Scissorhands Film Analysis

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Tim Burton, a gifted director, once said, “Anybody with artistic ambition is always trying to reconnect with the way they saw things as a child”. His concept is implemented throughout his famous works like, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, a tale of a poor young boy who won a trip to the famous Willy Wonka’s chocolate factory, Corpse Bride, a story about an insecure man who unintentionally marries a dead woman, and Edward Scissorhands, a movie of a man with scissor blades as his hands. With his dynamic use of framing, camera angles, sound and editing, Tim Burton establishes animated characterization in his films to demonstrate his eerie cinematic style.

In 2005, Mr. Burton imputed his bizarre cinematic style by directing Charlie and the
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At the beginning of the tour, when Willy Wonka released his winners to the mystical ‘candy-land’ to try the candy after his speech about the chocolate waterfall, the close up on Violet’s mother, the mom of the egotistic winner, vividly showed the leakage of raspberry candy out of her mouth, representing her repulsiveness. The visage of her was revolting as her greed for the candy overwhelmed her. When Veruca’s father caught her barbarically gnawing down the candy, she flashed an awkward grin with her blood-red teeth that was visible to the audience. Her incompetent behavior and her incapability to act mature were conveyed to the audience as she had an abominable disposition, leading into further disputes relating to the competition. Likewise, Burton utilized a low angle on Willy Wonka, the owner …show more content…
After Victor and Emily, two of the protagonists, return to the World of the Living, Emily starts to dance to the remembrance of the beauty of the moonlight to a non-diegetic choral music, creating the gracefulness of her character. As she continues her dance, she trips over a log, causing the abrupt pause in music and the dislocation of her leg. When she began her repertoire once more, the astounding music resumed. The enchanted choral music, with a heavy intensity on the violin, played gleefully as Emily danced as if she were a professional ballerina around the trees in order to exemplify her innocence and light- heartedness. Her ignorant personality later generated major character differences between her husband and herself. When she falls from an extruding log, her leg broke, stopping the chorus and representing her imperfections and clumsiness. Finally, once Emily returned to her routine, the music resumed, symbolizing the return of her gracefulness and purity by erasing her giddiness. Throughout this entire scene, Emily was oblivious to Victor’s thoughts to meet with his fiancé, Victoria, showing the naivety of her personality. In comparison, Tim Burton used the editing technique, shot-reverse-shot, between Victor and his antagonistic parents in the