Director: Tim Burton Studio: 20th Century Fox Genre(s): Fantasy Rated: PG-13 (For intense sequences of fantasy action/violence and peril) |
It’s time for another confession from your favorite critic:
I have Asperger’s Syndrome. I may have
mentioned this before, but I bring this up again because my review for the
latest Tim Burton starts with my personal history watching his films (as most
reviews of his movies do), and I want to throw in my voice with the misfits,
outcasts, and weirdo’s that, yes, I too found a special connection with his
works. While I love other directors and
their works, Tim Burton movies just always…clicked with me. They felt like they were on the same mental wave
line as mine. Years later I would find
out that Burton himself is (what we affectionately call ourselves) an ‘Aspy,’
and all made sense. At that point I knew
that Burton’s disability is what fueled much of how he viewed the world and how
he channeled that view into fine works of art.
I bring this up because the fact that he has Asperger’s is probably his
biggest strength and weakness at the same time.
In “Miss Peregrin’s Home for Peculiar Children” we see those strengths and weaknesses being played out in the open. It is based off a popular book series about children with abilities that make them different from normal people (and despite the title, it should be noted the book was American). The story involves time travel, alternate dimensions, and a villain that wants to sour the good mood by trying to kill everyone for his own personal gain. Like most of the movies I’ve reviewed in the past week, “Miss Peregrin’s Home for Peculiar Children” isn’t a terribly complicated story. I mean, considering where it takes place I suppose it has more going on in it than most, but it’s one of those screenplays where heavy scrutiny reveals a story that makes less sense than you’d hope it to. If you ignore exactly how things work or why they are you can have a lot more fun with it.
In “Miss Peregrin’s Home for Peculiar Children” we see those strengths and weaknesses being played out in the open. It is based off a popular book series about children with abilities that make them different from normal people (and despite the title, it should be noted the book was American). The story involves time travel, alternate dimensions, and a villain that wants to sour the good mood by trying to kill everyone for his own personal gain. Like most of the movies I’ve reviewed in the past week, “Miss Peregrin’s Home for Peculiar Children” isn’t a terribly complicated story. I mean, considering where it takes place I suppose it has more going on in it than most, but it’s one of those screenplays where heavy scrutiny reveals a story that makes less sense than you’d hope it to. If you ignore exactly how things work or why they are you can have a lot more fun with it.
You have children like Fiona Frauenfeld (Georgia Pemberton),
who can control and maintain plants and produce. You have a boy who has bee’s living inside
him, who enter and leave his mouth at will.
There is an invisible boy, though he seems the least peculiar in this
day and age. For some reason the
Peculiar (and that is what the film calls them) that I found to be most
interesting was Emma Bloom (Ella Purnell), a girl who has so much air in her
body she will float away without special boots and can create air bubbles
underwater. I can understand why our
main hero Jake (Asa Butterfield) falls instantly in love with her. Upon first glance all these kids look like
freaks, yet they reveal themselves to be, deep down, as normal as the kids they
are constantly compared to. All of them
are taken care of by Miss Peregrin (Eva Green), who is a suitable mother figure
that is smart and thinking three steps ahead.
In many ways this is typical Burton material. The misfits, the outcasts, the unjustified
fear from the general public…it’s all par the course for this man. I admit to having more fun with “Miss
Peregrin’s Home for Peculiar Children” than I have the past few Burton films. When I think about why it dawns on me that
Burton was – for the first time in a long time – stepping outside his comfort
zone. There is no appearance by Johnny
Depp or Helena Bonham Carter. He is
adapting a book that didn’t seem like an obvious choice for him to adapt. Danny Elfman was busy with “Alice Through the
Looking Glass,” so Burton had to work without his usual sound. He was filming the movie with 3D in mind and
had to compose his shots with the knowledge that (unlike the up conversion jobs
for previous films) the look was going to all be on him this time around.
People with Asperger’s can get comfortable and do rudimentary
tasks very well. That is why Tim Burton
makes such good Tim Burton movies: because he knows how to make them without
trying. Take away his usual actors,
composers, and force him to use a few new tools, and now he has to stretch
himself a bit. People with Asperger’s
don’t like to stretch their wings or try new things, but when to do so they can
do some pretty amazing things. “Miss
Peregrin’s Home for Peculiar Children” isn’t exactly what I would call amazing,
but by taking Burton out of his comfort zone he has made a movie that has some
of the imagination and whimsy that we have missed in several of his previous
films
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CONSUMER ADVICE |
Parents, there is some minor language and scary fantasy moments, but the violence is never gruesome and it isn't too scary. Recommended for ages 12 and up.
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