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Above: Johnny Depp (left) stars
as Sweeney Todd and Helena Bonham Carter (right) plays Mrs
Lovett.
Love him for his quirky visual style or hate him for his
apparently deliberate appeal to that subsection of the teenage
market that dresses in black all the time, mostly while
writing dire poetry about death and unrequited love, Tim
Burton is undoubtedly one of the more interesting and individual
of mainstream Hollywood directors. Somehow always able to
create films that look like no others – even with
his occasional misses, like the ill-judged “reimagining”
of Planet of the Apes – Burton’s movies have
a style all their own, and that should always be cause for
celebration.
Bar his two superb Batman films, which helped to kick-start
the movies’ love of superheroes again after the disappointing
Superman IV, much of Burton’s best work has involved
an acting superstar that Burton himself helped create way
back in 1990 with the oddball fairy tale Edward Scissorhands.
Now more popular than ever thanks to his glorious outings
in the Pirates of the Caribbean series, Johnny Depp is back
with his most regular director – and you just know
that the end result is going to be interesting.
With a director-actor trust and understanding like few others,
Burton loves to indulge Depp’s more extreme experiments
with characterisation and, playing off each other perfectly,
the result has been a succession of wonderful creations.
Be it the scissor-fingered, leather-clad Edward or the geeky
investigator of Sleepy Hollow, the overly eccentric Willy
Wonka or the lovably deluded filmmaker of Ed Wood, Depp’s
performances in Burton’s films are always something
special.
This latest outing for the pair, however, is something altogether
different. Yes, on the surface it could seem much like any
other Burton/Depp film. Once again, the star looks pale
and drawn. Once again, the film’s colour palette seems
largely to be made up of blacks and greys. Once again, the
action takes place in a world at once gritty and fantastically
unlike the real one. Once again, the subject-matter –
the famous tale of the London barber who murders his customers
and has them turned into pies – is decidedly dark.
Yet this is a musical – based on the hit Steven Sondheim
Broadway show, which has thrilled audiences around the world
since its first performance back in 1979. More to the point,
this is a musical without proper singers – just regular
actors like Depp, Helena Bonham Carter, Alan Rickman, Timothy
Spall and Borat himself, Sacha Baron Cohen. All of whom
are performing all their own songs.
Burton may like to experiment and take risks, but taking
a bunch of actors who have never sung and whacking them
in a multi-million dollar movie surely takes the biscuit.
Talking apes? Fine. A children’s movie featuring a
main character who looks like something out of a horror
film? No problem. But a bunch of untested singers belting
out Broadway show tunes? Never mind that Depp’s star
has never been higher, the studios must have worried with
this one, surely?
But don’t forget Burton’s previous musicals,
the animated Corpse Bride and A Nightmare Before Christmas.
Both were great fun, and Nightmare has picked up an insanely
loyal cult following over the years. If anyone can pull
this off, he can. And one thing is certain – though
both have made their own respective mistakes in the past,
there has yet to be a Tim Burton film with Johnny Depp in
the lead that hasn’t been well worth watching. This,
their sixth film together, is no exception.
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