The famous director Tim Burton has a special way of making films. From the
different techniques he uses and reuses, to the similar themes you can see in almost all his films, Tim Burton has a particular style when it comes to directing films. Paying close attention to his film techniques and themes, you start to discover a bit about him. He uses camera techniques like lighting and flashbacks to show the theme of split-worlds. A splitworlds theme is one that is supernatural, and is one that he often uses. Split-worlds shows at least two different types of worlds and how they interact. Tim Burton usually uses the world of the living and the world of the dead to show split-worlds.
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Quite a few of Tim Burtonʼs movies involve the supernatural in some way. In movies
like Beetlejuice, Corpse Bride, and The Nightmare Before Christmas, dead people interact with the living, thus illustrating the theme of split-worlds. The manner in which he has his characters interact is not realistic, but is what makes his style unique. Not only does
Burton use unusual character interaction to highlight the theme of split worlds, he also uses lighting to his advantage in his movies.
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The lighting of a place can help make a setting creepy or welcoming. In the movie
Beetlejuice, Tim Burton uses lighting to set a mood about whatʼs happening to the characters. Barbara and Adamʼs house is alone on a hill looking down on the town.
Immediately you know the house links to the main characters and that something big happens there. The setting and lighting in Barbara and Adamʼs house is retro and country like. The lighting on the house is high key so itʼs bright and happy, making it a cheerful place. When Lydiaʼs family moves in, they redo the inside of the house, changing the look of the setting to a more modern and fancy look. The lighting inside also changes. It becomes sharper and more artificial looking. It also becomes low key, making it kind of spooky. The drastic change in setting