DUSTING OFF BURTON
By Pat H. Broeske
From
The Los Angeles Times, 01.20.1991
Tim Burton is not only headed back to Warner Bros. to direct the sequel to his
mega-hit
Batman. He'll also return to Disney, where he got his professional
start as an animator, to produce an animated feature,
The Nightmare Before
Christmas.
The storyline: A skeleton tries to take over Christmas, because it gets more
attention than his holiday -- Halloween.
The longtime Burton project had its inception at Disney in the early '80s, when
Burton made his directorial debut with the five-minute Disney puppet-animated
film
Vincent, about a 7-year-old boy who dreams of being Vincent
Price.
According to sources,
The Nightmare Before Christmas was originally
deemed "too weird" and put on the back burner by the studio. In the
years since, Burton's offbeat oeuvre has proven commercially viable, with titles
such as
Beetlejuice and the current
Edward Scissorhands.
A Disney spokeswoman also confirmed that the studio is exploring the possibility
of finally releasing Burton's
Frankenweenie. Made in 1984, the 30-minute
live-action short is about a young boy who brings his dog back to monstrous life
after it's been struck by a car.
"Because of its running time and its subject," the spokeswoman says, "we
can't attach it to just any title." Pat H. Broeske