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Henry Selick Movies

In the early '90s, a maverick animator named Henry Selick, then of limited public recognition, inherited the much-coveted task of helming one of visionary Tim Burton's longtime pet projects, The Nightmare Before Christmas -- not by any stretch the first stop-motion animated feature (the technique had been used, to varying degrees, for decades), but one that imparted to the technique a mesmerizing fluidity unseen up through that time in cinemas. Nightmare marked Selick's broadest exposure to date and his first entrance into the public eye, but only the tip of the proverbial iceberg. Selick's career in the movie business actually began over 15 years prior, and encompassed a whole host of rare and astonishing accomplishments that led Roger Ebert to term him "a veteran."
As a man of prodigious illustrative ability, Selick graduated from CalArts in the late '70s and wasted no time launching his career. He made a beeline for Disney, that hotbed of animated talent, and enlisted as a key member of the company's character animation design program. Work on Pete's Dragon and The Small One ensued, but the endeavors bored the wildly imaginative Selick, who temporarily resigned in 1979 to develop his own projects, with an AFI grant. This yielded the nine-minute, experimental animated short Seepage (1981), the story of two people conversing beside a pool. The effort netted multiple awards and further developed Selick's reputation; he subsequently returned to Disney with a higher profile, but work on The Fox and the Hound failed to fully engage his creative energies, and he resigned shortly thereafter.
By 1986, Selick founded his own production house, Selick Projects, which used stop-motion animation to market products, and signed with a number of massive corporate clients in the process. Among other efforts, Selick masterminded The Pillsbury Doughboy, a Ritz crackers ad with the crackers skiing down a mountain made entirely of cheese, and a series of now-infamous animations for MTV that included a short where a bee carves the station logo into an individual's hair; the latter won a Clio. Selick's success continued, unabated, with his development and production of an additional animated short, Slow Bob in the Lower Dimensions. Although the endeavor gleaned countless honors at festivals including the 1990 Ottawa Animation Festival and the 1990 Chicago Animation Festival, a more important occurrence was afoot: the short reunited Selick with Tim Burton, whom he had known not at Disney (which one might expect given the coinciding of the men's tenures there) but at CalArts, where they developed abiding respect and esteem for one another. Burton saw Slow Bob, fell in love with it, and immediately thought of collaborating with Selick on a new project -- err, so to speak. Years prior, Burton had sketched out designs for The Nightmare Before Christmas as a Disney animator. Because he completed the initial sketches under Disney's aegis, that studio still held the original illustrations and rights to the project years later. Given the quadruple successes of Burton's Pee-Wee's Big Adventure (1985), Beetlejuice (1988), Batman (1989), and Edward Scissorhands (1990), the company greenlighted the project, delighting Burton, who immediately invited Selick to direct the piece under his supervision. It told the story of a typical Burton misfit, the spooky Jack Skellington, one of the creators of Halloween who decides to kidnap Santa and assume St. Nick's role as the progenitor of Christmas -- with predictably outrageous results.
The fate of Nightmare is, by now, well known: upon its release in 1993, it triumphed on all fronts. At a mere 74 minutes (and several years in production) this comic fantasy delighted everyone and their uncle and permanently launched Selick as a mainstream feature director. Of the widespread critical raves, Roger Ebert wrote of the picture and Selick's involvement: "Nightmare...is a...Burton film in the sense that the story, its world, and its look first took shape in Burton's mind...but the director of the film, a veteran stop-action master named Henry Selick, is the person who has made it all work. And his achievement is enormous. Working with gifted artists and designers, he has made a world here that is as completely new as the worlds we saw for the first time in such films as Metropolis, The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, or Star Wars." The film's box-office success paved the way for Disney to give the go-ahead to Selick for a follow-up. He chose to adapt Roald Dahl's classic novel James and the Giant Peach as a feature in the Nightmare vein -- a process that took several years. The studio released the picture, stateside, in April 1996, to solid reviews; Ebert commented, "[The animators'] achievement is...amazing. All of the creatures, especially the colorful insects that share James' journey, are brought to vivid life, and the fact that we can see realistic textures -- like the cloth in some of the costumes -- gives the illusion an eerie quality halfway between reality and invention." And in The New York Times , even as Janet Maslin had some serious reservations about the picture (such as its lack of a clear audience), she declared of the filmmakers, "Together, this prodigiously clever group has come up with expert animated effects and some boldly beautiful sights unlike anything else on screen: the sight of the peach being pulled by a flight of seagulls through a starry sky, for example." Five years would pass before Selick's tertiary effort emerged, and alas, it didn't fare nearly so well. The director's 2001 animation/live action combo Monkeybone stars Brendan Fraser, Bridget Fonda, and Whoopi Goldberg, and upped the edginess of Selick content to a PG-13 level. Its story -- about a cartoonist creator (Fraser) of a raunchy animated primate (the title character) who finds himself sucked into the cartoon-inhabited "Dark Town" and threatened by the prospect of the ape taking over his body -- came closest to Ralph Bakshi's Cool World than anything else. Scattered positive notices did not encourage audiences, who failed to connect with the effort. It died a quick death at the box office.
While contributing the final underwater animated chase sequence to 2003's Wes Anderson movie The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou, Selick worked diligently on his fourth big-screen animated venture, 2007's Coraline. This movie -- adapted from a popular children's book by Neil Gaiman -- returns Selick to form with a more traditional animated presentation aimed squarely at a young audience. It tells the story of a little girl who discovers that a secret passage in her apartment leads to an alternate world with another mom and dad. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi
2009  
PG  
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A young girl walks through a secret door and discovers a parallel reality that is eerily similar to the life she already knows, yet deeply unsettling in a number of ways, in director Henry Selick's animated adaptation of Neil Gaiman's international best-seller. Eleven-year-old Coraline Jones (voice of Dakota Fanning) is fearlessly courageous, and perhaps far too adventurous for her own good. Coraline and her parents (Teri Hatcher and John Hodgman) have recently relocated to Oregon from Michigan. Bored in her new home since her parents are distracted by work and she has yet to make any new friends, Coraline passes the time by exploring her new neighborhood with an annoying local boy named Wybie Lovat (Robert Bailey Jr.). But after paying a visit to her eccentric neighbors Miss Spink (Jennifer Saunders) and Miss Forcible (Dawn French), a pair of aging British actresses, and crossing paths with the outright weird Mr. Bobinsky (Ian McShane), the precocious young girl becomes convinced that her new surroundings are just as dull as she'd initially suspected. Shortly thereafter, Coraline discovers a hidden door in her new house, and decides to investigate. Venturing into the eerie passageway inside, Coraline emerges into an alternate version of her own reality. At first glance, this strange new world seems even better than the real thing; there her parents aren't distracted by work, and Coraline is always the center of attention. There's even a mysterious Cat (Keith David) that's fascinated by her every move. But when Coraline's button-eyed Other Mother (also Hatcher) attempts to make her stay permanent, the frightened young girl must summon her resourcefulness and bravery in order to find her way back home and save her real family. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

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Starring:
Dakota FanningTeri Hatcher, (more)
 
2004  
R  
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The first effort from director Wes Anderson since his critically beloved The Royal Tenenbaums, The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou finds the filmmaker re-teaming with a number of familiar faces, including Bill Murray, Owen Wilson, Anjelica Huston, and Seymour Cassel. Murray plays Steve Zissou, an eccentric and renowned oceanographer who has decided to seek out and enact mortal revenge on a shark that ate one of the men on his team. Along for the ride is Ned Plimpton (Owen Wilson), a young man who has joined Zissou's crew after showing up claiming to be the seaman's long-lost son and Zissou's co-producer (and estranged wife), Eleanor Angelica Huston. As the expedition ensues, the two bond and Plimpton falls for a female journalist (Cate Blanchett) who is writing a piece on Zissou. The crew meets a host of obstacles on their journey, including pirates, kidnapping, and bankruptcy. Adding a flair of whimsy to the film's aesthetic, the sea creatures and underwater scenes in the film have been created using stop-motion animation under the direction of Henry Selick, the man behind The Nightmare Before Christmas and James and the Giant Peach. The ensemble cast also includes Willem Dafoe, Jeff Goldblum, Michael Gambon, Noah Taylor, and Bud Cort. ~ Matthew Tobey, Rovi

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Starring:
Bill MurrayOwen Wilson, (more)
 
2001  
PG13  
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This feverishly energetic comedy combines stop-motion animation and live action from director Henry Selick, creator of The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993) and James and the Giant Peach (1996). Brendan Fraser stars as Stu Miley, a cartoonist who created a randy monkey character called Monkeybone that has taken off in popularity, making him a celebrity. Stu's set to launch a TV series based on Monkeybone and marry his beautiful fiancée Julie (Bridget Fonda) when he's injured in a freak accident that puts him in a coma. He travels to Dark Town, a holding area for the comatose who wait to either regain consciousness or move on to the afterlife with the help of Death (Whoopi Goldberg). Dark Town is also a realm where fictional characters reside and before long Stu has met the vulgar Monkeybone, who travels back to the land of the living to inhabit Stu's body. Aided by Kitty (Rose McGowan), Stu must find a way to reclaim his body and put Monkeybone back in his place before the raunchy primate ruins his charmed life. Monkeybone is based on the cartoon graphic novel Dark Town by Kaja Blackley. ~ Karl Williams, Rovi

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Starring:
Brendan FraserBridget Fonda, (more)
 
1996  
PG  
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A young boy's discovery of a gigantic peach triggers an eventful journey across the sea in this strikingly designed and surprisingly twisted animated adventure. A live-action framing device establishes the dark yet fanciful mood one might expect from an adaptation of a Roald Dahl story, as young British lad James (Paul Terry) is orphaned by the death of his parents and forced to live with two cruel, repulsive aunts (played by noted British character actors Miriam Margolyes and Joanna Lumley of British TV hit Absolutely Fabulous). The visit of a mysterious stranger provides a means of escape, however, through a magic bag of "crocodile tongues" that bring about the appearance of the giant peach. The curious James soon winds up inside the fruit, at which point his body changes, and the film switches to a combination of stop-motion and digital animation. The new James meets up with a group of talking, oversized insects, including a vampish spider (voiced by Susan Sarandon), a sarcastic centipede (voiced by Richard Dreyfuss), and a matronly ladybug (voiced by Jane Leeves). These creatures become his traveling companions when the peach rolls into the Atlantic Ocean, and James and his new friends must brave a variety of dangers to reach the shore. Director Henry Selick provides further proof of the visual skill he demonstrated in The Nightmare Before Christmas, creating a fascinating, often eerie alternate universe, while Randy Newman provides the upbeat musical accompaniment. Young children may be disturbed by the story's creepier overtones, but the mixture of remarkable visuals, oddball characters, and off-kilter fantasy will appeal to all other audiences. ~ Judd Blaise, Rovi

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Starring:
Simon CallowJoanna Lumley, (more)
 
1993  
PG  
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This stop-motion animated fable was a big hit when it was released -- not only at the box office, but critically. It was praised for its stunning originality and for the excellence of its execution. In addition, it was praised for being a completely absorbing fable that both grownups and children can enjoy, so long as the children are able to its handle scary bits (beginning perhaps at age seven or eight). In the story, Jack Skellington (voice of Chris Sarandon) is the Pumpkin King of Halloweentown, a realm of reality where the inhabitants make it their life's work to scare humans on Halloween. He's good at his work, and is very popular around town, but it all bores him. In a funk one day, he wanders into a wood where every tree is the doorway to realms serving one or another human holiday, and falls through the doorway into Christmas. There, he sees scenes of such glee and good will that he is overwhelmed. He returns to Halloweentown with the inspiration to persuade his fellow citizens to kidnap Santa and do Christmas in their own Halloweentown way -- complete with snakes and shrunken heads. Despite strong arguments against this project by Jack's otherwise loyal girlfriend, Sally (voice of Catherine O'Hara), Santa (voice of Edward Ivory) is duly captured, and the townspeople prepare a very special Christmas for everyone. Jack is excited about the new plan, and at first doesn't notice that Sally isn't around much anymore. Meanwhile, Oogie Boogie (voice of Ken Page), a sinister opponent of Jack's, has re-kidnapped Santa and has captured Sally as well. Since Sally is the true love of Jack's life and (he eventually realizes) the only one who can be relied upon to tell him the truth in every circumstance, a confrontation with Oogie Boogie becomes inevitable. In addition to being a monumental work of animation (it took over 120 animators and many more technicians more than two years to film it), this show features ten very appropriate musical numbers by composer Danny Elfman, who also supplies Jack's singing voice. In October 2006, fans of the innovative animated classic got to experience The Nightmare Before Christmas in a whole new dimension when the film was re-released into theaters in Disney Digital 3-D -- a process developed to add remarkable new depth to films that were originally released in standard 2-D. ~ Clarke Fountain, Rovi

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Starring:
Danny ElfmanChris Sarandon, (more)
 
 
1981  
G  
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The Disney animated feature The Fox and the Hound tells the story of a friendship between traditional enemies. Tod is a fox whose parents have died. His best friend is a hunting dog named Copper. As Copper grows up, he learns that it is his job to hunt foxes. Tod's caretaker Widow Tweed takes Tod to live in a game preserve where he falls madly in love with Vixey. Copper and his owner eventually enter the preserve to hunt Tod, and eventually Copper must decide between duty and friendship. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi

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Starring:
Mickey RooneyKurt Russell, (more)
 
1978  
 
The story of a poor boy who is forced to sell his pet donkey on the eve of the first Christmas. The new owners of the donkey become Biblical history. ~ Rovi

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1977  
G  
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Based on a story by Hollywood old-timers Seton I. Miller and S. S. Field, Pete's Dragon divides its time between its flesh-and-blood characters and an animated green dragon. Pete (Sean Marshall), a lonely orphan boy in turn-of-the-century Maine, runs away from his abusive foster family. He stumbles upon a lovable dragon named Elliot, and the two become inseparable companions. Elliot is visible only to Pete, leading the townsfolk to assume that the boy is a trifle tetched. Pete finally finds happiness with his "new" family, lighthouse-keeper Lampie (Mickey Rooney) and his daughter Nora (Helen Reddy, who sings and sings). British comic actor Jim Dale co-stars as the wacky dentist Dr. Terminus. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Helen ReddyJim Dale, (more)