SHEAR HEAVEN: EDWARD SCISSORHANDS
By Richard Corliss
From Time, vol 136 n 25, 12.10.1990
Directed by Tim Burton. Screenplay by Caroline Thompson
Once upon a time, an aged inventor (Vincent Price) lived in
a mansion at the edge of Any Town, U.S.A. His crowning creation
was a young humanoid named Edward (Johnny Depp). Alas, the old
genius died before he could give Edward human hands. So for many
years this benign creature lived alone. Until one day an Avon
lady (Dianne Wiest) came calling, and then . . .
Aaaooh, who cares?
The fable is in disrepute these days. Any fantasy that trumpets
its artifice with storybook colors and extravagant decor--all
to illustrate the parable of a malformed artist-messiah rejected
by his flock--is asking for trouble. Perhaps only Tim Burton,
fresh from his Batman bonanza, could have the clout to make such
a defiantly vulnerable curio as Edward Scissorhands. And perhaps
only this former animator could make it work so beautifully.
A witty comedy of manners that arcs into poignance, this is a
Christmas movie only a Grinch could hate.
Edward is the innocent other, a literary type that stretches
from Kaspar Hauser to Being There's Chauncey Gardiner to E.T.--and
to the heroes of Burton's Beetlejuice and Pee-Wee's
Big Adventure.
When the Avon lady brings him into her spectacularly bland neighborhood,
she unawares sets his creativity on a collision course with her
friends' anxious conformity. At first the housewives accept Edward's
handicap as a gift. His metal shears can dice vegetables in a
trice, turn a drab hairdo into a chic coiffure and sculpt front-yard
bushes into exotic topiary: ballerinas, pterodactyls, even a
group portrait of the all-suburban family. And how pleased Edward
is to be a guest of this brood--especially since it includes
teenage Kim (Winona Ryder), to whom Edward will give his love
as soon as he stops giving her the creeps.
Depp, who wears the hyperalert, slightly wounded expression
of someone who has just been slapped out of a deep sleep, brings
a wondrous dignity and discipline to Edward. Wiest does a delightful
turn on the plucky, loving mothers from old sitcoms. The whole
movie, in fact, time-travels between today and the '50s, when
every suburban house could be a quiet riot of coordinated pastels.
But the film exists out of time-out of the present cramped time,
certainly--in the any-year of a child's imagination. That child
could be the little girl to whom the grandmotherly Ryder tells
Edward's story nearly a lifetime after it took place. Or it could
be Burton, a wise child and a wily inventor, who has created
one of the brightest, bittersweetest fables of this or any year.