T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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359.1 | | 5235::J_TOMAO | | Fri Oct 22 1993 12:57 | 9 |
| Doesn't open until next week in my area (Worcester MA) I saw the
critics - Sneak Preview and they both loved the special effects but
said the story was lame - and its only sloghtly over an hour long (can
you blame the creators?)
I saw the previews in a theater before I had ever heard of it and I
just loved it! I am looking forward to seeing it on the big screen.
Jt
|
359.2 | | 12035::MDNITE::RIVERS | | Fri Oct 22 1993 16:55 | 8 |
| Actually, it's opened at White City today.
I plan on going to see it tonite after work.
Cheers,
kim
|
359.3 | Thumbs up | 12035::MDNITE::RIVERS | | Mon Oct 25 1993 12:42 | 54 |
| A very nicely done movie, as long as one does not sit in front of
small, non-movie-trained children who don't realize that talking very
loud during quiet parts means they can be heard into the next county.
I noticed a lot of small (say, under 10) kids in the theaters. The
film is funny, very quirky, very much what one would expect from a Tim
Burtonesque fairy-tale, and the lively parts are enough to keep a small
child's attention. What with all the monsters and all. But "The
Nightmare Before Christmas" isn't flashy and bright like a Disney
Cartoon, and indeed, it has some parts which are meant for drama and/or
poignant moments. Aka "slow parts", when not much is happening on
screen. Fine for many of us, but not for young kids, who seemed to get
restless and bored. During these periods, the two kids behind me would
go into shriek mode most often. Your kids, of course, may vary.
All that said, I managed to enjoy myself. The story concerns Jack
Skellington, the King of Halloweentown, who finds himself wanting a bit
more than simply scaring people once a year. He stumbles upon the very
merry Christmastown, marvels at all the neat presents and the fact that
no one is scaring each other, and catches a silhoutted glimpse of
"Sandy Claws". Jack scampers back to Halloweentown and calls a
meeting, getting all the various denizens to voice their approval of
taking over Christmas. Of course, a Halloweentown resident's idea of a
neat present is somewhat different than the happy elves of
Christmastown's.....
Besides Jack, the film features a wide variety of interesting--well,
things. Dr. Finklestein, the mad scientist who construts Jack's love
interest, Sally the Ragdoll. There's a trio of fairly effete vampires,
the Oogie Boogie man (the most unpleasant of Halloweentown's
inhabitants, certainly in personality, if not in looks), Oogie Boogie's
henchmen, Lock, Shock and Barrel (who I liked best), the literally Two
Faced Mayor, and many, many more. There is usually a lot going on in
any once scene, so much that I'd like to go see it again, to catch some
details I missed.
There are many songs in the film, none of them particularly catchy, but
it's Danny Elfman's first time writing a musical. They grow on you if
you listen to the tape. The incidental music is stock Elfman -- but I
sort of like Elfman's fairy-tale music, so I enjoyed it. Elfman also
provides Jack's dramatic singing voice.
The stop-motion puppets are great to look at, highly detailed, and the
animation is really nicely done. The film is fairly short (around 70
minutes), but when you can appreciate that the animators could only
film about 5 seconds screen time a *day*, you understand how doing
something the length of oh, Gettysburg, is a bit out. :)
I'd certainly recommend it.
***.5 out of ****
kim
|
359.4 | Thumbs up | 17576::COLETTI | Fast, Cheap and Out of Control | Mon Oct 25 1993 12:45 | 5 |
| Saw this on Sunday with the kids - it's a fascinating movie and the
kids (boys, 10 and 11) were enthralled throughout. Short move - about
80 minutes, I'd say - done mostly as a musical. Stop motion animation
is the smoothest and most life-like I've ever seen. Wouldn't be
surprised if this becomes a holiday classic!
|
359.5 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Mon Nov 01 1993 20:14 | 59 |
| From the ads, I figured this was going to be right up my alley,
gruesome-wise; the shrunken-head bit had a Gahan Wilson quality, the
attenuated lines of Jack's character conjured up spiders and skeletons
and animated scarecrows all at once, the scenery looked vaguely like
something Edward Gorey would come up with during a bout of indigestion,
and the Jack-in-Christmastown scenes combined Charles Addams with Dr.
Suess in an intriguing fashion.
So - did it work? Mostly yes - but watch out for the Thing Under the
Bed! <BANG!!! CRASH!!! Excuse me - there will be a brief pause while I
replace the lightbulb in the lamp that the cat just knocked over.>
That's better. I enjoyed the film a lot. For the most part, the
stop-motion and other effects felt seamless. The casting was splendid,
with William Hickey especially good as the mad scientist (who looked
like a nightmarish cross between an embryonic Howard the Duck and
Stephen Hawking, and sounded like - well, like William Hickey, which is
scary enough for anybody). The music worked well to support the mood
and - once in a while - to provide a catchy little number ("What's
This?", one of the more Suess-ian songs, was especially appealling).
And there were lots of cute bits of business: the vampires forming a
sort of Greek chorus to one exceptionally dolorous song, Jack chiding
(ever so gently) one of the townsfolk for trying to gift-wrap a
road-killed turtle ("That one's a little too far gone; try something
fresher"), the maid-in-a-tower fable translated into Sally's amiable
escape techniques, the confrontations between the residents of
different holidays, the Oogie-Boogie/boogie/bogey/boggle/bug derivation
(I was immensely pleased when I looked it up), and all manner of stuff
going on in the background, things it'll take a couple of viewings to see.
But I was very much surprised to find that, about a third of the way
through, I was getting a teensy bit... queasy. Halloweentown was so
loaded with "the horribles," some of which were in an advanced state of
decomposition (and yet, unlike the turtle, were still roaming around),
that for a while there it felt like I could smell 'em, hear the
squelching sounds... Yechhh. [This eased up a bit when Jack got to
Christmastown, but I was no end astonished at my reaction. Maybe Tim
Burton built a better nightmareland than I'd expected.]
The Christmas-eve segment triggered another twinge of queasiness (the
recipients of Jack's largesse were really, really scared and
bewildered), but was also a hoot; Jack looked just like that Gahan
Wilson cartoon of a skeleton dressed in a Santa suit (caption: "Well,
Mrs. Jones, I think we know what's been blocking your chimney since
last winter."). The blend of the sweet guy we know him to be and the
really horrible monster he looked like to all the kiddies was very...
interesting. [I haven't had any nightmares about him yet, though I
expected to; Burton managed to get nearly all of the Things That Scare
Me into that one cartoon figure, from the empty eyes to the skeletal
shape. I haven't even gotten too nervous about that half-open closet...
so far.]
All in all, I think the movie's a wonderful piece of animation, and
very cleverly assembled; if the story's a little thin (especially the
Jack/Sally romance), well, so are the main characters, so it suits 'em.
I don't know if this will become a warm family holiday tradition, but
*I'll* probably watch it again.
-b
|
359.6 | should've been 20-min animation SHORT (not enough material) | 5436::DEBRIAE | Erik | Tue Nov 02 1993 13:48 | 70 |
|
Well I have to write despite having no time since my take of the movie
doesn't agree with the reviews so far...
I didn't think much of this film, and was rather disappointed by it.
My three theatre companions felt exactly the same. In short, we were
all terribly bored after the first ten minutes. The movie seemed to be
over two hours instead of only 80 minutes (was it really only that
short?). The story line was very very weak, as were the characters.
It was a B-grade half-hour Saturday morning cartoon put into
technically superior animation and stretched out to over an hour.
Now, I am a huge fan of animation. After just having attended this
year's annual animation film festival, I was expecting animation on par
with many of the better shorts I've seen. This year the festival
contained the long short called "The Sandman," which was creepy and
gruesome while sweet and endearing at the same time. It was my
favorite, and the commercials for "The Nightmare Before Christmas"
seemed to have a similar look (especially the boy opening the xmas
gift). But upon seeing it, Nightmare just did not hold up.
Technically, it was indeed amoung the smoothest animation I have seen.
And Burton's attention to detail was painstaking and remarkable (yet I
would not call it beautiful). However, after the initial ten minutes
where I was involved with looking at the animation, the characters, and
the Halloween-town scenery, I became bored. The scenes often had the
same exact background (naturally, since it happened 'in town') and once
you got used to the characters, the new-ness of their animation wore
off, and you watched the character _for_ the character and his/her
storyline as if s/he were a real life actor and not for their animation
anymore (perhaps to the animator's credit). And since I found the
characters to be cardboard-cutout weak and the story weak, that
explains why I became bored.
The animation film festival shorts held me riveted, watching every
frame with anticipation and delight. Nightmare dragged on, and the
animation lost its appeal with a feeling of sameness after a while.
The film was gruesome and dark feeling, but you became used to it after
a while. And unlike "Sandman", it did not have any endearing qualities
to fill in any holes. I did not feel for any of the characters,
including absolutely nothing for the main character Jack (unlike the
adorably-done little boy in "Sandman"). In Sandman, scenes were taken
(gorgeous motion shots) from the angle of a little boy, where you felt
like you were experiencing the story along with the boy, from his
viewpoint. Nightmare was flat and cardboard. I felt I didn't know any
of the characters well, and therefore didn't particularly care about
them or what happened to them. I was 'watching' them on a flat
artificial surface, like physically looking at a storybook's pictures,
removed from the action and not involved in it. The music was also not
memorable in any sense, it was almost a non-entity.
I give Nightmare a *1/2 (one and a half) stars out of ***** stars.
Might be good for mid-to-older school boys who might revel in the
bathroom-humor dripping-ooze 'gore' (became tiresome toward the middle
of the film). The theatre seemed to be 90% children, mostly elementary
school aged (we felt like the oldest people there). But "Nightmare" is
definitely NOT a children's film in my mind. (Some parents walked out
with their children mid-way, I would guess that the look and feel of
the film would be disturbing to quite a few of the younger children, I
would not recommend it personally either). And my word, to mention
the word "classic" in the same sentence as "Nightmare" is the most
absurd thing I have heard in a very long time. An emphatic "Absolutely
no way" from me. Unless I was asleep and missed it when "Betelgeuse"
became a Children's Classic. And that has more chance by far than
Nightmare. Animation does not always mean "for kids".
This is all my own opinion upon the seeing the film. Usually I agree
with the previous people on film reviews and when Gene and Roger both
give thumbs up, but not this time. Your viewing may vary...
-Erik
|
359.7 | Give it a miss | 16913::MILLS_MA | To Thine own self be True | Tue Nov 02 1993 15:38 | 16 |
|
Saw it last weekend. I didn't like it much, but then, I'm not a fan of
that type of animation. I also detected more than a passing similarity
to Edward Gorey and Charles Addams in the backgrounds.
I especially didn't like the blending on Christmas and Halloween, and
the typically "dark" Burtonesque sets. Why did I go see a movie I knew
I probably wouldn't like? I was overruled by my son and husband. Only
my son enjoyed it, though, although he did sit on my lap a couple of
times when the action got a little too weird for him.
*** 1/2 stars out of 4 for special effects
* for family viewing
Marilyn
|
359.8 | | 5235::J_TOMAO | | Mon Nov 08 1993 14:00 | 14 |
| Loved it!!!!
Even though it had some real slow moments (like several of the songs) I
thought the pace was good, storyline o.k. (a major twist on the Grinch
Who Stole Christmas) some good songs, alot of funny one liners - but
awesome animation!!! Basically the only thing I really 'loved' about
it was the stop action animation stuff.
If you want a great story, don't bother - don't even bother if you want
a "love story"...but to me this is one of those movies that plays well
on the big screen.
** out of *****
Jt
|
359.9 | | AOSG::NORDLINGER | No se gana pero se goza | Tue Nov 09 1993 16:12 | 6 |
| I really liked it, fun, colorful, great music. A rudolf story for
Halloween.
all three thumbs up!
John
|
359.10 | And apologize again! | RNDHSE::WALL | Show me, don't tell me | Wed Nov 10 1993 08:59 | 15 |
|
I went to see it last night and didn't think my time misspent.
Terrific craftsmanship, and enough attention paid to other parts of
film-making so that it wasn't just visually interesting. I didn't find
any of the songs particularly objectionable.
A holiday special for the nineties. A sort of Rankin-Bass on crack. I
noticed that one of the Oogy-Boogy's henchcreatures had a voice that
was very much like that of Hermie, the elf with dental school
aspirations, in Rudolph, the Red-Nosed Reindeer. I don't know if that
was intentional, but it's a sort of homage. However, I don't think I'd
pay full price to see it again. It's a question of it being less up
my street, not a comment on the quality of the film.
DFW
|
359.11 | wow! | 57784::BUCKLEY | violent new breed | Fri Dec 03 1993 18:22 | 10 |
|
Saw it last night ... LOVED IT!! But, I feel this is one of those
love/hate movies...to me, one of the best films I've seen in ages
-- I can't wait to go again! But, I saw a few couples actually walk
out mid-movie. So, I guess it's not for everyone (like the noter
who rated this movie a * "for family viewing" ... that is exactly
why I absolutly loved it!!)
**** out of *****
Buck
|
359.12 | Excellent!!!!!!! | ASDG::MCNAMARA | strange visitor...... | Mon Dec 06 1993 11:57 | 10 |
| ...YES!!!!! I loved it as well....so much imagination and talent on the
part of Tim Burton and his crew...I picked up the soundtrack as well..
when we (my wife and I) we there, we completely forgot all other
issues....that's a mark of a great "fantasy" movie...
****1/2 out of *****
mac
("Making Christmas...)
|
359.13 | Go for the sets and animation! | TLE::JBISHOP | | Mon Dec 13 1993 14:26 | 32 |
| Count me in as one of the "pro" people. I do, however, have
some less-positive thoughts:
1. As noted, it drags a bit towards the end, as the scenery
(wonderful though it is) doesn't change and the story is
lightweight for the time it has to occupy;
2. The other holiday towns aren't different enough--I think
it'd have been stronger if Christmas Town weren't done by
Burton (whose natural style fits Halloween Town well), but
by someone else whose natural style was warm and hearty;
3. The skip into the "real" world is jarring to me, necessary
though it was--it would have worked better if we never saw
peoples' faces, I think;
4. Santa shouldn't look like that--that was the Tim Burton
Halloween version of Santa, quite wrong;
5. Santa shouldn't be powerless. He's the top guy in one of
the towns, he should be able to fluff off the Boogey causually.
This really didn't make internal sense to me;
6. Halloween isn't just rotting zombies and the like--it's also
kids in costume and the "cute spooky" stuff we get inundated
with.
That said, it's worth watching for the Halloween Town sets alone.
Burton's heart is clearly in his work there (as it was in the "waiting
room" part of Beatlejuice).
-John Bishop
|
359.14 | | 5235::J_TOMAO | | Tue Dec 14 1993 13:19 | 7 |
| Just a side note...I had a great time in "Newbury Comics" (The one in
Shrewsbury Mass on route 9) yesterday and saw some great little TNBC
stuff.....wind up toys, coffee mugs stickers...cute stuff for an avid fan.
all disclaimers apply - just passing on some info...
Jt
|