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Tim Burton gives ‘Frankenweenie’ another shot

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For no apparent reason, several of Victor’s classmates resemble classic movie monsters. One kid looks like Igor and is named Edward “E” Gore. Another unfortunate lad looks like Frankenstein’s monster with a flat head, oversized shoulders and hulking physique. They form two-thirds of a scheming trio completed by a Japanese boy named Toshiaki, whom I guess is supposed to represent evil scientists from Toho’s giant monster movies. Toshiaki speaks with an exaggerated Asian accent that makes him sound like a “Jonny Quest” villain and is hardly politically correct for a 2012 family film.

The one relatively normal schoolmate is the sympathetic girl next door named Elsa Van Helsing (many character names are in-jokes) and voiced by Winona Ryder, working with Burton for the first time since “Edward Scissorhands.” Her pet poodle has an enormous bouffant, so we see the “Bride of Frankenstein” joke coming long before it happens.

Victor and his friends live in the town of New Holland, which Burton and production designer Rick Heinrichs have conceived to look like 1950s suburbia – a 1950s suburbia filtered through the era’s sitcoms and educational shorts.

“Frankenweenie” doesn’t have the deeper themes of this summer’s superior horror-themed stop-motion feature, “ParaNorman.” Yet “Frankenweenie” does have an agenda to promote science education at a time when, in certain parts of this country, science is treated like witchcraft. “They like what science gives them, but not the questions science asks,” says Victor’s science teacher, Mr. Rzykyruski (pronounced “Rice Krispie”).

The teacher is played by Martin Landau, who was Bela Lugosi in Burton’s “Ed Wood” and uses that voice again here. “SCTV” veterans Catherine O’Hara and Martin Short play Victor’s parents and several other characters.

Victor’s classmates eventually figure out he brought his dog back to life, and they all raid the cemetery for their own dead pets. The resulting monster mash-up at the ending is predictable, but still enjoyable. A good Godzilla/Gamera joke is always welcome.

In the early days of his career, Burton emerged as a brilliant and playful filmmaker. He lost his sense of joy during the years he churned out the reconstituted “Planet of the Apes,” “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory” and “Dark Shadows.”


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