For fans of Stephen Sondheimâs musical Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street -- and people who just like good movies -- itâs a relief that director Tim Burtonâs film version has been released, and turns out to be bloody good. Burton rises to the occasion in adapting Sondheimâs dark, operatic and musically complex material. It shouldnât be too much of a surprise that the director has musical chops, however. From the very start, Tim Burtonâs films have featured songs and dances.
Pee Weeâs Big Adventure: âTequilaâ
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Burtonâs 1985 debut feature has many amusing moments, but the part that everybody remembers is Pee Wee Herman (Paul Reubens) getting down in a biker bar to the Champsâ âTequila,â which starts in this clip around 2:30. You wouldnât call his dancing âgood,â but thereâs something engaging about it -- it inspires geeky dancers to imitate it if they ever hear it at wedding receptions or frat parties. The suspense building up to the scene, and the unlikely combination of Pee Weeâs childish persona and the boozy surf music, really make it irresistible. (The film also marked the first collaboration between Burton and his perennial composer Danny Elfman.)
Beetlejuice: âDay-Oâ
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In the best scene of this supernatural comedy, recently deceased ghosts (Geena Davis and Alec Baldwin) try to drive out their new homeâs insufferable occupants with a unique form of possession. Like Burtonâs previous musical number, thereâs a winning incongruity between Harry Belafonteâs earthy song (coming in around 1:45) and the pretentiousness of the party guests. Note the way they dance (especially Catherine OâHara) as if their bodies are acting against their will.
Batman: âTrustâ
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Jack Nicholsonâs Joker has two pseudomusical numbers in the film, both set to songs by Prince. In Burtonâs brooding, timeless vision of the Batman mythos, Princeâs pop-funk doesnât fit at all, as if the choice was made by some kind of marketing-driven corporate synergy rather than any match to the filmâs characters or style. The âPartymanâ number when the Joker vandalizes the museum proves particularly awkward (and looks worse on Youtube), but the deadly parade scene set to âTrustâ starts out with a memorable exuberance. Thereâs an irony that the Joker would play âTrustâ right before gassing his audience. (Incidentally, Danny Elfmanâs âBatmanâ theme on the soundtrack set the tone for virtually all subsequent superhero movie music.)
Edward Scissorhands: âIce Danceâ
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I wouldnât go so far to call this a dance number, even though Edward Scissorhands always feels like itâs on the brink of becoming a full-fledged musical. With Elfmanâs swoony compositions, the allegorical story makes a sharp contrast between the pastel-colored conformist suburbs and Edward Scissorhandâs (Johnny Depp) Gothic artistry. It probably wasnât much of a leap when Edward Scissorhands became a dialogue-free dance musical in 2005, with music by Terry Davies and Danny Elfman, although Burton had little to do with it. You can see a montage from the stage show here.
Tim Burtonâs The Nightmare Before Christmas: âKidnap the Sandy Clausâ
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Credit must go where credit is due: Henry Selick directed the stop-motion animated musical The Nightmare Before Christmas, even though it feels like most pure distillation of Burtonâs sensibility of dark, dreamlike whimsy. Perhaps Elfmanâs lyrics arenât always the strongest, and the material features maybe one downbeat song too many, but the film crafts one haunting image and tune after another. The song most likely to get stuck in your head is the hilariously nasty âKidnap the Sandy Claus.â BTW, the one in red is voiced by Paul Reubens.
Tim Burtonâs Corpse Bride: âRemains of the Dayâ
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Burton and Elfman returned to the animated musical well with Corpse Bride, directed by Burton and Mike Johnson. Corpse Bride doesnât really measure up to Nightmare Before Christmas, having a more familiar story and only four songs. The most entertaining and memorable number features Elfmanâs âMr. Bonejangles,â recounting the backstory of the Corpse Bride (voiced by Sweeney Toddâs Helena Bonham Carter). The skeletal visuals and musicianship hark back to 1930s jazz and animation, but thereâs something wrong with any musical number that leaves so many words unintelligible.
Ed Wood: âMusic Videoâ
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Ironically, my favorite Tim Burton score is the one that Danny Elfman didnât write. Apparently Burton and Elfman had a parting of the ways after Nightmare Before Christmas, so Howard Shore composed the music for Ed Wood, which evokes 1950s junk culture with bongo drums and sci-fi theremins. The movie includes a scene in which transvestite director Ed Wood (Johnny Depp) does the dance of the seven veils, but this clip is from a music video shot for the Ed Wood special-edition DVD, directed by Burton with choreography by Toni Basil (of âMickeyâ fame). Speaking of music videos, Burton also directed a video for the Killers called âBonesâ with plenty of B-movie special effects, seen here.
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory: âAugustus Gloopâ
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Burtonâs remake of Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory is kinda sorta his first live action musical, thanks to the elaborate numbers of the Oompa-Loompas (all played by Deep Roy). With lyrics adapted from Roald Dahlâs original books, the songs are Charlieâs most brilliant, inspired moments, featuring joyously goony choreography, eye-candy sets and costumes, Royâs deadpan expressions and Elfmanâs virtuoso command of different pop styles. âAugustus Gloopâ is probably the best of the lot, but they're all fun.
Sweeney Todd: Opening credits
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Charlieâs credit sequence, which goes through down the smokestacks and through the chocolate factory, finds echoes in the opening credits of Sweeney Todd, which follows a trail of blood through what will be some of the filmâs main locales. Itâs an instrumental version of Sondheimâs âThe Ballad of Sweeney Todd,â a tune otherwise cut from the film, and signals that Burtonâs version will be a lushly cinematic experience. Shorter clips with the cast actually singing are online, but I think this one makes a great appetizer for the film's many entrees.