Sunday, April 28, 2013

Lennox Frankenweenie



Tim Burton's Frankenweenie is the story of Victor Frankenstein and his best friend and dog, Sparky. Sparky dies tragically before young Victor's eyes, breaking the boy's heart. victor realizes through demonstration in his class that electricity can reanimate the dead. Victor gathers all the electronics in his house, digs up Sparky's corpse and proceeds to successfully bring his pet back to life. Victor then attempts to keep Sparky a secret, but he fails and notices that Sparky is not accepted and viewed as a monster. Once it is realized that Sparky is kind, it is too late and Sparky is already dead once again. Out of remorse, the towns people attempt to bring Sparky back to life and succeed.

This is the basic plot of both Frankenweenie films. In 1984, the original film was released in black and white, and the film starred human actors, as well as a real dog. In this film specifically, we watch a real young boy witness the death of his dog caused by his own negligence; Victor throws Sparky's ball further and further out until Sparky is hit by a car. We later see a depressed Victor doodleling in class and his nonchalant teacher explaining  electricity's effect on muscles. We later see a real human boy, Victor, dig up his dog's corpse and successfully bring it back to life. Now, we'll stop right here.

In the 2012 version of the film, stop motion puppets are used to tell the story of Victor Frankenstein and his dog, Sparky. In this film, the events leading up to Sparky's death are a little different. Victor is portrayed as a child who only loves his dog and science. Victor wishes to participate in the science fair and his father makes him make a deal; Victor can participate in the science fair if he joins his school's baseball team. Victor is not as bad at baseball as he thought; he practically hits a home run. The flying ball leads to Sparky running into the street after it, and dying right before Victor's eyes. I will stop this here.

Seeing these scenes played out by a real actor is quite disturbing. In the 1984 version of the film, we see a young boy practically rob a grave. That is not normal and to a child, it may appear all too real. With animation, the child somehow understands that the story is "make-believe." It's a puppet dramatically acting out the scene, not a real, human boy. Without the special effects the 2012 version of Frankenweenie, the story is pretty short and straight to the point in 1984: Dog dies, boy brings it back to life, dog dies again, everyone works together to bring it back to life. This all happens in the 2012 version, but the effects allowed the story to be stretched out more. We get to see Victor's personality and his ability to think quickly and save the towns people from the revived creatures.

Stop motion animation allowed the story to be accepted into the imagination and viewed as a less mature film.

(I am terribly sorry for this being submitted late)

Sunday, April 21, 2013

Lennox Sweeny Todd

In Sweeny Todd, Todd and Mrs. Lovett are at the bottom of the food chain. They have no say, no power, no anything. Sweeny Todd wants revenge for the years he had been locked away and his lovely wife and daughter taken from him. Mrs. Lovett wants money and Todd. They agree to help each other get the power they desire. Todd begins to murder the poor nobodies of London and Mrs. Lovett begins to grind down their bodies and use the meat for her meat pies which are consumed by everyone of London. Mrs. Lovett uses the little people to get themselves to the top.  
 
It's a dog eat dog world out there, and Mrs. Lovett takes advantage of it. She doesn't have a care in the world as she grinds up the corpses. She feeds it to people as if she is doing nothing wrong. It's how she is getting by. It is not until the end do we realize how selfish she really is. We see that she knows that Todd's wife is still alive, but she wants the man and the property all to herself. She lets Todd kill his own wife in cold blood. Mrs. Lovett did what anyone with the right opportunity would do. 
 
Sweeny Todd was unjustly put in prison for something that he did not do. He is angry and bitter when he gets back to London, but deep down, he wishes to come home to a wife and child. When Mrs. Lovett tells him the story, all Todd wants more than anything is revenge. The men with power chewed him up and spit him out to get what they wanted, and Todd delightfully returned the favor. While he can't get to the judge, he takes the lives of innocent men in cold blood.
 
Mrs. Lovett and Sweeny Todd were looked down upon, they were filled with jealousy and hatred that only mend with depriving others so that they may gain. Man devouring man. It happens every day, everywhere. We see at the end of the film, those stepped on others to get where they are don't get the luxury of a fairy tale ending. 

Sunday, April 14, 2013

Lennox- Big Fish

Edward Bloom was a friendly guy. He was brave, too. When everyone in the town feared Karl because of his height, Edward went to talk to him. Just as Karl was literally too big to live in such a small town, so where Edward's ambitions. Edward related and connected to Karl on that level. Edward did not judge or shun Karl based on something that Karl could not change about himself. 
I guess one could say that Tim Burton judged his parents (his father), for something they couldn't change. Burton's parents did not push him away as the villagers attempted to push Karl away, Burton ran away; he left his problems behind like Will does when he is simply tired of hearing his father's stories. We see that Will comes to regret that as he watches his father on his death bed. That is how Edward and Will differ. Edward did not judge anyone based on their actions or their appearances, he found something in them that he could accept. 
The Twins, Jing and Ping, were two headed sisters; they were so close, they might as well have shared one body. When Edward met the twins he had been longing to get back to his wife. He wanted to get as close as he possibly could to her and the army was standing in his way. Jing and Ping listened to his story and I assume they couldn't imagine if they ever had to separate from one another. They understood Edward and Edward understood them. With the exchange of promises, the three of them worked together in order to leave that country. 
Burton had always been an outsider, in school and at home, he had no one to get close to until he reached adulthood and began to surround himself with weird  people like Ed Bloom did. Burton fought to get certain actors parts in his films because they were who he connected to. The leaving of his father and the coming of his son opened his life up just a bit more and allowed him to understand and accept more of what comes his way.


Saturday, April 6, 2013

Lennox Sleepy Hollow



Washington Irving's Sleepy Hollow was interesting. We learn of a man who has plans to corrupt a small village of superstitious and bored people. Sleepy Hollow is a place filled with house wives who tell tales of headless horsemen and other things. Ichabod Crane, the teacher, wants money and land, and the beautiful Katrina Van Tassel has all of it. Brom Bones is terribly jealous of the awkward man and Katrina is not the least bit attracted to him. The duo manages to run the man off, and Ichabod becomes a politician. This does not sound like much of a fun movie.

I think it would be terribly difficult to make this into an interesting movie. People love drama, romance, comedy, horror and action. Tim Burton took Irving's characters and made them "new." Ichabod was no longer a superstitious, womanizing school teacher- Burton made Ichabod Crane an enlightened, justice seeking constable who puts business before pleasure. Brom Bones was still jealous, but he's too full of himself to be a hero. Katrina Van Tassel is still beautiful, but she seems to have a crush on Ichabod Crane. Burton also presents the superstition of the headless horseman by bringing him to life.

Burton is not just using the characters' names to enhance his own horror story, he's bringing Irving's story to life with new twist. Burton gives his three leads, Ichabod, Katrina, and Masbath tragic back stories and brighter futures. Burton gets rid of Brom Bones who came off a jealous jerk to Ichabod as he met Katrina. Burton introduces magic to the story which explains the existence of the terrifying headless horseman. The women, who were only superstitious house people in Irving's story, were powerful and feared for their knowledge of magic. Burton enhanced Irving's story and made it theater ready.

I personally prefer Burton's version of Sleepy Hollow because it has what your basic movie watcher wants. We have our bumbling hero, his beautiful love interest and his small side kick. Irving's tale was great, but it left me unsatisfied and yearning for more.

Saturday, March 23, 2013

Lennox- Planet of the Apes



The apes give the humans no rights. They give them no chances. Although the humans can walk upright and speak their language, they still look down upon them. With the apes being physically stronger than them, they could do nothing but sit back and take the punishment. I believe it is safe to say that humans were not treated like humans. The situation felt very familiar. The Europeans believed themselves to be the superior race, and they enslaved the natives of America and Africa to do their work, as if they were animals.

In the scene where the cage is being drug through town, the little ape boys begin to throw stones at the humans saying that his father said it was okay. Those humans, they were locked up in cages. They were compacted together, uncomfortably in a cage. They did not receive seats, there was even one man who appeared to be very ill, or dead. These humans don't even receive protection from a little ape boy.

Another scene I would like to mention is the one where the little ape girl purchase a human little girl and takes her as a pet. The small child is separated from her mother, she is then given a collar and a cage. You can see the small child has been crying, and it appears that her cries were silent. That small girl may have understood that there was no way out of her situation. The apes had no care in the world about taking the small child from her mother. The only thing mentioned was, "Make sure you get rid of her before puberty." Harsh.

The final scene I would like to mention includes the house humans: the bald man and the Asian lady. The were so well behaved compared to the new house humans. They knew when to bow and when serve. They even stayed quiet in their cage at night. They accepted their fate.

All of those scenes show how inhumanely the humans are treated. We may sit back in awe and shock, but in our very on country, humans have been placed side by side in vehicles, their children had been sold away and some humans decided against even fighting their situations anymore , they decided it was just the way of their life. Those humans had people like Ari; they had others who would risk their social status to get them equality.

Saturday, March 9, 2013

Lennox- Ed Wood

 
Ed Wood was different. He was unique. His vision was his own and Tim Burton understood that. The actors selected for the Ed Wood film resembled Ed Wood’s own group of actors very well. In Gothic Fantasy, we learn that Tim Burton has always been a fan of Ed Wood’s film, and as a true fan of many things myself, I know what it is like to watch your fascination go down the drain because of choices made by an ignorant or uninterested director. Burton did what any fan would do and stuck to the truth as best he possibly could.
Ed Wood’s films were as unique as himself. Those poorly shot scenes are viewed as great works of art in the eyes of fans. If those fans were to view Burton’s biopic and see those scenes had been drastically for the entertainment of the audience, there would be a fit to throw. Burton’s job as a fan and a director were to make this biography as believable as possible. His job was to make us think that we were watching Ed Wood live his life, not to be entertained by his life story.
The scenes from Plan 9 from Outer Space were shot perfectly by Burton. It was as if Burton had literally taken the scenes directly from the original film. This had to be very pleasing to the eyes of fans and it had to have made them think they were actually watching Ed Wood direct this movie.  
This is why. Burton did not change or fabricate the work of Wood. He preserved it. It was Ed Wood’s work, not his. A painter would not paint the Mona Lisa with alterations and try to sell it to dedicated fans of Leonardo Da Vinci passing it off as parallel to the original. He has altered the originality that the fans fell in love with. Sure the extras are nice, but it is not the same thing. Tim Burton would be out of his mind to alter the art of Edward Wood Jr. and sell it to old fans and oncoming fans as a parallel work.

Friday, February 22, 2013

Lennox- The Girl With Many Eyes


A girl with many eyes. Why would someone choose to write about a phenomenon so strange? It was mentioned that she had a mouth as well, and she was indeed pretty. She enjoyed everything any socially normal girl would, but what does she and her many eyes represent? Having multiple eyes gives you multiple perspectives: sort of like security cameras. When many perspectives come together, you get one big view. Tim Burton was seen as strange, yet fascinating child. Maybe he was viewed as if he himself had multiple eyes, but it didn’t stop him from enjoying the normal pleasures in life.

A little girl may seem week, but maybe all of her perspectives made her stronger. Maybe all of her views of the world allowed her to be more open minded and accepting. I believe that Tim Burton has a very open mind. His art for Disney, as seen in Nightmare Before Christmas and Frankenweenie, was very different from the beautiful princesses and their handsome princes. He selected very different movies to work on; PeeWee’s Big Adventure, Beetlejuice and Batman were all very different, but Tim Burton managed to make them all his own through his unique perspective and style.

In the illustration the girl appears to be very strange compared to the boy observing her. He wears a dark striped shirt and has dark hair, but the girl who is the one who appears to physically be the strangest and the most different wears a pink frilly dress with cute pink shoes to go along with her blonde hair and green skin. I know we were told to not read too deep into the story but maybe their appearance was done very on purpose?  We would see the a boy in all dark colors with multiple eyes as very strange, and we would probably immediately relate him to Tim Burton’s alienation as a child. Maybe Tim Burton tried to avert our attention from making such an assumption.

Well I don’t know if I have made any sense with this, but this my blog for the week. Did anyone else think these stories were kind of depressing?