The Nightmare
Before Christmas
Dir: Henry Selick
1993
*****
1993's The Nightmare Before Christmas is nothing short
of masterful. The last of the great fairy-tales in some
respects, a combination of Tim Burton's wonderful imagination and
Henry Selick's talent and artistry (not to mention patience). It's clear
to see that it is a dark(er) version of Dr' Seuss' How The Grinch Stole
Christmas, Jack Skellington being a Grinch like character and his dog Zero
being a bare-bones version of the Grinch's dog Max. However, it’s also
full of its own originality. I loved the idea of a 'holiday' portal place,
where each season can be entered from another. Artists and film makers have
often explored the darker sides of Christmas but few have made such an exciting
and vibrant story of it. Halloween and Christmas are as far apart as they can
be, even though we celebrate both just months apart from each other. To see the
two, arguably most popular seasons combined is
quite an ingenious and creative wonder. It's amazing that it all came
together from a short poem Burton wrote as a young animator. The question is,
is The Nightmare Before Christmas
a Halloween or a Christmas movie? Either
way, it's a glorious fantasy, a wonderful animation and already a modern
classic. The humour and mood and beautifully balanced and Danny Elfman's music is superb. Not just for miserable goth girls neither.
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