Don't be thrown off by Tim Burton's name on it, he's only "producing", which is a huge difference from "directing" since most anything he directs nowadays is utter shit.
The director didn't do anything too spectacular in recent memory, although Wanted is probably what stands out the most. Can't vouch for it though, I never saw it. Still, it's Abraham Lincoln hunting vampires, sign me up.
could be another letdown like cowboy vs aliens
could be another letdown like cowboy vs aliens
Cowboys and Aliens was great, it was just advertised poorly. While it's certainly an action movie, with a name like that, it makes it feel like some B-movie type of over-the-top action flick.
Although I don't see how people expected something like that. Iron Man was paced in much of the same way and arguably wasn't even that action intensive. There's perhaps 3 major action scenes (the escape from the cave, the fight in the village, and the end fight against Obadiah) while most of it is given to character development. Both had the same director. It's a great film that was enjoyable and had plenty of arcs that came together and paid out in the end.
it felt kind of slow to me
I found C vs A's plot to be unengaging; shame. It had actual potential too; and nice action scenes. It was moderately enjoyable for what it was though; just not interesting enough.could be another letdown like cowboy vs aliens
Cowboys and Aliens was great, it was just advertised poorly. While it's certainly an action movie, with a name like that, it makes it feel like some B-movie type of over-the-top action flick.
Uhm what the duck?
What does Tim Burton do here? He's neither writer nor director on this. I guess I'll pass. It's called "producing."
And then this unnecessary tree chopping at the end? Do you even know who Abraham Lincoln is? Who doesn't know the tree chopping story by know?
Tim Burton is just one of the producers. So how much does he actually influence this movie compared to directors and writers? He manages production (hiring staff, directors, actors, budgets, post processing), unlike the director who manages over the shooting itself.
I know who Abraham Lincoln is. I don't think a vampire story about him holds a lot of value besides the inherent absurdity. I was referring to the fact that you called the tree chopping scene useless when his tree chopping quote is one of the most famous things about him.
Yeah, maybe it's light hollywood popcorn fun.
Tim Burton not making good films? I certainly think that if you overlook some flaws, Alice was a fairly good film. Sure, the third act was kind of limping, but the first two were good. And it's gorgeous as hell. It's not so much Burton, more of the script assigned to him. And then there's Sweeny Todd, which may be one of his best films yet. Directing is strong, acting is strong, and visual style is strong. Charlie was weaker story-wise, yet utterly delightful.
Every director has individual merits, and each has his/her hits and misses. For Burton's misses, there's Beetlejuice (XD), Planet of the Apes (2001), Alice (Sorta), Mars Attacks! (Bad. Just bad.), and Sleepy Hollow was a half miss. Burton's old work (those without enormous budgets and had original scripts) is by far his best. Try a couple, maybe you might like them. Even Bay had good films, there's The Rock (which I would regard as an excellent action film, perhaps one of that decade) and Transformers (I mean 1.)Tim Burton not making good films? I certainly think that if you overlook some flaws, Alice was a fairly good film. Sure, the third act was kind of limping, but the first two were good. And it's gorgeous as hell. It's not so much Burton, more of the script assigned to him. And then there's Sweeny Todd, which may be one of his best films yet. Directing is strong, acting is strong, and visual style is strong. Charlie was weaker story-wise, yet utterly delightful.
Good acting? It's just Johnny Depp being wacky Johnny Depp. He often falls into trends like many other actors. Take Robin Williams for example. He either plays "goofy" Robin Williams (Mrs. Doubtfire, Jumanji or however it's spelled) or "inspirational" Robin Williams (Patch Adams, Dead Poets' Society). Johnny Depp is much the same. He either plays "goofy" Johnny Depp (all his Tim Burton rolls, Pirates of the Caribbean, etc) or "serious" Johnny Depp (most recently I think he was in The Tourist?). In the end he's just told to act goofy.
Again. See Sweeny Todd; his singing isn't the greatest, but his performance was much better than most of what he did. It's Tim Burton + Serious Depp, and non-goofy. Besides, it's called character acting. Playing similar types of characters often isn't a sign of bad acting, it means that it's just what he's best suited for. Marilyn Monroe did the same thing too with her "dumb blonde" thing all the time, and Steve Buscemi playing weird villains.
Gorgeous as hell? Strong visual style? It's the same art style. Trying to be dark enough to appeal to his demographics with a lot of white facepaint. This was the worst with Alice. You can either go for children's appeal (the Disney one) or you can go with the mature appeal (American McGee's Alice). In between is just really shitty.
Denying that Alice is pretty is peculiar. Even those who I know disliked the film still found it to be pretty. Especially the costuming and set pieces. That happens often; shitty movies that look great. It was the same in Immortals, or Sucker Punch, or Green Lantern, or even Avatar. They're shit (maybe not Avatar), but they look pretty. I still don't find Alice to be shit, but it's pretty either way.
Also if you thought Charlie and the Chocolate Factory was good then that's a slap in the face to a classic. That's like praising a Michael Bay remake of the Godfather.
Willy Wonka was clearly a superior book and film, but I found this to be enjoyable. Regardless of Depp's weak performance in it.
When he's not busy making same-story movies, he's busy ripping material from others. Then he slaps a coat of white face paint on it, merchandises the crap out of it, and makes big bucks.
See Ed Wood (by far his best work, it's not the obvious Burton-like, and is a movie that Burton actually took seriously, I didn't even figure out that it was Burton directed it until I saw the credits), Edward Scissorhands (deeply personal film, and his first) and Big Fish. (deeply personal also, and didn't have Depp in it XD)
Again. See Sweeny Todd; his singing isn't the greatest, but his performance was much better than most of what he did. It's Tim Burton + Serious Depp, and non-goofy. Besides, it's called character acting. Playing similar types of characters often isn't a sign of bad acting, it means that it's just what he's best suited for. Marilyn Monroe did the same thing too with her "dumb blonde" thing all the time, and Steve Buscemi playing weird villains.
Denying that Alice is pretty is peculiar. Even those who I know disliked the film still found it to be pretty. Especially the costuming and set pieces. That happens often; shitty movies that look great. It was the same in Immortals, or Sucker Punch, or Green Lantern, or even Avatar. They're shit (maybe not Avatar), but they look pretty. I still don't find Alice to be shit, but it's pretty either way.
Willy Wonka was clearly a superior book and film, but I found this to be enjoyable. Regardless of Depp's weak performance in it.
See Ed Wood (by far his best work, it's not the obvious Burton-like, and is a movie that Burton actually took seriously, I didn't even figure out that it was Burton directed it until I saw the credits), Edward Scissorhands (deeply personal film, and his first) and Big Fish. (deeply personal also, and didn't have Depp in it XD)