Subject: Dark Shadows (2012, dir. by Tim Burton) Thu May 10, 2012 5:17 pm
Like what I've heard of Danny Elfman's score.
The White Tuxedo 00 Agent
Posts : 6062 Member Since : 2011-03-14 Location : ELdorado 5-9970
Subject: Re: Dark Shadows (2012, dir. by Tim Burton) Thu May 10, 2012 10:20 pm
May rent it someday. I'm bored with Depp's schtick.
Harmsway Potential 00 Agent
Posts : 2801 Member Since : 2011-08-22
Subject: Re: Dark Shadows (2012, dir. by Tim Burton) Thu May 10, 2012 10:55 pm
For the good of the nation, there needs to be a legal ban on Depp working with Burton.
Control 00 Agent
Posts : 5206 Member Since : 2010-05-13 Location : Slumber, Inc.
Subject: Re: Dark Shadows (2012, dir. by Tim Burton) Thu May 10, 2012 10:57 pm
I'll pass.
I was disappointed when I saw the trailer, too. I thought Burton would have made a proper adaptation, instead of another bizarre comedy.
Largo's Shark 00 Agent
Posts : 10588 Member Since : 2011-03-14
Subject: Re: Dark Shadows (2012, dir. by Tim Burton) Thu May 10, 2012 10:59 pm
Burton doesn't proper adaptations, usually for the better I say. That said, I'd say his strongest films are black comedies - BEETLEJUICE, ED WOOD and MARS ATTACKS!
CJB 00 Agent
Posts : 5501 Member Since : 2011-03-14 Location : 'Straya
Subject: Re: Dark Shadows (2012, dir. by Tim Burton) Fri May 11, 2012 1:48 am
That trailer has played every fucking time I've gone to the movies in the past three months! I feel like I've watched the whole damn film.
But as mentioned in another thread, Eva Green is root-worthy.
Makeshift Python 00 Agent
Posts : 7656 Member Since : 2011-03-14 Location : You're the man now, dog!
Subject: Re: Dark Shadows (2012, dir. by Tim Burton) Fri May 11, 2012 3:39 am
Sharky wrote:
Burton doesn't proper adaptations, usually for the better I say. That said, I'd say his strongest films are black comedies - BEETLEJUICE, ED WOOD and MARS ATTACKS!
I agree, but I'll wait for word of mouth on this one.
I still demand a Burton/Keaton reunion. It's hard to believe it's been 20 years since they last worked together. Why haven't they since? Is it just because Burton has a bigger hard on for Depp?
The White Tuxedo 00 Agent
Posts : 6062 Member Since : 2011-03-14 Location : ELdorado 5-9970
Subject: Re: Dark Shadows (2012, dir. by Tim Burton) Fri May 11, 2012 4:46 am
Well, Depp's a bigger draw and half the woman I know have a hard on for him.
Figuratively.
CJB 00 Agent
Posts : 5501 Member Since : 2011-03-14 Location : 'Straya
Subject: Re: Dark Shadows (2012, dir. by Tim Burton) Fri May 11, 2012 5:54 am
The White Tuxedo wrote:
Well, Depp's a bigger draw and half the woman I know have a hard on for him.
Figuratively.
And for the other half... literally? :shock:
Gravity's Silhouette Potential 00 Agent
Posts : 3994 Member Since : 2011-04-15 Location : Inside my safe space
Subject: Re: Dark Shadows (2012, dir. by Tim Burton) Sat May 12, 2012 12:45 am
CJB wrote:
But as mentioned in another thread, Eva Green is root-worthy.
She's getting some excellent reviews for the film. I heard Michael Medved today saying she was the best thing in it, that at least when she was on screen the film was "watchable", and that she nearly stole the movie. I've seen some online reviews basically singling her as the stand-out of the film. Not surprised. Once I saw the trailer I could tell she was delivering something different; I don't think many people would have thought she could do comedy.
CJB 00 Agent
Posts : 5501 Member Since : 2011-03-14 Location : 'Straya
Subject: Re: Dark Shadows (2012, dir. by Tim Burton) Sat May 12, 2012 12:53 am
Gravity's Silhouette wrote:
I don't think many people would have thought she could do comedy.
I dunno, I thought her "little finger" routine with Danny Craig was hysterical.
Harmsway Potential 00 Agent
Posts : 2801 Member Since : 2011-08-22
Subject: Re: Dark Shadows (2012, dir. by Tim Burton) Sun May 13, 2012 10:19 pm
DARK SHADOWS is by far the worst film Burton has ever made.
saint mark Head of Station
Posts : 1160 Member Since : 2011-09-08 Location : Up in the Dutch mountains
Subject: Re: Dark Shadows (2012, dir. by Tim Burton) Sun May 13, 2012 10:21 pm
Harmsway wrote:
DARK SHADOWS is by far the worst film Burton has ever made.
That bad??
So I guess it is a matter of waiting for the dvd.
Makeshift Python 00 Agent
Posts : 7656 Member Since : 2011-03-14 Location : You're the man now, dog!
Subject: Re: Dark Shadows (2012, dir. by Tim Burton) Sun May 13, 2012 10:31 pm
Harmsway wrote:
DARK SHADOWS is by far the worst film Burton has ever made.
That's too bad, I was hopeful Burton returning to dark comedy like BEETLEJUICE might be worthwhile. Oh well.
Largo's Shark 00 Agent
Posts : 10588 Member Since : 2011-03-14
Subject: Re: Dark Shadows (2012, dir. by Tim Burton) Sun May 13, 2012 10:51 pm
Armond didn't dig it.
Quote :
Spooky or Kooky? by Armond White on May 11, 2012 • 1:20 pm
Tim Burton’s Campy Dark Shadows
Gone are the days when Tim Burton films made you laugh first. Now Burton more likely makes you cringe as in Dark Shadows, his new film version of TV’s 1960s daytime soap opera. It retells the story of Barnabas Collins, an early American fishing scion, who had been turned into a vampire by Angelique, a witch he spurned. “She caused me to be a vampire so that my suffering would never end” says Barnabas (Johnny Depp) in tones so sepulchral they’re almost satiric. Yet, Burton loses his signature balance of dread and humor. There’s an indecisive, scattershot approach to both vampire legend and pop culture camp. It’s as if Burton couldn’t decide to be kooky or spooky.
Burton’s done genre make-overs before yet Dark Shadows isn’t a transformation like his 2001 Planet of the Apes or his do-over Batman Returns which definitively grasped the comic-fright tone missing from his 1989 Batman (a now-forgotten blockbuster). Burton’s Dark Shadows never takes hold as a gothic vision of American history (Sleepy Hollow II) or a comedy about love vs. spite, the occult vs. the all-too-mortal follies that transpire within the personalized crosscurrents of ruthless business practices in the Collins’ family saga.
Some of all of that occurs throughout Dark Shadows, but only in flashes: primarily when Barbabas and Angelique (Eva Green) combine sexual tension with commercial competition. Their seduction scenes (frolicking among Pop Art paintings like the Partyman museum vandalizing sequence) combine simultaneously with corporate hi-jinks. If this jokiness isn’t the fault of an interferring studio mandate, then blame Burton’s confused artistic impulses.
Burton had developed his own idiosyncratic approach to genre and sentimentality in such enjoyable films as Pee Wee’s Big Adventure, Ed Wood, Mars Attacks (his masterpiece), Beetlejuice, Batman Returns and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. But the mix of gloomy/gleeful tones in Dark Shadows (such as the poorly-timed joke when 230-year Barnabus misinterprets McDonald’s golden arches), suggests he’s lost his mirth.
The ghoulishness that has overtaken Burton’s filmmaking–in the nightmarish operetta Sweeney Todd and the lackluster freakshow Alice in Wonderland–vitiates his unique, usually macabre satire. Burton’s benign nerdiness now clashes with Dark Shadows’ strange pop culture anachronisms (the story is set in 1982). The original Dark Shadows program was inadvertently campy; through serialization of the horror genre it meant to attract a younger audience, engrossed in human mystery and the fantastic. But the show became a source of amusement for emotionally detached viewers. When Burton joins their scoffing ranks, he winds up with something messily uneven: A ball scene with Alice Cooper (and some of the original soap opera cast) proves desperately inconsistent with Burton’s wry morbidity.
This Dark Shadows borrows from the campy Addams Family films as much as various scenes re-play the outsider anxieties of Edward Scissorhands–not Burton’s finest moment although probably essential to understanding his fantasy life. Making sexy camp is a devolution for a once original pop artist. Burton was smart to get Johnny Depp’s best deadpan readings (“You may immediately place your wonderful lips upon my posterior and kiss it repeatedly”) and lucky to cast wonderfully histrionic Eva Green as Angelique, a ghoul in the shell of a vixen. When Angelique cries, her tears fall in the cracks of her decaying visage–at last an image worthy of Burton and equal to the improbable mash-up of Barnabas’ clawing Nosferatu fingers.
Makeshift Python 00 Agent
Posts : 7656 Member Since : 2011-03-14 Location : You're the man now, dog!
Subject: Re: Dark Shadows (2012, dir. by Tim Burton) Sun May 13, 2012 11:05 pm
Yeah, time for Burton to make a telephone call to Keaton.
Harmsway Potential 00 Agent
Posts : 2801 Member Since : 2011-08-22
Subject: Re: Dark Shadows (2012, dir. by Tim Burton) Sun May 13, 2012 11:06 pm
Time for Burton to retire.
saint mark Head of Station
Posts : 1160 Member Since : 2011-09-08 Location : Up in the Dutch mountains
Subject: Re: Dark Shadows (2012, dir. by Tim Burton) Sun May 13, 2012 11:19 pm
Harmsway wrote:
Time for Burton to retire.
That would be a shame,
He should do something original preferable something he himself created.
The White Tuxedo 00 Agent
Posts : 6062 Member Since : 2011-03-14 Location : ELdorado 5-9970
Subject: Re: Dark Shadows (2012, dir. by Tim Burton) Wed May 16, 2012 8:20 pm
Makeshift Python wrote:
Yeah, time for Burton to make a telephone call to Keaton.
"Hello, this is Michael Keaton."
Sponsored content
Subject: Re: Dark Shadows (2012, dir. by Tim Burton)