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Tim Burton's Corpse Bride (DVD, 2006, Widescreen) 
Tim Burton's Corpse Bride (DVD, 2006, Widescreen)

 
Tim Burton's Corpse Bride (DVD, 2006, Widescreen)

Leading Role: Albert Finney, Helena Bonham-Carter
Director: Tim Burton
Rating: Rated PG
Release Date: Jan 2006
Format: DVD
Additional Info: Widescreen
UPC: 012569593510
Product ID: EPID50356617
Description: In the same vein as EDWARD SCISSORHANDS and NIGHTMARE BEFORE CHRISTMAS, Tim Burton continues to combine wholesome comedy and creepy horror with this tale of a mild-mannered Victorian gentleman, Victor (Johnny Depp), who accidentally marr...
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Movie Description
In the same vein as EDWARD SCISSORHANDS and NIGHTMARE BEFORE CHRISTMAS, Tim Burton continues to combine wholesome comedy and creepy horror with this tale of a mild-mannered Victorian gentleman, Victor (Johnny Depp), who accidentally marries a mysterious corpse bride (Helena Bonham-Carter) instead of his intended, Victoria (Emily Watson). Victor soon discovers that the Land of the Dead holds more fun than frights and begins to fall in love with his innocent bride. Meanwhile, Victoria has been drawn into a scam of a marriage and may not escape with her life. As time runs out for everyone, can there be a resolution in which everyone gets what he or she deserves?


Building on their past productive relationship (EDWARD SCISSORHANDS, ED WOOD), Tim Burton and Johnny Depp create a colorful riot of a film that revives the increasingly rare method of stop-motion animation. Over the period of 10 years that Burton worked to complete the film, new techniques were created to speed the process, including a new way to change the character models' facial expressions by using gears in their heads. Of particular note is the lilting score by Danny Elfman, another longtime Burton collaborator. Fun for adults and children, CORPSE BRIDE is another welcome walk through Tim Burton's twisted mind.

Credits
Producer:Allison Abbate, Tim Burton
Cast:Albert Finney, Helena Bonham-Carter

Details
Edition:Widescreen

Editorial Reviews
3.5 stars out of 5 -- "[I]t's warped and wonderfully effervescent....Burton evokes a darkly erotic obsession that recalls Edgar Allan Poe and Hitchcock's VERTIGO."
Rolling Stone - Peter Travers (09/22/2005)

"As an achievement in macabre visual wizardry, TIM BURTON'S CORPSE BRIDE has to reckoned some sort of marvel....A sculpted musical dreamscape of kiddie-gothic expressionist design." -- Grade: B
Entertainment Weekly - Owen Gleiberman (09/23/2005)

"The visuals are dazzling and the characters vividly rendered in caricature fashion. Danny Elfman's score may be his best yet, with songs that are witty and melodic."
USA Today - Claudia Puig (09/16/2005)

"The new film showcases the subtle effects the technique can manage, with texture and detail, lighting and costuming still beyond anything computers can achieve..."
Sight and Sound - Kim Newman (11/01/2005)

5 stars out of 5 -- "A return to form for Tim Burton....A bravura, tag-along triumph in its own right."
Uncut - Kevin Maher (03/01/2006)

"[With] a few moments of graceful, melancholy lyricism rare for any kind of movie, let alone an animated one."
Premiere - Glenn Kenny (03/01/2006)

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    Top Reviews
      Corpse Bride
    Review created: 01/31/06
    by:
    7 of 11 people found this review helpful.

    Victor is extremely nervous about getting married to a complete stranger. He ends up finding that he likes Victoria, but when practicing his lines, he keeps messing everything up. Everyone is making fun of him, and yelling to get it right. After so long, he runs out of the church and into the woods next to a cemetary, practicing his lines on trees and anything around him. Finally he gets it right with full confidence, and slides the ring onto Emilys(corpse bride) hand, thinking it was a branch sticking out of the snow. Now Victor is living among the dead with his mistake of a bride.(Emilys parents wouldnt approve of the man she wanted to marry, so their plan was to run away. Emily was waiting for her love to show up next to a tree to get married, but that never happened.)

    Cute little romance story. Just as Unique as The nightmare before Christams. Its funny. Among the living it's dark and dreary, but amongst the dead it's much more lively and colorful. I enjoyed it. Suitable for all audiences.


    Review ID: 10000000000718874
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      TIM BURTON'S CORPSE BRIDE
    Review created: 02/12/06
    9 of 17 people found this review helpful.

    Tim Burton's mind must be a very strange place. Remember, it's where if you commit suicide you have to work for social services in the afterlife (Ref: Beetlejuice). I'm a social worker, so I know what that means! Men with hands made of scissors, Jack Nicholson as Batman's foil...this is one sick puppy of a director.

    So when you hear Mr. Burton is directing a film based on an Eastern European folktale in which one of the heroines-the heroines, mind you---is a corpse....well, family fare is not what comes to mind.

    And, although it's animated, Corpse Bride definitely is not for the younger set, 9 or so and below. These characters look creepy. The title character has a habit of losing her eye and talking to the maggot, Louie, who lives behind it. Skeletons of dogs and people walk and talk about in the "underworld".

    However, like Beetlejuice and Edward Scissorhands, older children will find the animations amusing and fascinating; and parents will be pleased with the messages packaged in the film.

    Briefly, "Corpse Bride" is an animated operetta in which Victor (voiced by Johnny Depp), son of fishmongers, is engaged to Victoria, (Emily Watson) the daughter of nobles who are now penniless. Neither know each other but meet accidentally and fall in love. When Victor stumbles over his complicated wedding vows at the rehearsal, he's humiliated by a stranger at the wedding (Richard E. Grant) and walks in the woods to practice. When he says the vows, he places the ring on a "twig" that turns out to be the finger of Emily (Helena Bonham-Carter), the Corpse Bride, who of course jumps up and happily informs him they are married. (She's very pretty, by the way, dead or not).

    Much of the rest of the movie is taken up by Victor trying to figure out how to get out from the Underworld and by Emily trying to either deny he's doing that or actively convince him to stay. Gradually, however, Victor finds, to his surprise, that he is falling in love with Emily.

    In the end the viewers have heard some good lessons about love, and the main characters, primarily Emily and Victor, have each been willing to sacrifice greatly for the other, out of their love for each other. The importance of wedding vows is a central theme, and Victor especially gives long thought to whom his alliances lie, given what he's promised, and to whom. And those motivated by greed, such as Richard Grant's character, mostly come out empty handed.

    The comedy is brilliant. In one scene, Emily's friends in the "pub" do a number quite reminiscent of the Star Wars cantina scene, given the odd-looking musicians. I'm not sure how well the "operetta" mode works with animation; while claymation gives these characters terrific means of expression, they are still limited in their ability to emote, and musical theatre may be best left to human faces. Still, Danny Elfman's score is beautiful as always.

    Leave the wee ones with the other parent next door at "March of the Penguins" or "Wallace and Gromit: Search for the Were-Rabbit", then huddle with the rest of the kids to see this wonderful film.


    Review ID: 10000000000741082
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