Jump to content
  • Sign up for free and receive a month's subscription

    You are viewing this page as a guest. That means you are either a member who has not logged in, or you have not yet registered with us. Signing up for an account only takes a minute and it means you will no longer see this annoying box! It will also allow you to get involved with our friendly(ish!) community and take part in the discussions on our forums. And because we're feeling generous, if you sign up for a free account we will give you a month's free trial access to our subscriber only content with no obligation to commit. Register an account and then send a private message to @dave u and he'll hook you up with a subscription.

Best Blu-ray conversion evaaaaaarrrrr!


Chris
 Share

Recommended Posts

Blu-ray disc of the week: The Nightmare Before Christmas review | T3.com

 

Blu-ray disc of the week: The Nightmare Before Christmas

 

Nothing has ever looked better in Hi-Def

 

Plot

 

Bored of his yearly Halloween conquests, scare-master Jack Skellington branches out by kidnapping Santa Claus and adding a frightful flavour to the Christmas festivities.

 

The Review

 

If High Definition video ever needed a character witness in court, then we'd call to the stand that misguided old festive thief, Mr Jack Skellington.

 

Quite simply, the Pumpkin King and his town of Halloween offer the finest exponent of the Blu-ray format to date. Tim Burton's classic stop-motion musical has always been visually stunning, but this re-mastering could take the breath away from a corpse.

 

We brushed off the festering cobwebs off our old VHS copy and it's easy to see how blessed we are by this technology. Paired with a HDTV boasting decent motion flow, the spider-like staccato movements of characters like Sally and Sandy Claws are accentuated spellbindingly

 

The film itself spawned (and continues to spawn) a legion of macabre teenage obsessives, mostly sporting decapitated Jack heads on tatty black hoodies. Its appeal as a witty, dark and beautifully idealistic, romantic movie remains absolutely timeless. Who could grow out of watching this?

 

The original score from Danny Elfman cemented a relationship with Burton that followed them through Batman, Beetlejuice and Edward Scissorhands and 15 years later Nightmare's amimation is still a flag bearer for stop-motion.

 

All together now: "Kidnap the Sandy Claws, beat him with a stick, lock him up for ninety years, see what makes him tick."

 

A Blu-ray buy?

 

The most compelling argument for upgrading your movie collection yet. Buy it.

 

Extras

 

An excellent selection here, including two fledgling films from Burton and an extensive making of documentary, which shows the painstaking precision needed to create Halloween Town. There's also a spooky reading of the poem from Christopher Lee.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share

×
×
  • Create New...