You are here:
Home / Archives for tim burton
Anyone who has ever watched some cheesy B-movie on SyFy, or some aspiring college kid’s weird and stilted little video, probably never would have thought anything would come of the directors responsible for those. Well, as we’ll see, perhaps these now-famous directors shouldn’t be written off so quickly. 10. Bedhead (Robert Rodriguez) From the creator [...]
Posted by Dustin Koski on Thursday, January 26, 2012 at 12:01 am
Filed under Bizarre, Movies · Tagged Academy Award, American film directors, Battle Beyond the Sun, Brett Ratner, Bring Me The Head of Charlie Brown, California Institute, child actor, Disney Corporation, Dustin Koski, film, Francis Ford Coppola, George Lucas, James Cameron, Jim Henson, Kevin Smith, Machete, Mae Day, Mason Reese, Peter Jackson, Piranha II: The Spawning, Robert Rodriguez, Roger Corman, Rush Hour, Scott Mosier, Southern California, tim burton, University of Southern California, University of Vancouver, woody allen
Short films rarely get major releases these days, so it’s no surprise that even serious movie fans often neglect them. But with the rise of websites like YouTube, shorts have finally found a viable exhibition platform. The following are ten of the most famous short films available online. Whether they’re art pictures, the early works [...]
Posted by Evan Andrews on Friday, August 26, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Internet, Movies · Tagged 1966 Cannes, A Trip to the Moon, Albert Lamorisse, Buster Keaton, Cannes film festival, car speeding, Chris Marker, Claude Lelouch, Dan Rohmer, director of films like Edward Scissorhands and Batman, Edward Scissorhands, Edwin Porter, Entertainment_Culture, Experimental film, films, Georges Méliès, Luis Buñuel, Movies, online films, online movies, Owl Creek Bridge, Ray Eames, Robert Enrico, Roger Jacquet, Salvador Dali, Short films, short movies, Silent films, the Cannes Film Festival, The Great Train Robbery, tim burton, Un chien andalou, walt disney
We’ve seen it happen over and over again: a new movie comes along that is both entertaining and fresh, only to be followed by countless sequels and spinoffs that are not only terrible in their own right, but also somehow manage to damage the credibility and popularity of the original film. Here are ten of [...]
Posted by Nathanael Hood on Thursday, April 7, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Movies · Tagged alien, Batman, Batman and Robin, Batman Forever, batman returns, film, Film genres, Halloween III: Season of the Witch, highlander, Highlander II: The Quickening, jaws, Joel Schumacher, John Carpenter, Movies, planet of the apes, Richard Donner, Rob Zombie, Sequel, Steven Spielberg, Superman, Superman III, The Dark Knight, The Highlander, The Matrix, tim burton, top 10 films, top 10 movies, worst franchises, worst sequels
There are exactly two reasons to be obsessed with Johnny Depp: his acting and his sex appeal, both of which have a tendency to defy rigid gender norms (that is to say, he played a transsexual in Before Night Falls, and boys and girls alike will unabashedly admit to their unhealthy Johnny crushes). As a [...]
Posted by Ryan Thomas on Tuesday, January 25, 2011 at 12:01 am
Filed under Movies, People · Tagged Actors, Alice in Wonderland, American film directors, appropriately-dubbed worst film director of all time, Before Night Falls, Benny, Buster Keaton, Caribbean, character actor, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Charlie Chaplin-inspired, Chocolate Factory, Don Juan DeMarco, Donnie Brasco, Ed Wood, Entertainment_Culture, Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, films, Frankenstein, Gay for Johnny Depp, Gilbert Grape, Goodfellas, hunter, I Am Sam, Jack Sparrow, Johnny Depp, johnny depp movies, Joon, Leonardo Dicaprio, Marlon Brando, Movies, People, pirates, Pirates of the Caribbean, Ray Liotta, tim burton, top 10 depp films, top 10 johnny depp, top 10 movies, TopTenz, Where the Buffalo Roam
Ask anyone older than a fetus’s age, they’ll tell you that film isn’t what it used to be (like most things in life and especially when it comes to the entertainment industry). Film used to be an artform in which filmmakers always took the long route in having their cinematic brainchild become a direct manifestation [...]
Posted by Ryan Thomas on Friday, November 19, 2010 at 12:01 am
Filed under Movies · Tagged Actor, Alice in Wonderland, Also, Batman, Blade 2, Brendan Frasier, CGI, Charlie Brown, china, Chocolate Factory, Christopher Nolan, Christopher Reeves, clark kent, conceptually-brilliant director, director, Discovery Channel, Ed Wood, Edward Scissorhands, Entertainment_Culture, fantastic four, Frank Oz, George Bush, George Lucas, Ghost Rider, Harrison Ford, Hollywood, Hollywood Classics Network, Hugh Jackman, Inc., Indiana, Indiana,United States, jaws, Johnny Depp, jurassic park, Keanu Reeves, King, Kong, L.A., Lewis Carrol, Lex Luthor, live-action Speed Racer, Los Angeles,California,United States, Meghan Fox, Michael Bay, Naomi Watts, Naomi Watts fall, New York, New York City,New York,United States, Nintendo, Nintendo Co.,Ltd., note-taking secretary, Physics, planet of the apes, PS2, queen, Sesotho verbs, Skull Island, Space Jam, speed racer, spider-man, Spider-Man 3, Stenotype, Steven Spielberg, Sundance, Superman, Sweeney Todd, the National Geographic, tim burton, Universal Studios, Van Helsing, X-Men Origins: Wolverine, Yi script
Of loved movie characters, a few have stolen our hearts with the kind of admiration and unrivaled awe that other movie characters are not so easily able to achieve. The greatest of these movie characters are ones that most of us have met over the years (or at least should try to get to know if [...]
Posted by Natalie Jaro on Monday, October 11, 2010 at 12:01 am
Filed under Movies · Tagged Anthony Hopkins, Batman, beauty and the beast, Benjamin Button, Brad Pit, Byron, Cate Blanchett, Charles Laughton, chorus singer, Christine falls, Christy Brown, Chunk, Conrad Veidy, Daniel Day-Lewis, David Lynch, Dea, Dea falls, Edward Scissorhands, Emmy Rossum, Entertainment, Entertainment_Culture, Eric Roth, Esmeralda, f. scott fitzgerald, film, France, Frederick Treves, Gerald Butler, Gwynplaine falls, Hamlet, Human Interest, Joel Schumacher, Johnny Depp, Joseph Merrick, Kendal, King, Mary Philbin, Mask, Mass media, metal scissors, Monster movies, Musical films, My Left Foot, Opera Populaire, Oscar, oscars, paint, Paris, Paris,France, Phantom of the Opera, policeman, Princess, Rocky, Rocky Dennis, Romantic drama films, scientist, Seth Brundle, stand by me, Steven Spielberg, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, The Elephant Man, The Fly, The Goonies, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, The Man Who Laughs, The Opera, The Phantom of the Opera, The Princess and the Frog, tim burton, Victor Hugo, Winona Ryder
With Christmas movies, such as “Scrooged” (or any other “Christmas Carol” knockoff) and even “National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation,” they follow the same tired cliché – man loses something of value, realizes the Christmas spirit and then all is well with the world. To paraphrase Scrooge – humbug! There are too many of these delightfully sappy [...]
Posted by William O'Dell on Monday, December 15, 2008 at 2:26 am
Filed under Movies · Tagged bad santa, Batman, Billy Bob Thornton, black comedy, Christmas, Christmas films, Christmas in the media, christmas movie, christmas movies, christmas season, christmas vacation, danny devito, eddie murphy, eight crazy nights, halloween, Jack Frosts, jack skellington, jamie lee curtis, John Cusack, kiss, Merry Christmas, Michael Keaton, movie, Movies, National Lampoon, nightmare before christmas, Santa, scrooged, the ice harvest, tim burton, villains