Winona Ryder in Tim Burtonâs Beetlejuice Beetlejuice (2024)
âI wasnât out to do a big sequel for money ,â Tim Burton emphasized at a press conference hours before Beetlejuice Beetlejuice opened the eighty-first Venice Film Festival on Wednesday. âI wanted to make this for very personal reasons.â In earlier interviewsâsee Kyle Buchananâs in the New York Times, for example, or Todd Gilchristâs in VarietyâBurton has explained that, for him, the emotional anchor of his surprise 1988 hit Beetlejuice is Lydia Deetz, the teen goth with an open line to the recently deceased.
âFor everybody that was a cool teenager, what happens to you as an adult?â asks Burton. âWhatâs important to you? What happens when youâve got kids?â When Buchanan suggests that Lydiaâs arc resembles his own, Burton replies, âYouâre absolutely right. Iâve been through all this stuff, so itâs quite cathartic. I identified with Lydia then and now.â
Starting out as an animator for Disney, Burton drew on German Expressionism, Disneyâs Silly Symphony series of short musical cartoons, the stop-motion animation of Ray Harryhausen, and a dash of 1960s pop art to forge a personal stylistic imprint that made such early short films as Vincent (1982) and Frankenweenie (1984) a uniquely refreshing approach to the ghoulish and gory that was also somehow endearingâand in a way, almost cuddly.
The astonishing box-office success of Batman (1989) gave Burton the clout to tell stories that hit closer to home, such as Ed Wood (1994) or Big Fish (2003), both embraced by critics who would sour on him when he rolled out such bloated and moribund remakes as Dark Shadows (2012) and Dumbo (2019), Burtonâs last feature before Beetlejuice Beetlejuice.
The new film reunites Burton with Winona Ryder, who once again plays Lydia, now an Elvira-like host conducting seances on TV; Catherine OâHara as her mom, Delia, a self-absorbed artist; and, of course, Michael Keaton as Betelgeuse, the irrepressible bio-exorcist. While Lydia and Deliaâs relationship has warmed over the years, Lydiaâs daughter, Astrid (Jenna Ortega), is the new teen looking to break away from her family.
âFrom its title on down, this is a movie that canât help but undercut any sense of pomposity around the occasion,â writes Vultureâs Nate Jones in an overview of his first night in Venice. âAnd yet somehow thereâs nothing cynical about it,â writes Vultureâs Alison Willmore. âBeetlejuice Beetlejuice is, instead, a return to form that finds Burton and much of the previous cast getting weird, gross, and, yes, goth in both an idyllic New England town and a gleefully bureaucratic afterlife.â
The Telegraphâs Robbie Collin dismisses Beetlejuice Beetlejuice as âmessy and tiresome,â and the Guardianâs Xan Brooks finds it âlazily amiable.â But for Jonathan Romney in Screen, this is Burtonâs âmost full-bloodedly Burtonesque venture in ages, with its boisterous mix of the facetious and the funereal.â
Romney notes that the âpriorityâ here âis to cram in as many grisly comic riffs as possible, from visual puns on phrases like âinner childâ and âspill your gutsâ to a relishable digression on Beetlejuiceâs romance with Delores [Monica Bellucci], recounted in Italian by way of homage to Euro horror maestro Mario Bava. But the filmâs most laudable achievement is its boisterous way of reclaiming highly tactile practical and animatronic effects for the CGI ageâin keeping with one characterâs mantra, âKeep it real.ââ
Speaking of Delores, âshe pops up, elegantly, only here and there,â writes Timeâs Stephanie Zacharek. âBut when she does, the movie veers into a gothic-horror reverie. Her zig-zag stapled face, resplendent as a Japanese bowl repaired with gold, is a nod not just to Boris Karloffâs OG Frankensteinâs monster, but also to the great Burton creations he inspired, like Frankenweenie and Corpse Brideâs Sally Finkelstein. Sheâs the face of amour fou, imperfectly perfect in every way, the dream-nightmare you know you ought to run from. Good luck with that.â
âTapping into the maniacally playful spirit of one of his enduring golden-era hits, the director seems reinvigorated,â writes the Hollywood Reporterâs David Rooney. âThe zippy pacing, buoyant energy, and steady stream of laugh-out-loud moments hint at the joy Burton appears to have found in revisiting this world, and for anyone who loved the first movie, itâs contagious.â
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