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Frankenweenie
Directed by Tim Burton by Deeky Wentworth
Victor Frankenstein is your typical suburban kid. And when
his dog is run over by a car, he does what any typical kid would do: He brings
the dog back to life. It’s rumored the Disney balked upon seeing this film, Tim
Burton’s first, and refused to release it, unsettled by the dark subject matter.
Not your average boy and his dog film was this. Of course, after Burton became
one of the most successful directors around, Disney had a change of heart. A boy and his (dead) dog. What is clearly apparent, though Disney may have been blind
to it, is Burton’s talent behind the camera. Not only is there a mastery of
style but Burton knows how to tell a story. Frankenweenie captures
perfectly the spirit of whimsy mixed with the grotesque that typifies the Burton
oeuvre. It wasn’t a big jump from this to his follow-up, Pee-wee’s Big
Adventure. So much here foreshadows Burton’s later work. From the angry
mob of Edward Scissorhands to the burning windmill of Sleepy Hollow,
and the overriding theme of misunderstood outsider, this is vintage Burton. But is the film too dark? I found it more cute than anything.
Given that Burton’s fan base are largely adults, I can’t see anyone objecting to
this film. That aside, I think we tend to be overprotective of children when it
comes to such weighty subjects as death, and it’s probably to their detriment.
Frankenweenie is definitely worth searching out.
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