Frame-by-frame family frights...!
50.)
The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993): 11/10
51.)
Frankenweenie (2012): 8.5/10
52.)
Wallace & Gromit: The Curse Of The Were-Rabbit (2005): 8.5/10
A trio of stop-motion animated delights today. Tim Burton's
The Nightmare Before Christmas (directed by
Coraline's Henry Selick) certainly needs no introduction, becoming a staple of two holidays over the three+ decades. The cracked yet sweet fable of Jack Skellington (spoken by Chris Sarandon, sung by Danny Elfman, who also penned the movie's superb song score), the preeminent spookmaster of Halloween town, who nevertheless grows weary of the usual seasonal frights and pines away for something new...and finds it when he takes a tumble through a portal in a tree and lands smack-bad in the middle of Christmastown, where he becomes entranced by the color, cheer and sheer motion of this strange new world. Wanting to possess this feeling for his very own, he arranges to kidnap the "Sandy Claws" who is the world's MC and wants to replace him, not knowing that his brand of ghoulish "presents" are not what the people are quite expecting.
Gorgeously designed, animated and performed by a superb voice cast (including the recently late Ken Page as the charismatically menacing Oogie-Boogie Man),
Nightmare has become a classic for good reason, and seeing it on the big screen again (in well-produced 3D, no less) is a treat.
Burton would return to stop-motion twice more in his career, the most recent being 2012's
Frankenweenie (an adaptation and expansion of his own 1984 live-action short), which re-configures one of the quintessential of the 1930s Universal Monster cycle to plunk young Victor Frankenstein (Charlie Tahan) into the very 1960s-ish suburban enclave of "New Holland", where he loses his beloved dog, Sparky, and utilizes the miracle of electricity to resurrect his pooch from the Pet Sematary ("I don't want him in my heart. I want him here with me"). Soon, his fellow elementary-school science-class students get wind of his achievements, and harness the same power to return their own selected dead things to life, leading to a climax studded with sly cinematic references, everything from old Toho
Gamera flicks to
Gremlins to
The Birds to a hilarious homage to
Bambi vs. Godzilla).
As always, Burton adroitly toes the line between creepiness and cuddliness (his animated films are an ideal starting point for younger children who want to watch something "scary" for the Halloween season without anything truly inappropriate or traumatizing), and his animation team renders the inside of his imagination with supple, maddeningly detailed skill and finesse. Anyways, I'm always a sucker for a good "Boy & His Dog" story, and
Frankenweenie is a particularly satisfying example.
Finally, the cracked gents at Britain's Aardman Animation Studios finally give their signature characters their own feature-length adventure (their newest,
Vengeance Most Fowl, hits Netflix in a few month's time) with
Curse Of The Were-Rabbit finding dotty inventor Wallace (Peter Sallis) and his faithful canine companion Gromit (expressively mute as always) running their own animal-control business, Anti-Pesto, where they're tasked with policing the gardens of the local populace in order to save their prize produce from the ravening appetites of a surplus of Alpine intruders. But when Wallace uses his "Mind-Manipulation-O-Matic" in at attempt to brainwash the bunnies out of their cravings for leafy greens, he unleashes the beast within, and soon the "Were-Rabbit" is tearing through cabbages, carrots and cauliflowers with a wanton greed as he tries to hide his new condition from his desirable customer Lady Tottington (a daffy Helena Bonham Carter) as well as Victor Quartermain (Ralph Fiennes), her foppish, would-be paramour, who's itching to put a 24-"carrot" gold bullet into Wallace's furry hide.
Like their previous short adventures,
Curse Of The Were-Rabbit offers up all of the dry humor, sly in-jokes, groaner puns and engaging slapstick that have typified the work of W&G creator and director Nick Park over the past 35 years, and the plasticine animation has a funky, retro charm that can never be replaced by the sleek yet anonymous gloss of CGI no matter how many tech advances they make. Kids will laugh and be delighted, and their parents will enjoy just as much while admiring the film's technical polish on an entirely different level. "I'm just crackers for cheese! Monterey Jack, mmmm...!"