|
Corpse Bride


Directed by: Tim Burton
Starring: Johnny Depp
Genre:
Animated
Run Time: 76 min.
Release Date:
September 2005
On The Web:
Official
Site
Teaser:
Movie Trailer
Reviewed by
Byron Merritt |
Victor Van Dort (Johnny
Depp) is the son of wealthy fishmongers and he's had an arranged
marriage set up for him. His wife to be, Victoria Everglot (Emily
Watson) is the daughter of Victorian-style royalty who are having
financial difficulties. Marrying Victoria off is seen solely as a "plan
(score music here)" to pull her parents out of their money-rut.
All seems to be going well until Victor fouls up his vows during the
wedding rehearsal and runs off into the nearby forest. He continues to
practice the vows as he stumbles through the trees, finally getting the
words right and then ceremoniously placing the ring on a nearby twig
...at least that's what he thought it was. The twig turns out to be the
dead finger of the Corpse Bride (Helena Bonham Carter). She and Victor
are now husband and wife, and she emerges from the grave to tell him so.
Running away from her and plowing into a tree, Victor falls unconscious,
only to awaken in the underworld of the dead.
Confusion reigns as Victor tries to tell the Corpse Bride that they
cannot be married ...because he is still alive and she is dead. Well,
there certainly is an easy way to fix that. But what of his living
bride-to-be, Victoria? How will she take the news? The Corpse Bride has
a lot going for it, but also a few issues. The positives far outweigh
the negatives, however. Most enjoyable (from my perspective) were the
miniatures and the way the "claymation" flowed. The clay characters were
smooth and outlandishly featured; Victoria's mother (Joanna Lumley) has
hair that looks like two large breasts pinned high above her head, the
Corpse Bride is disturbingly sexy, and the pastor (a perfect Christopher
Lee) appears as an evil Vicar.
Similar to WALLACE AND GROMIT IN THE CURSE OF THE WERE-RABBIT, the claymation is smooth and even. Although
Wallace and Gromit has a more
children's feel to it, Corpse Bride makes no such claim. Necrophilia,
frightening death sequences, bodily decay, and several other possibly
unappetizing ideas pop-up during the film. But they are usually infused
with sprinklings of comedy, which made these items less morbid.
The biggest "hole" in the movie was its script. Clocking in at just 75
minutes, there's very little time to get acquainted with the characters
and even less time spent on making sense of the movie's ending (I'll
only comment that when the Corpse Bride said, "You have set me free." I
said, "Huh?").
But the claymation, beautifully crafted caricatures, and mini-sets can't
be denied. Nor can most of the musical numbers that added a certain
garish quality to it (although some of the songs seemed forced to me,
while several others were spot-on).
I wouldn't let a child under 12 years old watch it, though. Adults will
laugh at the humor thrown down at death's door, but the youngsters might
not get it.
(back to top) |
Image from Corpse Bride

DVD cost: $19.99
Purchase:
BestPrices.com
Film Review Stew
Favorite? No.
Stew Poo-Poo? No.
Newsworthy:
As an indication of the
painstaking nature of stop-motion animation, it took the animators 28
separate shots to make the bride blink.
Movie Quote: "Darling?
Where are you going?"
Other Actors/Actresses
from Corpse Bride
   |