Tim Burton's The Nightmare Before Christmas 3-D (PG)
Kevin Bourke
December 01, 2006
WITH very few exceptions, films described as "holiday classics"
tend to be toe-curlingly saccharine affairs. Not so this
brilliantly dark, stop-motion musical fantasy from the splendidly
twisted imagination of Tim Burton. Since its rather half-hearted
initial release in 1993, word of mouth has given The Nightmare
Before Christmas the status of genuine family classic - especially
if that family happens to be named Addams! But for many years,
watching it on DVD has been virtually the only opportunity to
experience this frightfully fun story tale of how Jack Skellington
(voiced by Chris Sarandon), the bored Pumpkin King of
Halloweentown, attempts to take over the festive Christmas season
for a change of pace, and ends up kidnapping Santa Claus. This is a
tale with real heart and full of characters, like Jack Skellington
and the lonely rag doll Sally (Catherine O'Hara) who are,
ironically enough, much more compelling and engaging than the vast
majority of the human actors one sees on screen these days! Now
Disney, the very same folk who displayed so little faith in the
project in the first place, have used the latest 3-D technology to
bring this unique film back to the big screen where it belongs and
seeing it this way is a thrilling experience that shouldn't be
missed. Understandably, Burton and the film's director Henry Selick
were initially nervous about turning an analogue film into a new
digital print. "I was concerned that it would be a kind of
Frankenstein's monster," Selick remembers. But what's wonderful
about this dazzling new version of an already beloved film is that,
as Burton says, "because of the 3-D process, audiences really get
to see the texture of the puppets! When we were making the movie,
we got to feel in our hearts like our characters were real. When
you see it in 3-D, it just takes it that much further. "Everything
comes to life and you can literally see through the eye-sockets of
Jack Skellington! I'm extremely happy that the movie has kept its
purity and the 3-D actually adds much more to it." He's completely
right, and what more do you need to know?