa Жыл бұрын
I watched another live action Alice in wonderland and I felt the same way.
@karolinakuc4783 Жыл бұрын
@@AoiUsagiOtokoIt wasn't backstory more like sequel because Alice is to remind herself that she was there and who she was there. But it didn't have charm of the first book. It really felt like Burton only read summary of these books and thought let's make a movie.
@redactedandredactedaccesor72909 ай бұрын
Well the original was written by a pedophile so it could use a little deconstructing.
@teslashark8 ай бұрын
Same, Burton's Alice rips off both his own Chocolate Factory and American McGee's Alice
@Wendigoon2 жыл бұрын
This video went hard. I’ve had trouble figuring out why I find him so conflicting, but this laid it out perfectly.
@lanAdraHrepuS2 жыл бұрын
I thought you were a bot for a hot second, but it’s actually the man himself!
@elise29552 жыл бұрын
Wahey! I love your content man
@djdreampunk78852 жыл бұрын
Hey dude, are you still stuck in that cave?
@Xenobork2 жыл бұрын
@@djdreampunk7885 He's out bro he's lost on brown mountain rn
@hereforthechaos76142 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I totally agree
@heliodorable46122 жыл бұрын
so funny how he claimed that all of his peers seemed to peak in high school, and yet here he is, all these years later, reliving the same traumas and themes that he hasn't been able to let go of since his adolescence. truly a full circle moment, although he doesn't appear to have realized it
@lujorom9172 Жыл бұрын
That’s what I was thinking! It’s seems like he’s barely grown at all from his teenage self.
@Bard420 Жыл бұрын
That's what happens when you self-isolate. You don't really grow or learn as a person. It's unfortunate but I still support him because you can tell he's a good person at heart, just doesn't seem to realize his anger and bitterness doesn’t comes from being an outcast(He's a lot more accepted than he realizes). It comes from other aspects of life. I think he is depressed. I used to think a similar way. And he's not a role model but he definitely inspired younger me to be more myself and realize that not everything is black and white.
@Arcaryon Жыл бұрын
@@Bard420 Could you define just a bit what you mean by self-isolation? I ask because I think that people can grow when they are alone IF they do not shut the world out and remain critical of themselves to a reasonable extent - would that be classified as someone who "self-isolates" or is that something different in your opinion?
@Bard420 Жыл бұрын
@@Arcaryon By self-isolating, I mean someone who shuts the world out and remains critical. When I got really depressed, I became angry at the world because of some things I experienced that were out of my control as a child. Obviously I’ve grown a lot since then, but I wasn’t able to start until I accepted that sometimes bad things happen in life for no reason other than being at the right place, at the wrong time. And also that it wasn’t other people making my life miserable. It was a mixture of lots of various things. I see Tim Burton as being kind of stuck in this mentality that he’s an “outsider” who will never be accepted, and when you feel like an outsider, you’re naturally going to wonder why you are so different from everyone else. If you have a poor self image or poor self esteem, this can turn into a negative thought pattern about yourself. If your self esteem/self image is alright(like you don’t feel bad about yourself), it may turn into resentment because “Why can’t they see that I’m just like them?” Which can escalate into, “Fine, I don’t need you guys anyway.” I imagine Tim Burton as being the latter. A guy who feels like an outsider, and is probably, to some extent, maybe a little depressed. But I’m not saying that as if it is fact, that’s just my personal observation based on what I know and what I have seen. So I kind of see it as, Tim Burton is a guy who self-isolated, and became a little resentful of those who didn’t accept him and/or bullied him. Nothing wrong with that. The only thing is, to me it looks like dude never accepted that people do accept him these days because he made it cool to be an outsider, so he’s still carrying around that same resentment, with nowhere for it to go but into his movies and such. Because he can’t move forward, he isn’t able to grow from his experiences. He hasn’t learned anything. He can’t improve because he hasn’t accepted that there is a problem in the first place, or he doesn’t know how to deal with negative feelings. Or maybe he’s just content. But he isn’t opening himself up to new ideas. Mental health wasn’t prioritized as much when he was up and coming, at least as far as I’m aware, so it’s not a diss at him at all. I don’t really expect him to be educated in those areas.
@Chuck_EL Жыл бұрын
@@lujorom9172 i am still a fan of his....i actually read the superman script kevin smith wrote for tim burton, and saw storyboards.....as a superman and tim burton fan i loved it, he didnt shy away from making brainic (my fave superman villian) a dark and scary villian that he was in the comics and lex was going to merge with him that shit was badass and definatley would of scared people (think the superman 3 robot morphing scene but more graphic) ....i even dug nicholas cage as superman with the silver age longer hair superman arc look and he was still gonna be the small town farm boy who was akward as clark...which nicholas was perfect for ... but warner bros threw him under the bus
@xxmooshooxx2 жыл бұрын
I realized about halfway through Alice and Wonderland that Burton lost his magic. And honestly, Coraline and James and the Giant Peach compared to Frankenweenie and Corpse Bride made me realize that Henry Selick was the stopmotion magician. I love Burtons OG characters, but Selick's taste is IMPECCABLE. Hearing Burton say that POC's don't have a place in his work was actually heartbreaking. But then Selick responded by making Wendell and Wild with Jordan Peele. Further cementing his status as an absolute legend 🖤🖤
@clairekirpalani60812 жыл бұрын
Tim Burton had nothing to do with Coraline, it is a book written by Neil Gaiman. The film was directed by Henry Selick.
@StarWarsThrowbacks2 жыл бұрын
I LOVE Coraline
@Keopro2 жыл бұрын
I think there's actually a common point of division here. It appears Laika were technically involved in Corpse Bride but they also were involved in Paranorman and Coraline. They proved that when it came to stopmotion, the people Burton had worked with took those lessons and ran with them while Burton made Frankenweenie which felt like self-parody at times and took a turn on its moral in the last few minutes.
@ericfelds62912 жыл бұрын
I had a sort of similar experience in the theater, however it didn’t make me question if he lost his magic, it made question if it was ever there in the first place.
@princessmarlena13592 жыл бұрын
Well said!
@theunstoppablevanman Жыл бұрын
31:49 "You can't just have a funny guy in a bow tie who's whimsical." The 11th doctor: ceases to exist.
@melodyflores00 Жыл бұрын
I read Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children. And I tried finding a comment mentioning it. But he erased all the gloom that the book really gave, all the color made it a weird fantasy world instead of the dreadful reality that has monsters and children who weren’t normal. The main love interest Emma is replaced to have the levitating ability even though her fire ability was significant through the books especially since it showed how fiery she is :/ ruin the whole fucking book for me. i was so hyped only for it to the opposite of everything i expected and there was so much potential for a trilogy movie that really went to the dark world of the peculiar children.
@boojersey13 Жыл бұрын
You'd think a source material with literal, official accompanying images would give him a good enough idea of the visual style to go for at least a little bit...
@Fantistic Жыл бұрын
Honestly!! I remember when I saw the trailer, there was so many wrongs just by the trailer alone and the characters were either changed or scrapped. For an artist whose aesthetic is goth and dark, this was a disappointment, and I lost my respect for him as an artist
@archangelvalentine Жыл бұрын
Ah same, but my bias here is that I was never big into Burton. But I loved the Miss Peregrine's series, and was excited to see it on the big screen. But it was unfamiliar on screen, I didn't recognize many of the characters (especially Emma!) and the ending is....not for me, I guess. I decided then, his work isn't for me at all.
@Thor-Orion Жыл бұрын
His adaptation of Big Fish was such a terrible version of that book as well.
@Keldinosaurs Жыл бұрын
I agree, expect for me it made be enjoy the books more. Probably because I wasn't previously a fan. After Miss P I also ended up doing a lot of research into Burton as a person and realised how awful he was. Might be biased though since my Autistic ass had Miss P turn into my biggest SpIn ever lol. Edit: The books are my SpIn, not the movie :,)) I'm awful at explanations but to confirm, I hate the movie lol
@Rosemont1042 жыл бұрын
When creator Maxwell Atoms (of Billy and Mandy fame) criticized Burton's live-action Alice as "robo-dreck" and the embodiment of "story math" that he hates about the "Save the Cat" formula, I can clearly see why. Unlike Burton, he seems to have been emotionally invested in Alice, enough to be personally worked up after watching the new film. As for Burton, the difference between Alice and Edward is that the former is a girl, the latter is a "loner guy" like him and "loner guys" like him cannot see women as anything other than the alien, unattainable cheerleader from high school.
@JC-yy8iv2 жыл бұрын
Ugh and its hollow, superficial attempt to be… I wouldn’t even say feminist, more like “girl-power-y” just falls so, so flat for that very reason
@camilletorres-kelly6282 жыл бұрын
On a similar note, that last sentence made me realize why a lot of male film critics love Hocus Pocus and hate Halloweentown. They can relate to Hocus Pocus’s awkward virgin teen boy protagonist, but doubt Marnie’s status as a weirdo. Heck, even the Nostalgia Critic called Marnie “the cheerleader from American Beauty”, which makes your statement on Tim Burton ring even more true. Also, do you have a link showing Maxwell’s criticisms?
@Snips.Snails.Fairytales2 жыл бұрын
I have to agree. I loved Burton's Alice on a first watch, and I can credit it with helping grow my genuine love for the book. However, as time has passed and I have read and watched more adaptations of Wonderland, I realized I have a lot of problems with the portrayal of Alice's character in many of them. Especially Burton's. I think directors and writers assume that Alice must be boring to make everyone else stand out. As a result, Alice ends up being a footnote in a world that she created. I know everyone compares Burton's Alice to American McGee's Alice, but I think it's worth pointing out the portrayal of Alice herself. Alice in the video game gets angry, is allowed to make jokes and banter, and has a very dark world revolving entirely around her recovery from survivor's guilt. Alice in Burton's movie starts vaguely rebellious (in the most anachronistic and shallow ways), is dragged through the plot by other characters with minimal opinion, and ends up with somehow less personality than she had at the beginning. I don't blame the actress for this, because I know she is wonderful in other films. Burton's direction seemed to boil down to looking wide eyed and mildly perturbed at everything. Even the animated film by Disney gave her more to do than that.
@trinketeerrine66742 жыл бұрын
@@Snips.Snails.Fairytales That's so true ! Burton's Alice doesn't emote at all, no shock, no surprise, no anger or anything... That was so bizarre and really doesn't make anyone watching this movie invested with her story or her struggles, it feels mostly like a tour of Wonderland. I also really couldn't get past how Burton's Alice in Wonderland made the main outcast, who happens to be a woman, the villain of Wonderland and how the Queen of Heart's head size was the butt of the joke throughout the movie and brought up by every "good guy"... I couldn't believe the irony of this coming from a so-called "outcast" who has always shown nothing but great compassion for his male outcast characters...
@kostajovanovic37112 жыл бұрын
@@camilletorres-kelly628 it is well known that Doug does not hold a particularly well informed opinion on women
@726312 жыл бұрын
the "Wonka's a complicated character" quote is so ridiculous, I almost thought it was sarcastic. Wonka is apart of the spectacle. why *shouldn't* he be "just a weird guy"???
@edgarallenhoe35182 жыл бұрын
Imagine a version of Pee Wee Herman's Big Adventure with an extra 20 minutes tacked on at the end where Pee Wee reconciles with the abusive father who wouldn't let him say silly words as a child.
@reesafield74012 жыл бұрын
You hit the nail on the head, this is exactly what I said, down to you thinking that the quote was nearly sarcastic. "Wonka is just this whimsical guy with no background". . . . well YEAH, the movie isn't about him, we're not thinking about his back story.
@kseniav5862 жыл бұрын
I think Mr Burton was catching up on another trend here, which is taking beloved characters and trying to give them depth via an unnecessary tragic backstory. Didn't that become a staple of disney movies very soon?
@ijustlikebees2 жыл бұрын
@@kseniav586 oh so its his fault. I can't say I'm not surprised
@MASTEROFEVIL3 ай бұрын
700th like
@oroontheheels Жыл бұрын
I’ve heard “they peaked In high school” argument so often. Not only from Burton. And as a looser I’m gonna go out and say it’s usually NOT TRUE. Yeah, maybe some jocks are stuck in their suburbias town. Maybe some mean girls got accidentally pregnant and stuck there also. But most popular kids (even bullies) are able to use their social skill to go further in life. They adapt well in any company, they party, they make useful connections, they land a great job positions because they are energetic and charismatic and pretty. I was a looser and a loner in high school I’m still a loner and a looser. But I don’t want to be pathetic and try to make myself feel better at expense of someone else’s misery. Bully from my class became alcoholic? That sucks. Mean girl became teen mom? I hope she’s doing fine. And if a bully from my high school became crazy rich and successful I’m not gonna curse them. There’s a lot of unpleasant rich people. That’s how capitalism usually is. Tim is childish in that regard. He’s not a outsider anymore. He’s a crazy rich guy with hot wife and nice kid. He’s respected in industry. And so far I haven’t seen him doing anything THAT controversial?? If anything at all.
@vickielawson311411 ай бұрын
Loser
@ilonat83738 ай бұрын
Exactly. I'm so tired of this narrative. Most popular kids become successful in their life. People like Tim Burton are usually the exception to the rule. It's extremely difficult to make it in Hollywood. Many talented artists are struggling to make a decent salary to survive.
@toomanymarys73556 ай бұрын
The people who peak in high school often become teachers. It's not often the kids who were the best in anything, either.
@toomanymarys73556 ай бұрын
And I never bothered to find out what happened to the people I didn't care for. It was just extremely obvious that some of my teachers were teachers because their idealized their high school experience in a really disturbing way!
@oroontheheels6 ай бұрын
@@toomanymarys7355 people who idolise school years are VERY annoying, when you have finished the same school and you remember all the negligence and inappropriate behavior of adults there.
@adict1262 жыл бұрын
It's almost baffling to me, because when you look at his earlier work (like Edward Scissorhands, for example) it is popping with colour, which only makes the dark costume or home of the 'outsider' more effective, but his later stuff is just muddy, not to speak of the stories he goes with lately compared to what he used to go with
@The1nvisibleJeevas2 жыл бұрын
And the color usage in Corpse Bride is amazing as well, with the living world being intentionally desaturated and the land of the dead being very bright and colorful. Makes me wonder how much of this genius was Burton and how much of it was his colleagues'.
@cosmo25902 жыл бұрын
the line about the dangers of the mall goth pipeline rings especially true when you consider that, despite of what burton might say about being an outcast, you can sense how desperately he wants to fit in and any message about being an outcast is just sour grapes. i mean, this is the guy who was afraid musical theater might turn his son gay
@sweetsnejinka94112 жыл бұрын
Haaaa, I would love to read about that.
@zauberholz83572 жыл бұрын
He actually thought that about musical theatre? Woww 😅
@JC-yy8iv2 жыл бұрын
Yeah I was surprised he turned out to be such a bigot, for about 5 seconds. Then I realized I know at least a dozen racist and/or homophobic elder goths just like him. He’s literally just that one guy at goth night that everyone hates, the one who everyone knows has a collection of German WWII memorabilia at his house, he says it’s because he’s “a history buff” but when he gets drunk he complains about the scene being “polluted” by People Who Don’t Belong There.
@cosmo25902 жыл бұрын
@@zauberholz8357 helena bonham carter made an off comment about that in an interview for sweeney todd
@espeon8712 жыл бұрын
@@JC-yy8iv wtf that's fucked up
@boyroy4u2 жыл бұрын
The reason i think Burton loves recasting Johnny Depp is because he literally sees himself as Depp, a cool and angsty outsider that he can use to project himself through in his films. Depp is always Burtons POV character like in Edward Scissorhand. Maybe that's why his wife always plays opposite of him too 😂 (this isn't a serious take btw, mostly a fun joke that I think aligns with Burtons teenager-angsty side)
@tsuumee45452 жыл бұрын
Wife? You mean Helena Bonham Carter? They were never married
@tsuumee45452 жыл бұрын
@Kewliope Jones Rough
@simonegreen3582 жыл бұрын
@@tsuumee4545 Helena and Tim have been together for 13 years. They recently broke up because Tim cheated with a blonde. So much inverting the norm
@damoncurrie71032 жыл бұрын
it's a good take
@Mizanthrobe2 жыл бұрын
They’re both INFP’s it makes sense. I am as well but because of certain things that Burton has said I completely disown him as an INFP.
@thesisypheanjournal1271 Жыл бұрын
Can we also smack Burton upside the head for calling the jabberwock a jabberwocky? The POEM was called "Jabberwocky." The MONSTER was the jabberwock: "Beware the jabberwock, my son." "And, as in uffish thought he stood, the jabberwock, with eyes of flame...." "And hast thou slain the jabberwock?"
@alanpennie801310 ай бұрын
I didn't realise that this mistake was Burton's. Definitely imperceptive or lazy.
@TheCrimsonElite6667 ай бұрын
At least the Jabberwock looked decent and had a somewhat accurate design in the film. I'm actually glad that Burton's Alice was made in 2010 and not after 2013 when The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug was released, because I'd guarantee you that Disney would've shoehorned Smaugface onto the Jabberwock like what happened with King Ghidorah in Godzilla: King of the Monsters. Though at least it didn't really ruin King Ghidorah, it would've definitely ruined the Jabberwock.
@hazeljade90582 жыл бұрын
As a child I ADORED tim burton, all because i was obsessed with coraline. All to find out that actually Henry Selick did coraline. Which sort of answered the long time question I had as to why there was people of color in coraline, but not within any other tim burton films?
@jamelbunny57322 жыл бұрын
@@user-n9090 same
@camelopardalis842 жыл бұрын
Which characters in Coraline would that be? It's been over ten years that I saw the film.
@hydevanhelsing50632 жыл бұрын
@@camelopardalis84 Whybie and his grandma and his grandma's sister, who was one of the victims of the Other Mother.
@camelopardalis842 жыл бұрын
@@hydevanhelsing5063 Thanks!
@sierramobley89622 жыл бұрын
dude i just found out from this video that i’m a Henry Selick fan, i’ve loved his work my entire life but had no clue he was the one responsible lol James and the Giant Peach, Coraline, and Nightmare Before Christmas are three of my favorite movies of all time. makes me feel better about how hard Burton fell off
@mollygraham67522 жыл бұрын
In Wednesday, Burton has once again rejected the source material in order to tell 'his version' of the story, ignoring the actual core reason as to why people love The Addams Family.
@TheKeyser942 жыл бұрын
Actually Burton was the director of four of the eight episodes of Wednesday, the people behind the show, were the producers of Smallville, and they keep close to the source material, Gomez being like in the comics, Wednesday and Morticia being like the Addams Family movies from the 90', Raul Julia did a very good job as Gomez, but he is based on the 60' version of him, in the comic version he was a little more overweight, what Burton contributed to the story was giving the atmosphere, the creepy aesthetic, the design of the Hyde (based on Gollum), and the premise that is based on Addams Family Values, between the conflict between Wednesday and the Pilgrims.
@bellacigne2 жыл бұрын
Wednesday wasn’t really his work and it shows, so I don’t know why they labeled it that way.
@TheKeyser942 жыл бұрын
@@bellacigne Maybe because he directed four of the eight episodes, and even that the last four try to copy his style, is not the same, and it shows.
@alang.bandala88632 жыл бұрын
Great detail!
@skarlet9104 Жыл бұрын
@@TheKeyser94 Even if he did only 4 episodes, those 4 don't really have the "Burton" essence the video talked about.
@babyblue37172 жыл бұрын
People really don't talk enough about how at least 40% of everything Burton movies have to offer is a beautiful soundtrack. I honestly thought i loved his Alice movies, then rewatched them recently and realized... I just love the music. Honestly. The music in Edward Scissorhands??? Absolutely MAGICAL!! In Corpse Bride? Amazing!!!! The movies? Yeah, they're good too, but there's really something special about Danny Elfman's soundtracks.
@xtcyrafa2 жыл бұрын
danny elfman has to be my favorite composer of all time, the music itself feels like it has its own life if that makes sense
@CEWThree2 жыл бұрын
Seriously, I haven't watched his Alice in Wonderland since it came out in 2010, but I *own* that score album. And Burton and Elfman's best collaborations-- Batman! Edward Scissorhands!-- are stunning.
@catarinaceleste52332 жыл бұрын
Corpse bride music is TOP. TIER. But I also just really love the whole thing.
@PeterParker-hn8iz2 жыл бұрын
I had the DVD (still do, somewhere), and I used to play the movie with Danny Elfman’s commentary. Obviously he talks during it, but you get a lot of the movie with just the score turned up and it is beautiful
@jane81982 жыл бұрын
Didn’t Danny Elfman compose the original Simpsons theme as well? I love his work so much!
@hamwithcheese5869 ай бұрын
I can’t believe you didn’t mention Ed Wood. It’s his best film, all about being an outsider in Hollywood. Landau won an Oscar for it. I remember it being critically acclaimed and his claim to mainstream fame. Without Ed Wood there is no Sleepy Hollow.
@leaeid15012 жыл бұрын
Also worth mentioning that he used to work with scriptwriter Caroline Thompson but they fought while working on the Corpse Bride and never worked together since. Goes to show how important the script is as well.
@casir.74072 жыл бұрын
not only that, but caroline thompson was also instrumental, along with danny elfman, in making nightmare before christmas work on an emotional level with the character of sally and her relationship with jack. tim burton came up with the base concept, henry selick oversaw and directed the great animation, but caroline thompson and danny elfman shaped the fairytale-like story to make it the classic it has become
@sibauchi2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I used to love Tim Burton movies as a kid, so I wondered why his films kept getting tedious and unrelatable. Much later I found out that the Tim Burton movies I liked were all written by Caroline Thompson. It made me realize that we often forget the obvious fact that movies require multiple talents to be made, and that non-directoral staff need way more spotlight than they usually get.
@themasterbaetor37192 жыл бұрын
His best film is the one that isn’t written by her
@DannyDevitoOffical-TrustMeBro2 жыл бұрын
@@themasterbaetor3719 which one is that?
@christianwise6372 жыл бұрын
@@casir.7407 Time and time again we get to see why auteur theory doesn't really apply, because most of these great films wouldn't be the way they were without the collaborations of other people working on the film. The director may be the one overseeing the entire thing, but it requires good people working on the script, the lighting, the music, the editing etc for it to really come together and become something truly special
@almostawesomeali2 жыл бұрын
I would like to point out that Corpse Bride is not just an eastern european story but specifically a Jewish story. I found this out a few years ago but thankfully tons of articles, blog posts, tiktoks and twitter threads point this out to new people every day! Burton made a conscious choice to remove all Jewish elements to try to make it more "relatable" but therein robbed it of its very meaning. I implore you to read about this - two Jewish folktales that Corpse Bride take from are called The Finger and The Devil in the Tree. Burton has dismissed the Jewish origins of the story and actively sought to erase ethnic origin and place in favor of just "fable". this erasure of Jewish story has been further noted in at least one of Burton's other movies, Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children. Considering Burton is also markedly anti-Black when it comes to his cinematic universe I'm not surprised to learn this was a conscious effort on his part to scrub Jewishness from his films as well. I'm not bummed about his decline to be perfectly honest.
@pheonixrises112 жыл бұрын
thank you for listing the names of the stories!
@wholethedogsout8802 жыл бұрын
hope his show is a flop
@mjjjermaine2 жыл бұрын
+
@gen1exe2 жыл бұрын
Yeah really removed all cultural context: the Jewish and Eastern European
@SoulRebelInStereo2 жыл бұрын
OY VEY
@Morbos1000 Жыл бұрын
I think there is a larger issue that he ties into well. In the 80s there were tons of movies about nerds, especially about them being outsiders that were picked on and bullied but in reality were the best people in the film (according to the film's logic I mean). But today the nerds and geeks won the pop culture wars which is why things like comic book movies dominate. The outsiders became the mainstream and it turns out they aren't any better than the "normies" they replaced. Burton saw himself as an outsider but now people like him are the ones running the show and who content is made for. He just doesn't realize it.
@MCDreng Жыл бұрын
... and this (false) feeling of still being an outsider that "normies" want to erase leads into things like gamer gate where "gamers" attribute women and POC getting into video games as something malicious rather than video games just being a very mainstream thing in the 2010s.
@scaccu Жыл бұрын
@@MCDrenggamergate was actually about conflics of interest in videogame media. And btw: the "nerd community" of today is 90% filled with "normies" who are in just because it went mainstream, the "real nerds" are the ones pissed off because the franchises they loved were butchered in order to appeal a bigger audience (and bullied for this).
@fasteddy9312 Жыл бұрын
@@scaccuthe "toxic fans" and "gatekeepers" "You don't like us changing the thing that made the thing you like so special? Have you considered that you're racist or sexist?" -Corporate Media
@juststatedtheobvious963311 ай бұрын
@scaccu If you want to pretend that harassing Dragon Age 2's writer and lying about a Depression Quest review that doesn't exist is journalistic ethics? That's a reflection on you. Gamer Gate was as pathetic as the Comic Gate crew screaming about diversity in X-men.
@yurifairy296911 ай бұрын
@@scaccu Gamergate was started because of a fake article that does not exist. It was a wholly fraudulent harassment campaign.
@theseanwardshow2 ай бұрын
Got the pee wee part a little bit backwards. The movie was so popular with kids that the playhouse show was spun off from it, not the other way around
@gracewoodard51242 жыл бұрын
Let’s not forget when he completely isolated his BIPOC fan base because we dont “fit” his aesthetics. Also his past racially tone def comments. Super disappointing as a black creative who always felt safe in his work. There’s no way I can look at him/his work the same anymore. Not without knowing there’s no place for me or those who look like me truly at all. Which is crazy being that his works are whimsigothic fantastical fiction pieces. I think that’s what makes it even worse. There’s no reason why he can’t be inclusive, he just chooses not to be.
@Jimmy1982Playlists2 жыл бұрын
So 🤬 disappointing, as a 40 yr old who grew up on his classic, earlier work... his career from _Chocolate Factory,_ in particular, went downhill long ago, but it'd be nice to be able to enjoy the early films. This makes it hard... Especially for someone who pegs himself the outsider/outcast to have those sentiments is just deplorable.
@leppardman47792 жыл бұрын
Based Burton
@GetOfflineGetGood2 жыл бұрын
I think Maggie Mae Fish made a really good video that talked about this and some other weird backwards shit in Burton's work
@qwer96762 жыл бұрын
@@leppardman4779 racism doesn’t automatically mean based dumbass you don’t even know what it means
@bananawitchcraft2 жыл бұрын
I didn't notice the lack of diversity when I was younger. But I recently watched Edward again bc it was up on here for free, and I thought "hang on why do I only see one non-white person in this entire movie?" Then I chalked it up to being an exaggerated depiction of mid-century suburbia. In that context it actually makes a bit of sense, since the setting is painted as being very homogeneous and fake. The suburbs were originally a product of racial segregation. I didn't realize until now that he actually has made racist comments. Speaking as a mixed person it is super disappointing, childhood ruined.
@sallysellsseashell2 жыл бұрын
I think it’s important to mention that the story of the corpse bride isn’t just based in Eastern European folklore but specifically in Jewish folklore. This was taken out of the movie to make it more of a fairytale- setting it in England with Christian wedding traditions
@allison2572 жыл бұрын
THANK YOU for pointing this out!!! Christians have historically stolen from us and the pagan’s traditions an appropriated them to make them more palatable for their chaste bs.
@sweetsnejinka94112 жыл бұрын
Yes, this is important. My eyebrows raised at the vague "Eastern European" credit. Also, batman returns is Exodus... except Moses is evil and awful and the villain. So... there's that.
@melissamargolese87822 жыл бұрын
Also Ms Peregrines Home for peculiar children. The books references to the "hollowgast" and a Jewish protagonist were erased from the film adaptation for "marketability"
@espeon8712 жыл бұрын
@morborb literally his exclusion of poc and jewish people esp in this context of an adaptation of a jewish story to exclude the jewish heritage of the story is so shit and terrible esp towards fans of those communities and for someone who talked abt being an outsider he's now the man who's creating outsiders esp cuz he doesnt take outsiders into his world its very ironic
@espeon8712 жыл бұрын
@@melissamargolese8782 wtf that's just terrible, so much for someone who's always like outsiders outsider
@eccentric-j2 жыл бұрын
There’s a lot of irony in him criticising his former peers who “peaked” in high-school. In a way, his work peaked in the ‘90s and his identity is built on the acceptance and praise by the societal hieararchy of that time period deterring him from evolving his art.
@mitchell73092 жыл бұрын
Always thought this and 100% agree. By Sleepy Hollow and def Planet of the Apes, he was done. A caricature of himself thereforeard
@LeBasfondMusic2 жыл бұрын
😶🌫👀
@nuclearcatbaby11312 жыл бұрын
I feel like a lot of autistic nerds from poor families peak in high school. While football players and cheerleaders from rich families get to be successful by cheating in everything including college so that people think they’re scientific geniuses.
@kennethhwang34252 жыл бұрын
@@mitchell7309 True. Sleepy Hollow was his last spark. An artist refusing to evolve is an artist dead.
@_Rick___Grimes_5 ай бұрын
perfectly put i agree 100%
@nervousdetective Жыл бұрын
I watched Alice in worderland when i was 8 and as a self-proclaimed weird kid, the quote about best people being crazy really spoke to me (and then it came back when i was 11 in a Melanie Martinez song) I even wrote it in my diary and even though it sound goofy now that i read that again, i was a kid who felt like an outsider and Tim Burton really spoke to me. But i think that movie never got beyond that, Ttat age and that quote. After i turned 13 the only feeling that it bringed me was nostalgia for the asthetics of the film but nothing of the rest made me reflect either on my current self or my 8 year old self. On the other side, i watched A nightmare before christmas SO MANY TIMES, i loved it so much as a kid and i still love it now and i still feel and emocional connection to it now. And i think that is what is missing on Alice in worderland and later works of his. AMAZING VIDEO this is exactly the kind of tim burton analysis i was waiting for.
@Madeleinewith3Es2 жыл бұрын
"if everyone's an outsider, then no one is" thank you so much for putting my feelings about him for a long time this way, at some point I just realized he's not actually weird, just a type of quirky and arrogant that's socially acceptable and bankable and his critiques of society and suburbia from the Edward Scissiorhands era have gotten stale as he's aged and just become a part of that society
@hollyro46652 жыл бұрын
That’s exactly it. It’s not that he’s not weird. It’s that he’s the sort of weird thats sellable and acceptable to a mainstream audience. You see it a lot in music like with the experimental years of The Beatles. The Pet Sounds album by The Beach Boys or in more recent times Billie Eilish. All very unique and experimental in style but in a way that is just enough of the standard stuff to give to the masses.
@Anna-yy9so2 жыл бұрын
@@hollyro4665 I'd have a lot more respect for Burton's alleged "weirdness" if he cast a wider variety of actors. As has been made abundantly clear by his refusal to cast POC, he has a very narrow view of beauty. Even as a teenager I hated how in his movies, the good-hearted, thoughtful, sensitive protagonists are always slim, pale, and ethereally beautiful, while the "ugly" characters (especially fat ones) are stupid, brutish, lazy, and shallow. That's not at all provocative; it's as mundane and small-minded as you can get.
@hollyro46652 жыл бұрын
@@Anna-yy9so I agree completely. It’s why I said I think it’s smart he hasn’t touched it but I wish it was for completely different reasons. His weirdness is entirely built on his own life and narrow perspective that doesn’t reach beyond himself. I’ve already mentioned the pros and cons of that one.
@Anna-yy9so2 жыл бұрын
@@hollyro4665 "Doesn't reach beyond himself" sums it up perfectly. If he really wanted to, he could follow Rick Riordan's example and put his clout behind creators with different lives than his own. There's a huge difference between acknowledging your own limitations and simply not caring to broaden your perspective.
@hollyro46652 жыл бұрын
@@Anna-yy9so exactly that! Just because he can’t do it doesn’t me others can’t. And surely someone in his position has the power to make that happen
@clownfishstix2 жыл бұрын
I'm so glad someone else acknowledged the weird tension between Alice and the Mad Hatter in the movies, it was so bizarre and no one else would comment on it
@ruthbennett75632 жыл бұрын
I would say “icky” instead of bizarre (which, to me can have positive connotations). The sexualizing of any relationship in Alice’s adventures is distasteful.
@clownfishstix2 жыл бұрын
@@ruthbennett7563 I think you have a very good point there.
@danielarejgar2 жыл бұрын
What? Literally everyone and their grandmother talked about it. To me what's weird is that you think no one realized that.
@whiteasparagus43312 жыл бұрын
Also isn’t Alice like stated to be 16-17 in the movie while he is a grown ass man 💀? and he met her while she was a CHILD mind you, it’s super creepy
@clownfishstix2 жыл бұрын
@@whiteasparagus4331 he met her when she was definitely single digits and she can't be older than 16-17
@janedoe1570 Жыл бұрын
Tim Burton's seems a walking embodiment of that 'Normal People Scare Me' t-shirt that all the 'quirky' kids wore in the mid-2010s.
@jameswilkerson44125 ай бұрын
And in the ‘90s
@_Rick___Grimes_5 ай бұрын
honestly this is spot on
@_Rick___Grimes_4 ай бұрын
@@jameswilkerson4412 what a very necessary comment
@ajzeg01 Жыл бұрын
Sleepy Hollow is actually brilliant. It’s a tribute to the Hammer horror films, who took classic stories like Dracula and Frankenstein and loosely adapted them. It’s a great tribute.
@SplatterInker Жыл бұрын
This also explains the stellar character actor cast who clearly 100% got what sort of film they were in. 😂
@melissahouse3488 Жыл бұрын
It's in my top 5, along with Edward Scissorhand. 🖤 They can try to trash him but he's mega successful, talented & creative visionary and that's precisely WHY channels such as this try to horn in on his reputation. They have an agenda and are desperate to tear him down. He's still loved by many and his films speak for themselves. They've made substantial profit and are still a lot better than most other Hollywood garbage. They just want those they can dictate to, satisfy their race obsessed agenda, political agenda, or they are gonna try to attack and defame you. It's laughable because Tim Burton will forever be in people's conscious & hearts, for one film or another.
@zeableunam Жыл бұрын
Yeah I actually disagree with her take on Sleepy Hollow; also is it just me.. or did she edit the scenes with Johnny Depp & Cristina Ricci, to make look more awkward than what it actually is? 🧐
@jamesfarley8356 Жыл бұрын
Agree 100% Sleepy Hollow is a masterpiece It is our Halloween go to movie & the only thing wrong is that there was never a sequel to it as suggested (?) at the end 🤔😃😎
@dorianleakey Жыл бұрын
I liked it,but the criticism is valid, Burton turned the villain into the hero successfully and made a hit movie we enjoyed, but it showed he doesn't like the source material and fucks with it and sometimes that doesn't work
@veronicarodriguez86622 жыл бұрын
The worst thing about Burton's take on Alice in Wonderland is that a refutation of the nihilism, present in both the book and any the animated movie, would be interesting. Lewis Carrol was a decidedly conservative mathmatician. His fears that abstract forms of mathematics would undermine both the field and meaning itself have proven hollow. An Alice adaptation that engages with the weird and seemingly contradictory elements of wonderland and finds meaning in it would be interesting. Instead Burton eliminates the absurd within wonderland to create a stereotypical hero's journey with an extra bland helping of "rightful" monarch and chosen one tapioca.
@borealsullivan54862 жыл бұрын
That's why American McGee's Alice will always be a superior "burtonesque" version of the story
@bookcat1232 жыл бұрын
I feel like saying Burton misses the themes/points of things he remakes is kind of a given and not really the problem - because he never sets out to retell the original story or its themes. He takes inspiration from an existing property to retell his own story again. This is not bad in and of itself - Miyazaki does this really well. The problem isn’t that Burton is telling his own story, it’s that his own story isn’t actually that good. He picks a character he identifies with, and then tells how they’re a tragic hero in a terrible world which is just kind of childish. You can always tell which character this is, because it’s the one who gets no criticism from the story’s framework, has a tragic backstory that’s superfluous to the plot, and is probably played by Depp.
@Catfish3rs2 жыл бұрын
I think this really hits the nail on the head. Miyazaki succeeds where Burton fails because his films still have something to say. Burton, on the other hand, seems to abandon the source material only to make something aesthetically interesting but ultimately shallow.
@TheHunterGracchus2 жыл бұрын
Very true, I think. Among the few Burton movies I've seen, the one I liked best at the time was Ed Wood. I still love Martin Landau's portrayal of Bela Lugosi, but the more I dug into the actual history of Wood, the more I saw tragedy, not a band of lovable misfits carving out a niche together making B movies.
@MyFictionalChaos2 жыл бұрын
@@Catfish3rs i was about to say this comment nailed it as well!
@aidafuentesv2 жыл бұрын
I also think that he started having a major age crisis, specially after his divorce, he just stopped trying and chose to believe that his superficial adaptations were masterpieces, because he was still talking about being different, but by this time everyone else was already doing those kind of themes. He just got stuck with his childhood traumas and chose to never deal with his adult ones. it would have been interesting to see how he dealt with aging in his 40s, 50s, with his divorce, with the broken expectations from his persona; instead he chose to keep talking about how superficial the adult world is, the fakeness of the society, the bullied outsider. By that time he was very far from all of that, he was accepted by the entire Hollywood crew and his films became a mere banal product, a nice paradox I guess.
@aidafuentesv2 жыл бұрын
Also I find weird that he made a connection between Willy Wonka and Citizen Kane because they are this business titans, but he failed to see that in 2005/2006 Burton himself was going through an age crisis, just the same as Charles Kane, he could’ve attributed this characteristics to Willy Wonka, but again he chose to talk about his childhood traumas and the fact that he was a ‘different and unique” child. He just refuses to acknowledge his present.
@ethanhart1292 жыл бұрын
He did liken himself to Willy Wonka in interviews. One of the reasons Burton goes into Wonka’s frayed relationship with his father is because Charlie and the Chocolate Factory was the first movie he made after both of his parents died.
@aidafuentesv2 жыл бұрын
@@ethanhart129 still is about his childhood experience that he never got over with
@egg_bun_2 жыл бұрын
Oooh YES
@nifralo27522 жыл бұрын
Yeah Burton playing the "I'm an outcast card" these days is like Trump playing the "I'm one of you pesants" card
@polinanikulina Жыл бұрын
Sleepy Hollow the film was made for me as a very troubled 11-year-old. My daily horror show was a bloodless psychological thriller with no end in sight, so the gore and whimsical warmth in a bleak, depressing little village was a welcome relief. I still love Edward Scissorhands.
@TwinPeaksMichaelCera4 ай бұрын
can confirm that sleepy hollow was definitely made as an introduction to horror for 11-13 year old girls in the early 2000s who were interested in horror but weren’t allowed to watch actual horror movies (source: my past experience)
@sammyvictors26032 жыл бұрын
I could relate to Burton on being on outsider. But unlike Burton, I learned to have empathy for others. Empathy is a thing most humans have forgotten because they have become so myopic and solipsistic of their own pain.
@BroeyDeschanel2 жыл бұрын
That note about empathy is super interesting. I actually noticed when watching his stuff that he tends to punish his antagonists very severely in almost every movie. And since almost all of them are meant to represent the "bully" or the "establishment", it comes across like he's getting revenge on them in every film instead of ever taking a moment think about how they could be empathetic/3-dimensional.
@perrisavallon51702 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I think that's really WHAT the problem is - he's deeply unempathetic. He wants to have this message about how conformity is bad and nonconformity is good, but he's entirely uninterested in what causes otherness to begin with. He treats them like innate characteristics and paints his protagonists as inherently better than his antagonists. And as a result it's kind of weak, because he almost doesn't even define the two - honestly, a lot of his depictions of "conformity" kind of manifest as misogyny, like his "conformist" characters are often just women who fit traditional gender roles. That's one of the reasons his lack of diversity really rubs me the wrong way - I mean, obviously diversity is always good, but specifically if you're painting yourself as a voice for outsiders but don't understand that minorities ARE outsiders, then you're kind of misunderstanding your own message. Overall, he's extremely stuck in his own worldview.
@eerielconstantine50512 жыл бұрын
I agree, but would like to add that there seems to be a divide happening in society. You now have people who wish to connect with their emotions and live with them, and people who wish to get rid of them and lose their connection to others.
@sammyvictors26032 жыл бұрын
@Charisma Musician and that's why you balance it with discernment. We have so much knowledge today and little to no wisdom.
@mishi1442 жыл бұрын
Ooo, those are some words.
@myBquest2 жыл бұрын
I've always thought that Tim Burton and Guillermo del Toro have similar approaches in terms of cinematography, but the huge difference is that Guillermo has proven to learn and grow as a person and an artist, and Tim has only shown is true boring self. Guillermo has also included a wide variety of characters in his stories without whinning about inclusion, he just knows it is important. And Henry Selick deserves more attention too.
@gigerdevoter55772 жыл бұрын
I agree. While Del Toro is best known for gothic horror, he can also branch out to other genres like romance, thrillers, and even action movies like Pacific Rim. He is also meticulous with his works, which has allowed him to get the recognition he deserves. Tim burton on the other hand in into grim and somewhat macabe art styles that seemed very unique and interesting back then, but the problem is that he kept making movies in the same genre without ever taking a risk that would let him experiment with new and original ideas.
@matt.stevick2 жыл бұрын
Please respect ✊🏼 9/11 victims, families and witnesses.
@limlaith2 жыл бұрын
I could not possibly in any conceivable sense give less of a damn about inclusion. I don't even view it as important. Literally everything else is more important than that. If a story is compelling then it is compelling. If characters are well-written, then that ought to be sufficient, and it shouldn't matter how many other socio-ethnic checkboxes they fill. How boring. I view Burton as someone who has lost his inspiration. Like any artist, he seems to be tired, treading familiar paths, feeling less than he used to when he's walked them before. I think he needs a major break. It was a baffling idea that Disney wanted him to direct Dumbo. I will never actually pay to see any of the live action remakes and, I confess, am scarcely more interested in seeing them in syndication on TV, so I can't speak to that movie directly, but knowing how bleeding-edge woke Disney has become, I cannot fathom why they thought hiring Burton would be the right choice. I enjoyed Alice in Wonderland quite a bit, but after that, no - he really does seem to have become tired of his own movies. As have we. It's sad. I hope that he can find his way again. I really like him. I'll never be able to watch Edward Scissorhands again though. I cried until I made myself sick.
@jackhamilton96042 жыл бұрын
One thing Burton has over del Toro is at least he didn’t sign the Roman Polanski petition
@jackhamilton96042 жыл бұрын
@cinamonrollcutie 2 in 2009 there was a petition to free Roman Polanski (who raped a 13 year old) when he was arrested and del Toro was one of those who signed it
@forge7212 жыл бұрын
“Rarely does he clearly express what’s wrong society around him other than he doesn’t have to conform to it” Very insightful take
@fozz3 Жыл бұрын
I love the quote of Burton saying the Charlie was overshadowed by Wonka, and then he proceeds to solely focus on and develop Wonka as a character.
@alanpennie801310 ай бұрын
The truth is there's no one else in the story. All the other characters are Wonka's foils.
@felipest69262 жыл бұрын
the decline was consolidated in alice in wonderland, I remember during production it seemed like the perfect fit, and I was a big fan of his at the time (I was 13-14). When the trailer and then movie came out my sense of admiration was so deflated because it was all style (and in my opinion, not even much of it), with an uninspired script that was borderline cringe at times, probably starting the trend of Tim Burton's school of directing where actresses are told to behave very expressionless. from there onward it seems that all of his movies took that turn, even the seemingly more personal movie Dark Shadows is too polished, with a lousy script. Also I think its weird when people are obssessed with nostalgia for the 50s-80s dont want to engage with the racial tensions of the time in question. I'm not saying Tim Burton has to make a movie about racism, he doesnt have to do anything, but for someone who's got a penchant for 'outsiders', 'dark themes', 'wrongdoings of society', the palpable refusal to engage with a topic thats rich in all of these seems cowardly and small minded to say the least
@espeon8712 жыл бұрын
I think he just wants to have the aesthetic and also cuz he only knows outsiderness in his terms and not in the real systematic way which excludes people that arent like him. Cuz he was the outcast but now he's the insider who outcasts people, he's only pro putsider if its similar to him not when he's not the subject.
@reneedailey16962 жыл бұрын
VERY well said.
@felipest69262 жыл бұрын
@@espeon871 agreed. I think a way to better visualize what im trying to get at with he doesnt even attempt to touch on these subjects is by watching the scene in Addams Family Values where Wednesday actually talks about native american genocide and we see the outcasts of the camp take revenge on the more yuppie, cookie cutter kids, let's say. Its one scene yet its an effective way of actually integrating real life issues in the world building and humor of your movie.
@unclewiley19862 жыл бұрын
He actually goes out of his way to avoid them. The folktale of Corpse Bride is Jewish but that's not his aesthetic so the movie is about good ol Christian folks and their Christian weddings. Miss Perigrine's is pretty mucj completely missing its major Jewish character who pushed the plot (Jacob's grandfather). I don't even think Thomas being Jewish is mentioned in tbe movie. Not to mention he goes out of his way to avoid casting POC when he can help it.
@DannyDevitoOffical-TrustMeBro2 жыл бұрын
@@unclewiley1986 I don’t think he goes out of his way to avoid other races in his work, he just doesn’t write them in. A lot of his art takes direct inspiration from European tales, which is just fine. It’s just that he’s weirdly exclusionary of certain people, even when they would fit the story and world very well. For such a dark director/artist, he seems weirdly and childishly ignorant of real world darkness, which makes his films seem more naive than intended.
@MintyVoid2 жыл бұрын
I think the moral of his story is that he desperately needs therapy. He got lucky and found success and thus never had to face any of his trauma and bad habits. So they only got worse lol
@MJ_X22 жыл бұрын
And that he let Johnny Depp's narcissism derail at least some of his career, which just goes back to your point that he needs therapy
@MintyVoid2 жыл бұрын
@@MJ_X2 yeah you can sum up a surprising amount of issues regarding people and their actions towards themselves and to others with - go to therapy. as its the only place people are taught emotional intelligence and how to communicate effectively lol.
@nuclearcatbaby11312 жыл бұрын
He made the crazy decision to hire the frontman of his favorite rock band to write the music for his movies and it just so happened that Elfman was enough of a musical genius to pull it off.
@19Rena962 жыл бұрын
@@MJ_X2 LOL imaging thinking JD is a narcissist
@19Rena962 жыл бұрын
@@seraphimme I didn't mention him first, @M did. I'm just thinking why anyone would consider JD being a Narcissist? Like there are other Actors like Robert Downey Jr. that fit that description better than JD lol
@AAAAAAAA-ss6gn2 жыл бұрын
I still don't undestard how the dude who made Pee-Wee's Big Adventure didn't like Alice in Wonderland because "The plot doesn't make sense"
@MASTEROFEVIL2 жыл бұрын
I know right
@CupidStuntBoyz Жыл бұрын
Loved the analysis. But shocked you didn’t bring up Sweeney Todd. Arguably his best and one that perfectly encapsulates the tale and themes of the original source material. That film was made with so much love and understanding by Burton and is often overlooked. It is also incredibly filmed and crafted. Hauntingly beautiful.
@alittlebitgone Жыл бұрын
No one on earth argues that Sweeney Todd is his best, no one. It's 100% awful.
@CupidStuntBoyz Жыл бұрын
@@alittlebitgone clearly not everybody has your opinion
@One.Zero.One101 Жыл бұрын
@@alittlebitgone Your opinion is wrong and my opinion is right.
@alkaline8681 Жыл бұрын
Also remember that Stephen Sondheim was there guiding Tim on what to do.
@echo9932 Жыл бұрын
@@alittlebitgone Mate, you can hold your opinion, but just know that you're on a very, very empty boat with it.
@samuelbarber61772 жыл бұрын
To be honest, I can’t dislike Sleepy Hollow, it’s a movie where Christopher Walken does nothing but ride a horse, have crazy teeth and hair, and yell “AGH!” while brandishing a sword. That’s just awesome. Also, Christopher Lee is there, and any reason to have Christophers Lee and Walken in the same film is good enough.
@CrazyBanana510 Жыл бұрын
It's my favorite Burton movie. It's just so Halloween-y and violent and goofy and fun. It broke my heart when she said she hated it :(
@elimidd6626 Жыл бұрын
I love sleepy hollow just for how over the top and goofy it is, I love how ridiculous it is that Ichabod is a police inspector but even the slightest bit of blood is enough to make him sick, the silly witch angle, the over the top gore, Christopher Walken. It's far from the best Tim Burton movie, but it's one of my favorite "bad" movies just cause it's so fun to watch.
@Chuck_EL Жыл бұрын
@@elimidd6626 i wanted crane to be like he is in the novel a arrogant prick who thinks he knows it all and only wants to find the headless horseman because he thinks he'll get rich from it....thats literally the archtype antagonist in most of his films ...how did he mess THAT up???
@romijane Жыл бұрын
Same! I love how camp it is! And it's really unique.
@RariettyC2 жыл бұрын
I'm convinced that Burton is shockingly great at being a creative lead for musicals because they allow the characters to directly express feelings that he would probably struggle to include in diegetic dialogue, and the heightened visuals pair well with stories where characters are allowed to break out into song or dance. In Beetlejuice, its use of The Banana Boat Song and Jump in the Line as musical numbers are probably the most iconic things from it, and it's no surprise its story and aesthetic felt like a natural transfer when converted to a stage musical. Even in the most recent thing he directed (Wednesday), the best scene is a dance number. If him and Danny Elfman just spent the rest of their careers together making musical movies, I’d be happy.
@watchcloudspassmeby Жыл бұрын
Maybe just not movie versions of musicals that already exist. See: Sweeney Todd, where none of the dark humor translates at all 😅
@orangeslash1667 Жыл бұрын
@@watchcloudspassmeby Big news there is going to be a Beetlejuice 2.
@NightMystique13 Жыл бұрын
Same, my 18 yr old daughter and I are huge fans and nobody will persuade us to change our opinion.☺️
@NightMystique13 Жыл бұрын
@@orangeslash1667Yay!!!
@pencildragon2 жыл бұрын
One of my friends saw Burton's Charlie and the Chocolate Factory in theaters when it came out. She was eating those Harry Potter jelly beans during the scene where Willie Wonka reunites with his dentist dad and accidentally bit down on a black pepper jelly bean or something like that, and had a gagging, trying not to puke reaction much to the disdain of nearby people that thought she was just besmirching the movie's emotional climax. I like to think she was just ahead of the curve in critiquing Burton.
@Jane-oz7pp2 жыл бұрын
I can literally only remember the Oompa Loompas in that movie doing a dance, I didn't realise he even had a dad lmao
@lysolmyfish2 жыл бұрын
@@Jane-oz7pp I didn’t even realize it was a movie 💀💀💀
@n2legos2 жыл бұрын
@@Jane-oz7ppI remember him having a dad because his dad was played by Count Dooku 🤣🤣🤣
@corafishy Жыл бұрын
I am so dead. The use of the avril clip at the end was PERFECT. LMAO.
@Stacey_Robinson2 жыл бұрын
The idea that a character who's weird or villainous has to have a detailed backstory to make sense or resonate with an audience really couldn't be more wrong. My favorite villains and weirdo characters are the ones with no explanation given. They are the way they are and because it's coming from a place of creative truth, we instantly get it. You would think that Burton, who's obsessed with this idea of himself as an outsider or oddball, would understand that a character simply being their weird self is enough. I think that's the whole hypocrisy inherent to his work, though. He claims to be all about "non-conformity" but then flat out says that he's just trying to give his audience what they want to see.
@artxgx92452 жыл бұрын
Disagree. That was always my gripe growing up and now that antagonists have backstory I feel much more at ease. I guess my ease came at your expense. Fortunately there are still entertainment out there that meets the people who have your needs and now more entertainment out there that means the needs of people like mine.
@ryantrudell46862 жыл бұрын
That's a good point - Heath Ledger's Joker offers virtually ZERO clues as to who he was before turning in a psychopathic masterminded criminal murderer. Sure sure, there are plenty of fan theories. But the facts remain, Nolan chose not to explicitly reveal any clue. And it's one of the greatest movie villains of all time. Agent Smith in the Matrix, he's just a computer program with a quirk, nothing more. The Terminator - it's just a robot sent through time with instructions to kill. Nothing more. Maybe you're onto something.
@Shenaldrac2 жыл бұрын
Right? When I read that, I immediately though of Palpatine from the star wars prequels. Dude has zero backstory or character context, but the actor is clearly having a fantastic time with the role. Un-limited pow-ah! Like sure, you can have villains with complex and detailed backstories. It can be done well. But the notion that they _need_ to have that detail to be good is just wrong.
@Despair5052 жыл бұрын
Okay but maybe that idea is supposed to resonate with a larger audience, which very clearly does, and not with you especifically.
@Shenaldrac2 жыл бұрын
@@Despair505 "Which it clearly does" If you're going to make a sweeping claim like that it'd be nice of you to back it up. Also, even if it is true that doesn't make it good writing, or correct. Just because the majority like or believe something doesn't make it good or true. tl;dr- plz stop with the argumentum ad populum.
@stapler9422 жыл бұрын
Tim's reading of the original Alice as "a girl wandering from one crazy character to another" without any emotional connection, while proceeding to make a big budget Alice movie anyway, reminds me of a certain fellow named Doug whose thoughts on the film The Wall amounted to "a little full of itself, but good visuals and imagination" and then proceeded to make an entire parody album as a "love letter" to the original. 🤔
@austinsanders-983 Жыл бұрын
The way you worded '''a certain fellow named Doug''' is so funny 😂
@sumthingwikked4257 Жыл бұрын
@@austinsanders-983more like a certain bum.
@motor4X4kombat Жыл бұрын
at least he admited it was bad and it wished it was better, something that tim burton will never do with his stupid alice in underland
@angelsunemtoledocabllero580110 ай бұрын
Ironic because that fellow Doug criticize Burton for doing the exact same thing.
@VoidBoi4202 жыл бұрын
As a person of color who grew up idolizing Tim Burton to the point of styling my hair like his as a kid and always dressing in black, I see Tim Burtons ignorance towards casting marginalized people as a result of growing up in the 60s in the suburbs. Its not good that he feels the way he does. But hes inspired an entire generation of artist to fill a void he was never willing to fill. Burton encouraged me to be an individual. I love his aesthetic and he lead to me developing a love for Junji Ito and the monochrome pallet. Tim Burton had his time. I'm hoping we get another visoionary of his caliber someday.
@amandanguyen3902 жыл бұрын
Exactly! I'm not surprised that many people in this comment's section deem that his later works have "lost their magic". The way I see it, unless an artist is very willing to catch up with the times and constantly re-evaluate the personal values they held onto from their developmental years, their ability to capture people's minds and hearts with their artistry will die out after a while, because it's stagnant compared to the ever-flowing stream of culture.
@ShinyPrimarina2 жыл бұрын
I like this way of thinking about it. Burton's way of thinking of people like you and me in his work reminds me of the way racists would gatekeep Gothic fashion from people of color. While its disheartening, disappointing and demotivating, remembering that we can say "okay if you won't, then I will" is powerful. With that in mind, I'm glad this video came out around the time Wendell and Wild dropped
@holocade49082 жыл бұрын
why does tim burton have to cast black actors if he doesnt want to if it doesnt fit his script? grow up buttercup
@VoidBoi4202 жыл бұрын
@@holocade4908 Its not just that he doesnt. Its that he actively avoids it and say his reasons for doing so is that it doesnt fit his aesthetic. He'll cast black actors in the films but never as main characters. Its different when you know he's doing so intentionally. Its just weird. It would be just as bad if a director was deliberatly ommiting women or white people simply because they dont match their vibe.
@farwest92182 жыл бұрын
White people typically don't fit into Tyler Perry movies either unless to mock them (white chicks). Should we all have a say who's included in HIS films? How stupid and selfish are you people really
@RoyalKnightVIII6 ай бұрын
He really does come off as a priviliged rebellious teen. He's a very rich man making the rich even richer. It's astounding how many of his movies end up being pro status quo. Like say Beetlejuice ending with Lydia going to a Catholic girls school as a happy ending I do also lament that we all have decided that art no longer exist, its only IP, just another type of private property to be squeezed for profit.
@yutgorpotungyun2 жыл бұрын
For me, Tim Burton’s movie disturbed me not by his so call “dark tone” but how he treats female characters. I find Tim Burton’s obsession with a young ,blonde “virgin” like female lead disturbing. I also find it upsetting how he killed off/side-lined his ex-partner Helena Carter in multiple movies and wonder before he and Helena separated if he had some grudge with Helena. I didn’t watch all his film but he feels icky to me even in films that are celebrated.
@kennethhwang34252 жыл бұрын
If there is a creator that's perpetually stuck in the saint-whore extremes in their perception of women, it's Tim. He built molds to carve out his women so rigid they never felt quite...real.
@grayonthewater2 жыл бұрын
That’s so true
@alee1112 жыл бұрын
Definitely gives very strong ick. Especially after finding out how he did Helena. And it definitely showed through his work. Double ick.
@crystalclear6752 жыл бұрын
Ugh and the way he cheated on Helena with a younger blonde.
@xryxix2 жыл бұрын
It says a lottttt it's so gross
@cliodnaconnoree26352 жыл бұрын
"Big Eyes" from 2014 is directed by Burton and to me shows what this man is capable of when he's doing something new. I'm surprised more people aren't bringing that movie up - bright colours, complex emotions, no Depp nor Cartner, interesting story. It's a real breath of fresh air. Unless I'm misinformed and his involvement with the film was less than I assumed.
@Dravianpn022 жыл бұрын
It's an okay film. Was very by the numbers to me.
@weirdLEXbutok2 жыл бұрын
i remember Big Eyes . great film . i think the script was the best part for me but i also love the change in aesthetics
@LeBasfondMusic2 жыл бұрын
Big Eyes and Big Fish were two of his best films.
@STANNco Жыл бұрын
Wednesday came out, and i actually really like it. But at the same time hearing Jenna Ortega talk about her problems with the writing, maybe it was in some part good in spite of his direction and not purely because of it. There's more writers than just him of course though. I think in this case he just has trouble understanding characters and especially young characters
@melindawolfUS2 жыл бұрын
One point I want to add is that artists often become unrelateable when they become too rich or famous. They lose touch with their audience and what a normal life even looks like. Rocks stars eventually have nothing to sing about but being on tour in first class and having the finest of everything but that is just alien to most people's experience. Musicians call it the 3rd album curse. The same can be said of filmmakers and writers. Sometimes when you remove the struggle of an ordinary life, you also remove the emotional truth in their artworks that drew their fans in the first place. Add to that that the more powerful and respected they become, the more people don't debate their creative choices or put the breaks on their worst ideas. Society will usually either starve or spoil it's creators; it rarely makes art an easy career to hold in a healthy way in the long-term.
@seed.meditation3 ай бұрын
agree with you
@alexj-t23312 жыл бұрын
Burton has been a part of the Hollywood machine for pretty much his whole life and I get the impression that Hollywood keeps creatives out of touch and delusional over their own class standing in society as well and Tim is no exception, no matter how much pinstripes and fluffy wigs he can put on his characters is not going to make him anymore down to earth than the next director. He was beloved because he was seen as “different” and im sure the most genuine he’s ever been was in his early, pre-millionaire days. He was doomed to go down this path from the beginning. Eventually once you make your money and get to live comfortably… what else is there to say at that point?
@klaratehcoolcat2 жыл бұрын
I think being rich and famous and comfortable doesn't guarantee he won't have any meaningful message..... But it would require honesty about, and to himself. He doesn't seem interested in that haha
@reesafield74012 жыл бұрын
That last line is so important to me. As someone who has a big desire to do various things in the art world, I can genuinely say I never want to be "rich" for this reason. Comfortable, yes, rich, no. Because it is easy to say that money will never change you when you don't have it, but you inevitably change as your status changes, we're human. I don't want to get out of touch.
@jamarsh092 жыл бұрын
I feel like there are stories someone in that position of having it "all" can tell. Burton will probably never tell those stories as it requires acknowledging that he's no longer the outsider and not seperate from the status quo
@smugalice62062 жыл бұрын
That’s a damn tragedy.
@Senfree2 жыл бұрын
It wasn't the fizzy lifting drinks (they stole that by just drinking it, not an actual item) it was the everlasting gobstopper, that each child was given to keep so long as they didn't tell Slugworth (or however you spell it) Since it was given free, he had no reason to return it at all, which makes him giving it back to Wonka an even bigger gesture, considering he could have gotten a lot of money for the gobstopper.
@3-meo-2-oxo-pce Жыл бұрын
yeah and at 32:43 it literally shows the everlasting gobstopper. as soon I heard it, I started scrolling through the comments for it lol. I'm really surprised they got this wrong; maybe she's never seen the movie? (other than that I really liked the video)
@Senfree Жыл бұрын
@@3-meo-2-oxo-pce You'd be surprised how easily people miss details. When I watch people react to things they miss half the detail half the time.
@gaarakabuto124 күн бұрын
I got into Burton's work later on my life, specifically in my early 20s and mostly through his animated series and then his live action stuff. Honestly Tim Burton is greatly a product of his time and it took away a lot that I wasn't a child while watching corpse bribe and The Nightmare before Christmas, because it was clear to me that this would blow my mind by aesthetics and presentation alone my childish brain, but as an adult, I cannot ignore that all these amazing, almost breathtaking, setting up is to present a story about the stereotypical "weird guy that doesn't fit" and a very sterile romance story. Tim Burton, in my eyes, is a person that experiences simple things very intensly and it shows from the presentation, the aesthetics and the atmosphere he builds, but at the end of the day no matter how intensly he experiences things that doesn't change the fact that he just experiences teenage angst for being an outcast. Romance is one of the worst offenders in his work, his romance is the most 10 year's old perception of love I've ever seen. Corpse bribe is the worst case where characters fall in love with other characters just because they are weird, or just the "special one" but without any elaboration whatsoever or any building up on their dynamic between the two characters. I like Tim Burton and I wouldn't say that he is reduntant but his work surely has taken a hit over the years.
@MyssBlewm2 жыл бұрын
Growing up I enjoyed a lot of Tim Burton's works but as the years have gone by I've come to appreciate only some of his works. Don't care about his newer stuff. I think the last Burton film I watched was Sweeney Todd. I also wonder if his ~autuer touches~ have actually worked against him because it starts to feel lazy/homogeneous? Thanks always for your amazing work!!
@NicFarra2 жыл бұрын
It was Sweeney Todd that clearly showed me that Tim preferred doing what he always does to actually engaging with the material. I saw Teddy Tahu Rhodes as Sweeney and Antoinette Halloran as Mrs Lovett for NZ Opera and having virtuoso artists fully involved with the work just does not compare with non-singers fapping away vaguely at the fringes of someone else's very superficial take.
@roilresj4132 жыл бұрын
One of my biggest problems with Burton is how often he ages up child characters (Alice, Wednesday) to be 18-19. Also, pairing 18-19 year old characters with much older male characters (Katrina, Victoria, Lydia, Kim).
@LydiaMohr2 жыл бұрын
Lydia is even younger, perhaps around 16
@sporkzzz2 жыл бұрын
@@LydiaMohr I thought she was 15?
@LydiaMohr2 жыл бұрын
@@sporkzzz I mean, you could be right. I’m not positive. Of course, I do believe the cartoon Lydia is meant to be younger than the movie Lydia
@sporkzzz2 жыл бұрын
@@LydiaMohr ohh
@danielarejgar2 жыл бұрын
Victor wasn't paired up with an old man though?
@AndiniKissesGoodbye2 жыл бұрын
i was such a big tim burton fan.. and then i grew up and realized most of my favorite movies by him weren't even by him lmao
@AndiniKissesGoodbye2 жыл бұрын
anyway, stan henry sallick
@andiemorgan9612 жыл бұрын
This just proves you were NEVER a Tim Burton fan.😂 A true fan of any director would have a thorough knowledge of their filmography.
@nuclearcatbaby11312 жыл бұрын
It’s a shame that Danny Elfman never got to direct his own movies.
@AndiniKissesGoodbye2 жыл бұрын
@@andiemorgan961 i was like 10, in my head watching corpse bride etc was enough for me to be a "fan" lol
@Jane-oz7pp2 жыл бұрын
@@andiemorgan961 "you can't be a fan if you don't know literally everything about them" is the most bullshit pathetic gatekeeping take.
@digitalchapel Жыл бұрын
I have to say Sleepy Hollow is actually one of my most favorite of his movies - but it always left me wishing it was better executed. I liked the new take on the entire story but I wish it was a little more succinct in execution and I wish the editing was less sloppy. also, yeah, the backstories...we could really have done with less tragic backstories for everyone in it. it really does feel like the beginning of the long spiral downward for him.
@emilyglass66252 жыл бұрын
Big Fish is my favorite Burton movie, because for me it's the only one to realize the story as fully as it realizes the visuals. But at some point I went back and read a bunch of reviews of BF and was really surprised at how differently from me most critics and viewers read the film. A lot of critics initially complained that the father's vivid world, his larger than life self-mythology, was much more interesting than the boring son, so they resented that the film spent time on both. Almost everyone I've read interprets the film as the son getting a comeuppance, realizing he was wrong to be angry with his father, in the end. Me, I never thought that's what happens. The son has been begging his father to communicate with him in a more vulnerable, open way, but the father can't or won't do it. That's a reasonable thing to want from a family member, especially if the only language they ARE willing to communicate in aggrandizes themself, at the implicit expense of people (like you, maybe) who don't have an equally big D energy. I always thought that by the end of the movie, the son learns he was *factually* wrong that his father never bothered to speak about him with pride or love. He finds out that his dad told *other people* stories that show how much he is loved. But that's not learning you were wrong to be exasperated or even heartbroken that your parent was never able to be openly loving or vulnerable with *you.* I always interpreted the ending as the son giving his father a final act of mercy, out of sheer kindness. Out of compassion for the fact that his father is dying, and that's scary and final, and no matter what his dad was or wasn't able to give his son in life, the son wants him to pass surrounded by peace and love. The son accepts that his father will never be willing or able to speak a different language than his own narcissistic mythology, but he sets aside his own needs and longings long enough to say goodbye in the father's language, for the father's sake. So that the father won't feel alone when he dies. There was little to no loving communication between my father and me, though he wasn't a romantic, tall tale-telling fey creature like Ewan McGregor in BIg Fish. My dad only seemed able to value traits that reminded him of himself, and even when you had those traits, he still had to measure you against him. He happened to pass away in a fairly terrible accident when no one could make it to him in time to say goodbye. I don't think I owed it to him to validate him on his deathbed, not after he gave himself permission, over and over again, to make literal children feel small and unloved, but I still think about his death, itself. No one wants to face a painful death all alone. That's a big part of why Big Fish is, for me, the most properly profound Burton movie - because even though the son *is* more visually boring than the wacky father, the movie *isn't* reprimanding him. I mean, I hope it isn't. I've just never been able to read it that way. That's my random Big Fish appreciation tangent, haha. I also have a huge soft spot for Sleepy Hollow's aesthetics and for parts of Edward Scissorhands, though imo it wastes a lot of time on "critiques" that don't really go anywhere...
@ethanhart1292 жыл бұрын
It's worth mentioning that both of Burton's parents died in the early 2000. It's why Big Fish and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory both have pretty heavy father-son themes.
@whodatninja4392 жыл бұрын
it's the only one where felt like he had grown up
@mammi35772 жыл бұрын
♥️♥️You really touched my heart
@natashaavital87132 жыл бұрын
THANK YOU! I hate the way so many movies and TV shows romanticize this kind of character that wants everyone to go along with their self-mithology or fantasy worldview, when they're actually being pretty selfish and inconsiderate
@ultraboombean Жыл бұрын
I feel the critics kinda missed the point as you said. The relationship with the son is the most interesting part of that movie to me.
@jamlym49742 жыл бұрын
While I really like Sleepy Hollow, I actually find it less spooky than the original story. In the original story, when the horseman shows up, Ichabod is all alone in a spooky forest with nothing to do but flee for his life. But in Sleepy Hollow, Ichabod has a bit more advantage. He's got friends helping him and a means of defeating the horseman. It's less of a horror story and more of an action movie.
@aditisk992 жыл бұрын
That's what I felt too when I first watched it.
@denisaboomtown41992 жыл бұрын
I used to feel acknowledged when watching his work as a teen, I felt seen and less alone by all the wierdness, but ever since Alice in Wonderland, I started repelling his ideas and characters, as they all lost their magical uniqueness and they all felt made to please boring people and not the misfits.
@rozzie37012 жыл бұрын
Alice in Wonderland was the end for me too, just completely turned me off to any of this work after that 😢
@jspaingreene63502 жыл бұрын
I agree - I was surprised the essay pointed to Sleepy Hollow, which spoke to me about otherness, instead of Alice. Just like you said. Very well put.
@princesspikachu39152 жыл бұрын
@@rozzie3701 I haven’t watched a Tim Burton film since Corpse Bride. I feel like I have been spared…
@2000seoulsonyosound Жыл бұрын
Johnny Depp characters seem to be a self insert for Burton
@maddhappy22862 жыл бұрын
I feel, with Alice in wonderland especially, that much of his live action was glossed over as beautiful because of the costume department. All of Alice's dresses, the hatter, etc. The real costumes are beautifully done.
@lazulenoc68632 жыл бұрын
"You can't have a funny guy in a bow tie who's whimsical." - Tim Burton Steven Moffatt in 2010: And I took that personally
@macgyversmacbook1861 Жыл бұрын
THIS
@jinxyjangle11 ай бұрын
mad man with a box
@kathyibsais63832 жыл бұрын
I always thought that Tim Burton movies was about the outsider, the person who is not part of the majority. The one that is different. This is the essence of what it is like to be someone of color. One who is always on the fringe of the majority trying to fit in , yet trying at the same to be true to oneself. These characters resonate with us also, but it hurts when Tim Burton deliberately and willfully leaves out characters of any color and ignore us because we don't fit into his "aesthetic" . We just want to be part of his world too.
@iiiiiiiiiiii900000002 жыл бұрын
The themes in Tim's art have more to do with his autism (which does make him a marginalized person and might explain why he considers himself an outsider), and what he's comfortable expressing, which is totally valid and what all authentic artists do. You can't force an artist to create what YOU want. Can you imagine someone telling a POC to stop making so much stuff with POC in it? What if a POC just simply feels more comfortable representing what they are familiar with? Why don't Broey and others spend their time discovering and raising up artists who are POC who can deliver their POV. Because they do exist and they don't get enough support. This is literally 44 minutes giving a rich white man more attention, while accusing him of things we absolutely cannot prove are correct, which is morally wrong and completely unproductive.
@kassandravaldezcontreras80752 жыл бұрын
Agreed, very well put 💔
@wiseauserious87502 жыл бұрын
Well said
@searchingfororion2 жыл бұрын
Once again, I reiterate that other than the members of the household, the individual who shows genuine compassion and concern for Edward and never takes advantage of or persecutes him is the *black* police officer. While the roll may "small"/less lines he's extremely significant. He does absolutely everything he can to not only ensure Edwards safety upon release, but also to divert the mob so he can escape. I'm not saying one BIPOC character fixes everything but it should be acknowledged because the role itself is very important and could have been played by someone of any race but the fact that it is *not* a white person gives it depth. (Speaking from a minority within a minority I understand what it's like not to be represented or wrongly represented but I like that particular choice in the film and I feel that it should be acknowledged.)
@aguilarraliuga17772 жыл бұрын
Nah, go away. Your lot don’t have to included just because of your inferiority complex
@daniexists6 Жыл бұрын
I am ashamed to admit that one of my favorite films ever is Burton's Ed Wood, but over time I've come to understand why. It simply was this really unique film in its era that actively paid tribute to its inspiration's B movie work, while also telling a purposefully obtuse version of what really happened because, unlike other biopics, it really wanted to boil down why Wood was such a fascinating figure in Hollywood history by putting us down in that sort of movie with him as the center. And it's not really something I think Burton would make now, even when he produced the same writers' script about Margaret Keane.
@alanpennie801310 ай бұрын
It's pretty much a perfect movie.
@chronicallychic2 жыл бұрын
There's also a weird amount of ableism in his filmography. It doesn't sit right with me as a disabled person. The channel Princess and the Scrivener did a series of "Burtonmas" videos in 2019 talking about poor representation of many marginalized groups in his movies -- either the included representation was terrible, or it wasn't there at all. It's worth watching if anyone wants more context on his movies.
@espeon8712 жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@chronicallychic2 жыл бұрын
@@espeon871 No problem!
@kyandaila2 жыл бұрын
could you provide a link? i’m also disabled and would LOVE to look more into it but i’m struggling to find it
@frncsk64882 жыл бұрын
@@kyandaila I believe this is the series the commenter is referring to kzbin.info/aero/PLhbv_wRrdM4u3638L43bCfODuB4w0dHgZ (not sure if link will show). In case it doesn’t, how to find the video is by going to the Princess and the Scrivener channel, click on Playlists, and click on Burtonmas 2018. The video for day 6 is the one about disability in Burton’s films. Looking forward to watching it myself (-:
@kyandaila2 жыл бұрын
@@frncsk6488 thank you!!
@ARVETDEG2 жыл бұрын
You know, despite Burton's movies considered "gothic", if you look closely, his films have more German expressionism influences than gothic, with a big pinch of suburbia undertones, and with his endings always making the characters or settings to become normal and/or suburban, showing that somehow being different was just a phase you must overcome to become better or happier or it's your doom. Sort of like youth goth nostalgia. That's why I could never get into them or liked them as madly as everyone around me did and that's why I think his movies appealed to a lot of people, because while they looked weird and dark, in reality they were very commercial and normal underneath, thus making them mass appealing. And while there's nothing wrong with that, I always found it weird how everyone always claimed how unique and different their movies where. And while I could enjoy them (still can or at least his early movies) I never went as bananas over them or Burton like everyone else did. That's why I preferred noir movies or horror movies when it came to darker settings, as I've always felt that Burton was that next door regular kid who became goth in his last year of highschool to get goths girls but never grew out of it.
@nuclearcatbaby11312 жыл бұрын
I wonder if he copied the German expressionism from Danny Elfman’s music videos for Oingo Boingo (check out “Little Girls” and “Nothing Bad Ever Happens”)
@CyberneticCupcake22 жыл бұрын
I saw that decline in the stop-motion adaptation of his own Frankenweenie. On the one hand, it hits all the marks and is honestly a gorgeously modeled and animated film. On the other, besides the stuff that was clearly from the original short, the side-plots establishing the children and their own monsters kinda weighed down the film and felt dreadfully padded, already taking a fantastical concept and pushing suspension of disbelief further than I would have wanted. Let Burton handle aesthetics and direction (maybe with a codirector or decent actors with a hand in the process) and let _better screenwriters_ decide what actually happens. Ironically one of my favorite movies of his is Ed Wood, a dumb but honestly heartfelt loose retelling of the life of the infamous filmmaker. Probably because both screenwriter and director could relate to that oddball image, with plenty of projection to fill the gaps in reality.
@madhatter67902 жыл бұрын
too right, people forget Burton needs to work with these companies to get his movies out and sadly that means he has to endure some amounts of corporate meddling meaning you have Burton, this powerhouse of imagination against the block headed business folks that don't understand that a GOOD film takes time and it needs Burton's full stylish control to help it be something great
@TaliesinBHeidkamp2 жыл бұрын
FRANKENWEENIE felt so weird in a bad way. The way the only non-white character was the bad guy and then the lack of empathy towards the children when their pets died (again). Yes, they were bullies, but seeing the kid hold the empty Shell of his turtle or how the other had to watch his hamster being stomped was odd for a film which's main point is "losing a pet sucks". Hell, the weird blonde girl never even knows what happened to her cat that got fucking impaled! Yes it got turned into a weird bat monster but that was an accident. And for a guy who likes to proclaim how he fights for the weird people it was very telling how the blonde girl and the Igor-looking kid were presented as unsympathetic. "It's cool to be strange and unusual...well..in a Hot Topic model kind of way!"
@nuclearcatbaby11312 жыл бұрын
I think Danny Elfman would make a good screenwriter as well as musician. He actually tried to be a screenwriter and director at one time and even got so far as recording the demo tracks but Disney cut the funding before his movies could be made.
@mo-ji7ms4 ай бұрын
i absolutely love when videos like these get randomly recommended to me, love finding a new video essay creator
@lb.a1572 жыл бұрын
This reminded me when I came across a huge fan of his work. She was a lonely outsider young adult woman who basically considered herself a sort of female Tim Burton or, the very least, the female version of his characters. Since I was a fan of him myself I had no problem with that and I thought she was pretty cool. But time went by and this lady started to get arrogant, narcissitic, annoying, hostile and even racist so she started to get rejected by everyone around her, including myself. Whenever she made a new friend, said friend walked away immediately after she showed her true colors. She never dated, because she wanted the "perfect man", but truth is because no man she met wanted her around due to her attitude. Whenever she got called out on her behavior she went on in comparing herself with Burton and her characters and how she was a "misunderstood victim" instead of the childish woman who was refusing to grow up. She also wanted to become an artist, but her arrogance made her unable to take criticism, so her art looked just as childish as her attitude, again, she kept comparing her art to Burton's. Then I stopped talking to her because she was annoying me with her attempts to cultivate this silly image of a misunderstood, weird and lonely girl with artistic potential and dreamed on becoming a success like Burton. Never heard of neither her or her artwork since and this hapenned like almost a decade ago. After watching this video, it made me realize how Burton himself is not so different from this friend I mentioned, with the main difference he had luck (and talent). Is amazing how this impacted both his art and his fans. My friend was a living example of how this behavior of being a permanent outcast is harmful and childish, it only leads you to more loneliness, specially as you grow older. In her cartoon mind, her actions made sense, but we don't live in a cartoon or a movie, unlike the cartoons, we must all grow up someday. I still have hope he can still show his potential and grow up frim this trope he created, the same way I hope this woman I mentioned got to work on herself.
@oo-ru5lt Жыл бұрын
Sounds hot
@WalnutAnimations Жыл бұрын
@@oo-ru5ltbruh
@ivanagustinortiz5237 Жыл бұрын
As someone who grew up watching a lot of Burton films and has become and artist/director myself, I've realized I kinda became this permanentlu reluctant outcast and that I need help because if this grows it will become a limit to myself, my ability to be social and my work. Sadly, Burton is content with being an outcast that makes movies about being little while working with the biggest industry almost since day 1 lol.
@droolingpine96582 ай бұрын
Yeah im sure this woman existed 🙄
@pseudonymous9153Ай бұрын
An unlikable person existing??? Yeah, sounds sus alright@@droolingpine9658
@someonecomenting1300 Жыл бұрын
Looking at him and his work. Only this comes to mind. It's ok to be Daria at the adolescences stage of your life. Being Daria at 30-50 is a whole other thing.
@robzilla730 Жыл бұрын
Kinda like Kevin Smithee: still with the Jay and Silent Bob thing in his 50s...
@lashermayfair011 ай бұрын
I'm very confused by this comment. What is Daria supposed to become in her 30s-50s? Of course everyone changes over time, but what aspects of Daria's life/behavior would be so unacceptable in a middle aged person?
@kateseegar11009 ай бұрын
@@lashermayfair0 Daria, as much as I love and relate to her, is definitely not always a good person and it's definitely her own doing half the time. And that's the point of the show. If you watch the show, there are many times when Daria insults someone harshly to their face and makes quick judgements for really no good reason. She's done it to Jodie and Brittany pretty consistently throughout the series despite the fact that, for the most part, they're often approaching her positively and passively. I don't think the person that commented before meant she's some soul-sucking piece of shit character, the whole point of the show is that Daria has to learn that even if she doesn't care about conforming to a society she deems shallow that people are more complex than she gives them credit for and that SHE herself is more complex than she even understands (ex: her feelings for Tom and Trent, the episode where she gets contact lenses, the many times she's assumes that just because she feels like something is shallow that it doesn't mean Jane thinks it's shallow, her relationship with Quinn and her parents, etc). What the commenter means is that in order to make meaningful relationships and experiences, you have to let yourself grow and change the way you look at the world. Otherwise, you're just stuck and frozen in time by your own flaws and limits.
@KOTEBANAROT9 ай бұрын
@@kateseegar1100one scene in Daria really stuck out to me, its where they watch childhood tapes and little Daria starts screaming all upset about Quinn getting all the cake or whatever. It really put it into perspective: we're not really meant to think Daria is always cool and right. She can be deeply petty and mean for no good reason. But theres also a good part of her: she's actually deeply moral and a good person underneath all those sarcasm quotes. She has good reasons to dislike the System, but a lot of the time people who really mean no harm to anyone is also a target of her anger. I always liked this nuanced approach - in the future, i think she'll learn to recognize when people are just kind of dim witted followers without any sort of ulterior motive to harm anyone, and when they're actually malicious.
@elimidd6626 Жыл бұрын
Tim Burton kinda reminds me Shyamalan, started put solid with good premises and a solid style, got praised for it, and just. Kept. Doing. It. While believing himself to be some fantastic and misunderstood autuer. His early work was solid and fun, but his inability to change and evolve throughout the years and his teenage mentality of "no one understands me I'm an outsider" that's continued well into his life has caused his work to stagnate and become predictable. Also, I personally love Sleepy Hollow simply because it's so campy and goofy and over the top, it's a so bad it's good movie for me.
@Ringothetankengine-qy1vl11 ай бұрын
The difference is, Burton made a wealth of good movies during his early success in the 80s and 90s, Where Shyamalan made 2 good movies during that early success. The cracks were already showing for Shyamalan by the time of his 3rd movie, where for Tim, the cracks only started to appear around the late 90s and early 2000s, when Tim had already made a wealth of critically acclaimed hits. and by the 2000s, his output had become much more sparse, and the films that were produced were more inconsistent. from a decent film like Sweeney Todd, to a great film like Big Fish, to a mediocre film like Charlie and the Chocolate factory, and a bad film like planet of the apes. It's only around the 2010s were his output became consistently bad, in no-small-part due to Disney whipping out boat-loads of money for him to churn out their soulless remakes. kind of ironic he started as an animator at Disney, and the fact that that he complained about the factory-worker mentality. In other words, he became another cog in the system, all in all, he's just another Brick in the Wall.
@alanpennie801310 ай бұрын
Agreed. Most people outlive their talent if they live long enough. Tim had a very good run before he ran dry.
@allys74411 ай бұрын
I love Tim’s work and I think he definitely has a great imagination. I like German expressionism in film, so it’s cool to see him have a modern twist to the style in his movies. But Tim’s best works are the ones that are original, when he brainstorms different characters (IE Beetlejuice, Edward scissorhands, jack skellington, the characters from corpse bride, etc.), but his recreations on pre existing materials are a hit or miss. The Batman films are some of my favorites, Charlie and the chocolate factory was fabulous and visually gorgeous and the first Alice in wonderland movie and Frankenweenie was decent. Ed Wood was good too. But in recent years, he’s become a bit lazy and doesn’t seem to trust his imagination to create original stories. I mean, in the back of our heads, I’m sure we’ve wondered what Alice in wonderland and dumbo looked like if they were made by different directors, but none of us would imagine that coming true in real life.
@manufacuturedpersonality7182 жыл бұрын
To me, Alice in Wonderland struck a nerve while gaining weight, then losing it through illness, then gaining weight to be healthy again, then getting pregnant and miscarrying... Alice changes so many times in her physical form and the world around her can't always accommodate or know how to react or deal with her sudden feelings... Yeah, I know it's a pretty face value reading, but that's one part of the story that always kind of sticks with me.
@calcifer8306 Жыл бұрын
A lot of people miss the point of Alice and Wonderland. There is no point. It's just a girl traveling and learning how to grow up. It doesn't need to be darker and it doesn't need to be explained. Wonderland is unexplainable and people are just weird. You don't need a reason to be odd just as Alice in Wonderland doesn't need to be any deeper than it already was
@KagamineRinVocaloid Жыл бұрын
Also I would like to add that Alice in Wonderland isn't an adaptation, It's a sequel.
@JeffreyDeCristofaro2 жыл бұрын
I'm surprised you didn't discuss ED WOOD, which I still think is both Tim Burton and Johnny Depp's best film, the peak of each of their careers and as collaborators, despite failing financially. It was a heartfelt tribute to one of Burton's idols who inspired him, it was both beautiful and beautiful-looking, it was neither overly complicated or simplistic, and it clearly showed the director dedicated to his craft while presenting a story that stood opposed to mainstream acceptance and mediocrity. And it also was a reminder of a period when Depp didn't go overboard in his performances, showing a balance of fragility, charisma, warm humor, heartfelt drama and authentic humanity overall. That said, I haven't seen a Burton film in years that has matched that masterpiece. I really liked BATMAN RETURNS but strongly prefer the DARK KNIGHT Trilogy. SWEENEY TODD for me comes really close, but it's still no ED WOOD. And I find it really disappointing when a filmmaker tends to contradict himself, wanting to believe in and say one thing while allowing himself to fall into the trap of becoming a conventional Hollywood director lacking an individual style and spirit.
@jjphoenix40552 жыл бұрын
Another of the GREATEST movies from Burton. Looks like the videographer here isn't too interested in horror films or biographies of extraordinary weirdos in movie history like Ed Wood was. Another excellent film from Burton.
@rogerdodger64352 жыл бұрын
I love Ed Wood. Even as a kid I couldn't put my finger on it but something about it just had me in love with it. Then Mars Attacks happened... 😕
@G_Nono7777 Жыл бұрын
I used to really like Charlie and the chocolate factory as a kid, but I only saw it dubbed in Hungarian. I think it improved a lot on Johnny's performance, as he sounded more normal.