The Nightmare Before Christmas
Director: Henry Selick
Cast: voices of: Chris Sarandon (Jack Skellington), Catherine O'Hara (Sally), Danny Elfman (Jack's singing voice), William Hickey (Dr. Finklestein)
(Touchstone Pictures, 2000) Rated: PG
by Jon Munn
:. e-mail this article
:. print this article
:. comment on this article

Loveable Freak

When The Nightmare Before Christmas was first released in 1993, I recall a reviewer saying, "This is the kind of story Dr. Seuss would have written if he had grown up on heavy metal and horror films." I must say that I agree. I'm not exactly sure what music Tim Burton (who authored the story on which this stop-and-go animated musical feature is based) grew up on, but I know that he is a huge fan of horror film actor Vincent Price. I think it's pretty safe to assume that the many Price films Burton watched as a child helped shape his macabre sensibilities and laid the groundwork for Nightmare. The movie tells the story of a loveable freak named Jack Skellington, the pumpkin king and the brains behind the holiday we know as Halloween.

Burton knows a thing or two about loveable freaks — his movies are full of them. From Batman to Edward Scissorhands, his films are populated with folks trying to live in a world that can neither understand nor accept their quirks. Bruce Wayne, a.k.a. Batman, is the poor little rich boy who lives in seclusion following the brutal murder of his parents. Night after night, he dons a rubber suit and enacts his own brand of non-lethal vigilantism against the evils of society. Edward Scissorhands, the oddball creation of an eccentric scientist (played by none other than Vincent Price), stumbles into an initially welcoming suburbia, but is eventually cast out when the neighbors begin to view his obvious difference from them as harmful. The rest of Burton's characters follow suit — James (of Giant Peach fame), enters a fantasy world of talking bugs and one enormous piece of fruit in order to escape the verbal abuse he suffers at home. And of course, Pee Wee Herman is the nerdy man/boy who travels cross-country to recover his stolen bike (in Pee-Wee's Big Adventure) — and discovers that the outside world is much stranger than he is.

Jack Skellington fits nicely into Burton's stable of misunderstood protagonists, though his situation differs from that of Batman and Edward Scissorhands. Jack resides in Halloween Town, where it is the sole purpose of every citizen — witch, vampire, zombie, or werewolf — to deliver Halloween every year. Jack is in charge of the festivities, but has grown tired of all the same old scares, which he makes clear in a musical lament: "I would give it all up if I only could." But Jack knows it is his duty to create terror and mayhem every October, again and again, and again. He doesn't have a choice in the matter.

Jack's restlessness initiates a chain of events that leads to his discovery of Christmas Town, as well as his eventual kidnapping of Santa Claus and attempt to take his place. The results are predictably disastrous, as the horrors of Halloween are mixed unevenly with the joys of Christmas: Jack, as Santa, delivers shrunken heads, large snakes, goblins, and other frightful things to the children of the world, and is eventually shot down (in his coffin-sleigh) by the military. The real Santa is left to fix Christmas, as Jack realizes that all he really wants and needs to be is the best pumpkin king in the world.

Jack's ultimate epiphany is in keeping with the themes that usually apply to Burton's benevolent losers. We feel sorry for Jack, sympathize with his plight, and gain a better understanding of his personality, but we inevitably realize that there's nothing that can be done to change who he is or how the world looks at him, just as Jack realizes this. It might sound like a defeatist philosophy to suggest that Jack is something of a victim, powerless to affect his destiny, but Burton's fables are typically bittersweet like this. Like Edward and Ed Wood (played by Johnny Depp in Burton's Ed Wood), Jack Skellington comes to terms with who he is and learns to accept his freakish fate.

TODAY ON POPMATTERS
Blogs | recent
Media Center: Robyn, Fleet Foxes, Kardinall Offishall…
Short Ends and Leader: A Touch of ‘Seytan’
Moving Pixels: Hurry Up Hedgehog!
Re:Print: Blubberland by Elizabeth M. Farrelly
Marginal Utility: Difficult theory
Events | recent | archive
:. Vandaveer — 26.March.08: Washington, DC
Books | recent | archive
:. Unaccustomed Earth by Jhumpa Lahiri
:. Madness: A Bipolar Life by Marya Hornbacher

RECENT FILM
MORE FILM
:. recent articles :. full archive
In bold are PopMatters Picks, the best new films.
Army of Shadows
Art School Confidential
Ask the Dust
Boys Briefs 4: Six Short Films About Guys Who Hustle
The Break-Up
Brothers of the Head
Cars
Clerks II
ClickThe Da Vinci Code
The Descent
The Devil and Daniel Johnston
The Devil Wears Prada
District B13
Down in the Valley
Drawing Restraint 9
The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift
Find Me Guilty
Free Zone
Friends with Money
Goal! The Dream Begins
The Great Yokai War (Yôkai daisensô)
Heading South (Vers le sud)
The Heart of the GameThe Hidden Blade
An Inconvenient Truth
Inside Man
John Tucker Must Die
The King
Lady in the Water
The Lake House
Leonard Cohen: I'm Your Man
Little Man
Little Miss Sunshine
Miami Vice
My Super Ex-Girlfriend
Nacho Libre
The Night Listener
The OH in Ohio
The Omen
Once in a Lifetime: The Extraordinary Story of the New York Cosmos
Only Human (Seres Queridos)
Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest
Poseidon
A Prairie Home Companion
The Proposition
Quinceañera
The Road to Guantánamo
A Scanner Darkly
Scoop
Shadowboxer
Silent Hill
Sir! No Sir!
16 Blocks
Stick It
Strangers with Candy
Superman Returns
Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby
Trantasia
Waist Deep
The War Tapes
Wassup Rockers
X-Men: The Last Stand
The OH in Ohio
World Trade Center

RECENT DVDS
MORE DVDs
:. recent articles :. full archive
In bold are PopMatters Picks, the best new DVDs.
:. American Dad: Volume 1
:. ATL
:. The Big Valley: Season One
:. The Blue Iguana
:. Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid
:. Cheers: The Complete Eighth Season
:. The Cult of the Suicide Bomber
:. The Day of the Animals
:. Dazed and Confused: Criterion Collection
:. Deadwood - The Complete Second Season
:. Dharma & Greg: Season One
:. Don't Come Knocking
:. An Early Frost
:. Find Me Guilty
:. Good Times: The Sixth Season
:. Imagine Me & You
:. Joe Dirt
:. Johnny Cash: Man in Black: Live in Denmark 1971
:. Journey: Live in Houston 1981 - Escape Tour
:. M*A*S*H Season Ten: Collector's Edition
:. Napoleon Dynamite: Like the Best Special Edition Ever
:. Neil Young: Heart of Gold
:. Oh! Calcutta!
:. The Omen: 2 Disc Collector's Edition
:. One Bright Shining Moment: The Forgotten Summer of George McGovern
:. Ren & Stimpy: The Lost Episodes
:. Room 6
:. Rude Boy
:. The Sisters
:. Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie
:. 30 Days - Season 1
:. The Time Tunnel Volume 2
:. Touch the Sound: A Sound Journey With Evelyn Glennie
:. V for Vendetta
:. Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea, Season 1 Vol. 2
:. We Jam Econo: The Story of the Minutemen
:. Why We Fight
:. The Wild Wild West: The Complete First Season
:. Winter Soldier

 
advertising | about | contributors | submissions
© 1999-2008 PopMatters.com. All rights reserved.
PopMatters.com™ and PopMatters™ are trademarks of PopMatters Media, Inc. and PopMatters Magazine.