Really? After seeing Alice in Wonderland you trust his sensibility?
I am clinging to my good memories, in the hopes that he will return to classic Burton movies.
Did you not see the Mad Hatter breakdancing?
As soon as that started, I instinctively recoiled in my seat, knocked the 3D glasses off my face, and nearly sent my regular glasses with them. So no, I didn't see it. THANK G-D.
I am clinging to my good memories, in the hopes that he will return to classic Burton movies.
Well, the animated Frankenweenie should be arriving soon.
I averted my eyes from the Mad Hatter dancing as well.
Pretty much anything from Anthony Trollope would be right out.
Generally true, but it would be interesting to see him tackle the Ferdinand Lopez/Emily Wharton plot line in The Prime Minister. (On the other hand, if Burton decides to tackle a Victorian novel, he'd be more comfortable with Charles Dickens. Or at least Willkie Collins.)
What.
I refuse to link that for you.
I refuse to link that for you.
BECAUSE IT NEVER HAPPENED.
BECAUSE IT NEVER HAPPENED
I saw. And I can never, ever unsee ...
I refuse to link that for you.
I thank you for not even giving me the temptation to click.
The thing is, in the movie it's presented as a positive. Like, if only the Mad Hatter would get his dance on again then we would know that Underland (Wonderland) is free and glorious again. Whereas, it is just the opposite and makes you suspect the Red Queen knew what she was doing repressing all their free expression. If freedom leads to Mad Hatters' breakdancing then freedom must be quashed.