He uses these camera movements in many of his movies. In Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, there was boom/crane used to show the reactions of the characters when Augustus Gloop was getting sucked into the big tube at the chocolate lake. In Edward Scissorhands, tracking was used when Peg first went into the mansion to sell her makeup. The camera tracked her movements to show both her facial expressions…
inspired by his kids to write children’s stories, which began seriously with the publication of James and the Giant Peach in 1961(Notablebiographies.com). Dahl began to publish more and more children’s books but one of his most popular books is Charlie and the Chocolate…
Television, 24 Oct. 2016. Web. 27 Jan. 2017.) Depp did such an amazing job, that Timothy asked him to continue to be in his movies. Depp has been in Edward Scissorhands, Alice through the looking glass, Alice in Wonderland, Dark Shadows, and Charlie and the chocolate factory to name a…
This is supposed to make the audience feel a certain way towards the story and the characters in the neighborhood. Another example is in the movie Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Tim Burton uses a high and a low angle to show Charlie staring up at the factory. While the high angle is on Charlie and the low angle is on the factory this makes Charlie look weak, delicate and insignificant especially when he is comparing something so small and something so…
2014)2 Death is another common theme found throughout his films. Edward Scissorhands, Sweeny Todd, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Big Fish, Sleepy Hallow, Frankenweenie, Corpse Bride and Alice in Wonderland and many more have near death experiences or actual death. In the film, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, most of the characters face a near death experiences from Augustus almost drowning in chocolate to then being sucked up a pipe to Violet ballooning into a blueberry and having to be…
He uses this to compare the life of Edward in his castle to a life he is living now and how he loves his new family just like he loved his inventor. Burton also uses this technique again in the movie Charlie in the Chocolate factory when Willy has a flashback to when he was first tasting chocolate against his father's wishes, then eventually leading him to be banished by his father for wanting to be a chocolatier. This allows you to see that Willy feels so weird about parents because his father…
to exceed my expectations. In Burton’s movies a big part of their success because of his use of dark and gloomy cinematic elements. Burton undoubtedly always creates an eerie and mystical notion in all 3 of his movies. Willy Wonka: Charlie and the chocolate factory, Edward Scissorhands, and Alice in the wonderland.Tim Burton does not fall too short of the mark when it comes to action and light heartiness. Burton has a special appeal to horror due to his repeated genre in the movies he has…
abnormal is better than the traditional norm. In Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Charlie wins a golden ticket for a visit to Willy Wonka’s mammoth factory. “Do you like my meadow? Try some of my grass! Please have a blade, please do, it's so delectable and so darn good looking!” said Willy Wonka to the kids. The factory’s stunning chocolate waterfall, edible grass, and candy mushrooms were all so elegant to Charlie compared to his old, tacky home. Charlie favored this bizarre, unfamiliar…
to be a veritable hotspot in no time. Ridiculous Shakes – burgstr Ridiculous by name, delicious by nature, burgstr’s milkshake philosophy is that lines are meant to be crossed, and the chocolate malteaser shows why. As the name suggests, the shake is ideal for chocoholics. It’s like mainlining liquid chocolate, because sometimes chewing and swallowing is just too much to handle. Due to potential spillages, it’s…
Numerous flashbacks show how Wonka grew up as a kid, how he got the idea for his massive chocolate factory, and he his father tried to hide the wondrous candies and chocolates of the word. Another way that Burton introduces these wacky outcast characters are through the fantastical settings that he puts them in. For instance, in Edward Scissorhands Burton presents Edward into a world…