A fun dark movie from before Burton jumped the shark. It has his signature style and the mood of the setting is excellent, enjoyed the casting, acting, plot, and pacing.
In an episode of Happy Days, The Fonz goes water skiing, encounters a shark, and jumps over it in the water skis. It marked a moment of dramatic decline in the show's overall quality, and the term has been used since for any such point in time where something is identifiably worse after a specific event.
Love it. The movie has excellent visuals and is scary but with a great sense of dark humor where appropriate. Just picked up the 4k release and ripped it to my plex server. Looking forward to watching it again shortly!
It's great, IMHO. It really nails that feeling of impending doom. I love how the mystery unfolds and all the little breadcrumbs left for you to pick up on.
The acting is great. I actually think this is one of Johnny Depp's last great roles before he got too big. He's weird and quirky in a way that works for me.
Also the soundtrack is great. I just picked it up on vinyl because I like it so much.
One of my favorite Halloween films. Great cast, well written, distinct style. Odd that a film that has such a creepy or horror vibe is sort of a “feel good” film in the end.
It's pretty good. The visuals are iconic and it has some captivating moments. I personally didn't enjoy Walken as the horseman as much. I think the costume design for him was just okay and because he's so recognizable it takes me out of the movie a bit. Yes I acknowledge the rest of the cast is full of stars, perhaps I can't articulate why I'm offput by the horseman. I think the teeth look silly rather than menacing.
I liked the story tweaks and I think the mystery was paced out nicely.
Really liked it. I have it on blu-ray and watch it every October as part of my spooky movie series.
It's great vintage Burton. Depp and Ricci both fit their roles perfectly.
Walken was a weird choice for the horseman, but he does a good job with it and despite being a little outside the norm for Burton film (I know he was also in Batman Returns) Walken doesn't take away from the movie IMO.
My dad and I watched a commentary on this movie (I don't remember whether it was from a DVD or separate from the movie itself). One of the comments was about how, in a shot of the fireplace, they'd put great care into making sure a flare in the flames caused skulls or demon faces of some sort to show in the flames. Neither my dad nor I had noticed and we considered it too subtle to be worth the apparent effort, as the effect was very brief.
It's alright, very stylish and Tim Burton can be good at getting that creepy Halloween feeling. Probably my 3rd favorite adaptation after an audiobook version and the 90's 3d animation version.