Tim burton uses many techniques that reflect him as an auteur. Uses clothing’s and colour to juxtapose characters, give them meaning and set a mood. He uses significant turning points to give the character a meaning. There’s contrast between Edwards house and the suburbs to show the differences between Edward and the citizens, and uses themes like prejudice and conformity to show it was a normal suburb for the 1950’s to 60’s.…
Burton has an amazing way of knowing exactly when to incorporate music into a scene. For example, in Edward Scissorhands Burton starts the movie off with a story, giving the audience a view of the town where everything will take place, and in the background, the music sounds almost angelic. While the music over the town sounds angelic, one the audience views the mansion, the music turns dark and causes a sense of creepiness. Not only do you see examples of this in Edward Scissorhands, but also in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. One example of this is in the beginning of the movie when Charlie finds the last golden ticket. At first there is no music at all, but once he sees the ticket the music starts and is very upbeat and exciting, showing a mood of…
Most noticeably, the use of dark lighting exemplifies the importance of relationships. In Edward Scissorhands, Edward was in a dark castle and was lonely until Peg takes him to her bright and lively house. The dark lighting showed Edward’s loneliness, however, the bright lighting of the town and Peg’s house showed how he was able to create a relationship with the town’s people, which he was unable to do previously in the tower. In Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Wonka did not have a good relationship with his father, so the flashbacks of his childhood are in a darker light. The dark lighting in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and Edward Scissorhands stresses the importance of relationships.…
Burton uses high key lighting to show a scene, which adds to his style. For Instance, when Kim and Edward were hugging in Edward Scissorhand. There was lot of light around them shinning around them. Also another example is when they were fixing the house in Bettlejuice. They were all outside, and the sun was shining on the people that were outside. In this case…
From the sound, lighting, camera placement etc. One example of this is the lighting throughout the film, you can see it is very bland, very black and white, to reflect Harold’s lifestyle. Another use of lighting in the film is when the light on his wrist is flared are brightened to show the significance of the watch to him and the story. Many of the shots in the movie are simple and still, especially towards Harold to show the simplicity of his life. The colors in the film also have a big reflection on the character’s attitude and emotions. For example the color’s in Harold’s house and work are very dull and stale to reflect his emotions and his basic personality. Another example is the bakery, which is much more colorful to show the baker’s aggressive personality. Another example is the colors in Dale’s home, they are very bright and energetic to show that the changing character and emotion of Harold. Music also shows the setting of the characters, with the music throughout…
Sound is a crucial part in a Tim Burton movie he uses sound in so many different ways for example in “Edward scissorhands” Edward in carving an ice sculpture and all the ice shavings flying off looks like snow and there has never been snow in there town so Kim is amazed by the beauty. Tim Burton uses music to create a mood of a fairytale. On the other hand in “Edward scissorhands” Peg drives up to Edward house and the music creates a very spooky sense of suspense. In “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory” Tim uses sound to portray a fantasy like feeling throughout the whole movie even when something bad went wrong he still used a…
Both high-key and low-key lighting were used in the movie “Edward Scissorhands” to create a joyful and happy mood but also a sad and depressed mood. For example, when Edward is at his castle the lighting is low-key to create a mood. But, when Edward is at Peg’s families house, the lighting is high-key to create more of a happier mood. Another example is in the movie “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory”, Tim Burton again uses lighting to create a certain kind of mood. In the scene, the children are all waiting outside to go inside the factory, where the lighting is low-key and gloomy but when they go inside the lighting changes and so does the mood. The lighting gets brighter, the mood gets lifted and the scene gets colorful.…
Music makes the scene dramatically different depending on the type of beat that is being played. For instance, in the movie, “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory” a scene with Oompa Loompa’s…
Some of the items protected in the Spousal Impoverishment Protection Program are burial funds, vehicles and the couples home. It's very important to help protect a spouse when the other spouse enters long term care because its prevents the other spouse from losing everything. The at home spouse may fear financial devastation from paying the high cost of nursing home care. Medicaid rules have been created to protect certain income and properties for the at home spouse, without affecting the nursing home…
In Edward Scissorhands, high key lighting is used when the neighborhood is shown for the first time. This happened right after the mansion was shown which was very dark and gloomy, so it also conveys a mood change. A long shot is also used to show how uniform and unnatural the neighborhood, and the audience sees that everyone is the same. This leads to issues when Edward goes to live with Peg, because the neighborhood is not used to change. This drastic setting change conveys the theme that it is difficult for society to accept others that are differential because the neighborhood is very routine-based and they are not prepared for an outcast like Edward to enter their community. This is why problems occur when Edward starts living with Peg. Also, in Charlie in the Chocolate Factory, low key lighting was used before Willi Wonka opened the door to the candy room. This created suspense because the families did not know what lie ahead. When the families first entered his factory, they struck Willi Wonka as socially-awkward and an outcast, so when he opened the door to the candy room, they were unsure of what would happen next. This suggests that it is difficult for society to accept others that are differential because the parents were skeptical of Willi Wonka’s…
Tim Burton is one the most influential and perhaps oddest individuals in the film industry today. Having not only directed about a hundred films, he’s also produced, written, and animated others, while making his own art! Of course, Burton’s diehard fans will recognize his work, but there is a wide audience that hasn’t even heard of Burton’s films and certainly hasn’t heard of his background. Who exactly is Tim Burton and how has he changed the industry of film with his unique sense of style? How did he become such a visionary director and how has his style of ‘Burtonesque’ shaped film? Well, it all started in the suburban city of Burbank, California, of all places!…
Tim Burton's style as shown through his works, "Edward Scissorhands", "Big Fish", and "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory", tend to portray an image of a fairy tale with the playful touch of childhood innocence and fantasy. Burton enjoys digging deep into a story, focusing on key details and character development. He achieves this by using the effects of flashbacks, bottom lighting, and overhead shots in ways that get a reaction out of the audience.…
lighting change but the very feel of the movie changes with it being cheerful looking and full…
So many elements work so well together in this film, starting with Tim Burton's artistically stylistic mind. Burton has the talent to come forward with his unique, different vision and create film after film with his alternatively artistic ideas. In Beetlejuice a warped sense of reality can be seen, then in Sleepy Hollow his unique vision emerges with the comically black Headless Horseman and his lair, and then in Planet of the Apes his stylistic retelling of the '68 story with his own twisted style gives insight into his vivid imagination. Looking at concept art for his films, you gain an understanding about his aims for his creations, and his vision of the ideas. His unique vision makes many of his films so appealing as they pose different ideas and different visions to the more conventional ideas from a director. Rather than relying totally on CGI (Computer Generated Image) to create these worlds, Burton aims to create as much as possibly using physical elements to create a greater world which his team can then work with.…
Lighting in the movie isn’t as major in the movies as the sound or characters, but it still is pretty major, the lighting in these movies are very much like the sounding when the mood changes the lighting changes. In the scene at the very end of the first movie of Indiana jones the lighting in that bit is very major, when…