維克多無意中將定情戒指套在了一根枯樹枝上,誰知泥土中爬出了一位身披婚紗的僵尸新娘……鬼才導演蒂姆·波頓一如既往地詭異。而《僵尸新娘》就像是一席略顯病態(tài)的動畫自助餐,吃與不吃都由你。
Fun for adults and children alike, Tim Burton’s Corpse Bride is another welcome walk through the director’s twisted(扭曲的) mind.
Not a horror story
Tim Burton’s mind must be a very strange place. He loves to mix comedy and horror in the same plate. So when you hear Mr. Burton is directing a film in which one of the heroines(女主角) is a corpse... well, fear is not what comes to mind.
Corpse Bride is not the horror story the title suggests, but a sweet and lovely tale of love. Although it was inspired(激發(fā)) by a sad Russian folktale about how anti-Semitic gangs(反*組織) would often kill and bury the Jewish(*人的) bride in her wedding gown, it is indeed a tale of optimism(樂觀的), romance and a very lively afterlife(死后生活).
The living vs the dead
While most animated movies are bright and colorful, Corpse Bride creates two palettes(兩種色調) and not the ones we expect.
The world of the living is cold and joyless. The only colors here are grays, purples and greens. The world of the dead, on the other hand, is where you’d want to spent your vacation. It’s livelier, cheerier and with brighter colors. And what’s more, the hero Victor is greeted here by the dog he had as a child. The dog, of course, is all bones, but look at it this way: No more fleas(跳蚤)! So, which place Victor would like to stay? It’s a bit hard to guess his final decision...
A figure of sympathy
Let’s take a look at our title character, Emily, the Corpse Bride. She is a figure of sympathy(同情) rather than horror, and her tragic tale is touching. She’s beautiful with big eyes and full lips, and only a few places where the skin has rotted(腐蝕) away to reveal the bone beneath.
Emily lost her own chance at happiness when she was murdered on the eve of her wedding and now wants to be a good wife for Victor. But she later learns that Victor doesn’t belong to her and sets him free.
A painstaking process
Tim Burton had worked on this animation for over ten years. He used a rare method of stop-motion animation(模型定格拍攝方式), in which characters were made into puppets and posed for pictures.
The puppets in the movie were made from stainless steel(不銹鋼) covered with silicone(硅脂) skin. And there were gears (機械零件) in puppies’ heads to change their facial expressions(面部表情).
The process is so painstaking that an animator even reported adjusting(調整) his own facial expression in his dream...
Fun for adults and children alike, Tim Burton’s Corpse Bride is another welcome walk through the director’s twisted(扭曲的) mind.
Not a horror story
Tim Burton’s mind must be a very strange place. He loves to mix comedy and horror in the same plate. So when you hear Mr. Burton is directing a film in which one of the heroines(女主角) is a corpse... well, fear is not what comes to mind.
Corpse Bride is not the horror story the title suggests, but a sweet and lovely tale of love. Although it was inspired(激發(fā)) by a sad Russian folktale about how anti-Semitic gangs(反*組織) would often kill and bury the Jewish(*人的) bride in her wedding gown, it is indeed a tale of optimism(樂觀的), romance and a very lively afterlife(死后生活).
The living vs the dead
While most animated movies are bright and colorful, Corpse Bride creates two palettes(兩種色調) and not the ones we expect.
The world of the living is cold and joyless. The only colors here are grays, purples and greens. The world of the dead, on the other hand, is where you’d want to spent your vacation. It’s livelier, cheerier and with brighter colors. And what’s more, the hero Victor is greeted here by the dog he had as a child. The dog, of course, is all bones, but look at it this way: No more fleas(跳蚤)! So, which place Victor would like to stay? It’s a bit hard to guess his final decision...
A figure of sympathy
Let’s take a look at our title character, Emily, the Corpse Bride. She is a figure of sympathy(同情) rather than horror, and her tragic tale is touching. She’s beautiful with big eyes and full lips, and only a few places where the skin has rotted(腐蝕) away to reveal the bone beneath.
Emily lost her own chance at happiness when she was murdered on the eve of her wedding and now wants to be a good wife for Victor. But she later learns that Victor doesn’t belong to her and sets him free.
A painstaking process
Tim Burton had worked on this animation for over ten years. He used a rare method of stop-motion animation(模型定格拍攝方式), in which characters were made into puppets and posed for pictures.
The puppets in the movie were made from stainless steel(不銹鋼) covered with silicone(硅脂) skin. And there were gears (機械零件) in puppies’ heads to change their facial expressions(面部表情).
The process is so painstaking that an animator even reported adjusting(調整) his own facial expression in his dream...