I'm surprised. I would have thought that is being a Tim Burton movie alone would have gotten its fans...then again, maybe people only like him FOR Depp...Alice in Wonderland was marketed towards the fact he was in it, and yet his character really wasn't THAT big of a deal in the movie. I was expecting it to be like...The Mad Hatter story honestly. I was glad I was wrong with that
I would think another problem with Frankenweenie was it was in black and white. What's more appealing to kids? Bright colors, or dull grayscale?
Some say the black and white turned kids off. I'd say that in between the choice of a story of a gaunt looking kid trying to reanimate a dead dog shot in black and white vs a blindingly colorful movie about way too many monsters where the tasteless fart joke is put front and center in the advertisement, I don't see any 6 year olds wanting to see the former. I mean, I don't even think Frankenweenie was the kid friendliest of the three stop motion films. That would be Pirates. Of course, to be honest, I don't see little kids enjoying Paranorman half as much as older kids and especially teenagers.
I agree there were story problems, and it really feels like Tim was trying too hard to get back to his roots (I can't blame him for that). It's unlike any movie he made after the 90's, I'll give it that. Still, it's funny that the movie was a flop, but it was the only one to get merchandise out of the three. I have the only American released Pirates product. An
apple juice wrapper.
- Charlie and the Chocolate Factory 2005 (He removed everything charming and lovable from the book and previous film and exaggerated the unsettling bits. Creative downward-spiral confirmed.)
I grew to not find the original film charming. Well, aside from Gene Wilder, that is. It's so 1970's. It looks like it was produced by the Krofft Brothers, and what was up with that idiotic creepy boat ride bit? I barely even prefer Burton's version, and that's because the visuals are slightly less icky looking to me. I think
both of them stack up horribly to the original book. After all, Dahl
hated the first movie... I don't think he was around for the second. What Charlie and the Chocolate factory needs is a fresh 2-D animated adaption that completely ignores both movies ever existed. What really sticks out is that Tim wanted to do something different,
yet he tried to emulate bits of the last movie.
I actually didn't mind that joke. It's better than keeping silent about Brown's behavior like many people in the media have.
Both Chris and Mel deserve all the lambasting they can get. I don't see how either of those things they did didn't end their careers. I mean, Michael Richards' insane blow up destroyed his career, and the only thing he's been in was a Curb your Enthusiasm episode and a forcefully hidden cameo in Bee Movie that he recorded before that happened. At least people are starting to turn their backs on Mel. It really sucks that he was like that, since Lethal Weapon and Chicken Run were both great films. But props to Seth for saying Chris Brown beats women and Rhianna keeps coming back.