IT'S NOT UNUSUAL FOR TIM BURTON : VEGAS, SCI-FI MOVIES AND TOM JONES FASCINATE DIRECTOR OF `MARS ATTACKS!'.Byline: Amy Dawes Daily News Staff Writer He grew up on Evergreen Street in Burbank and discovered a playground for his imagination at the nearby Evergreen Cemetery Evergreen Cemetery is a common name for cemeteries, including the following in the United States:
adj. spook·i·er, spook·i·est Informal 1. Suggestive of ghosts or a ghost; eerie. 2. Easily startled; skittish. silences. Now Tim Burton is one of Hollywood's most inventive creative forces, a director whose dark, distinctive visual approach and persistent sense of fun have animated movies as diverse as ``Beetlejuice,'' the first two ``Batman'' films, ``Edward Scissorhands'' and ``Ed Wood.'' In his new movie - ``Mars Attacks!'' - Burton, now 38, indulges his childhood passion for B-grade space-invader movies with a goofy Goofy bumbling, awkward dog; originally named Dippy Dawg. [Comics: “Mickey Mouse” in Horn, 492] See : Awkwardness , extravagantly realized send-up of the genre. Financed by Warner Bros BROS Brothers BROS Benefits and Retirement Operations Section (King County, Washington) BROS Barnes and Richmond Operatic Society (London, UK) . for a whopping $80 million, ``Mars Attacks!'' features cheese-brained little green men with ray guns who land on earth and blow away every well-meaning Earthling who attempts to extend a welcome, vaporizing Las Vegas Las Vegas (läs vā`gəs), city (1990 pop. 258,295), seat of Clark co., S Nev.; inc. 1911. It is the largest city in Nevada and the center of one of the fastest-growing urban areas in the United States. to boot. Jack Nicholson John Joseph Nicholson (born April 22 1937), known as Jack Nicholson, is a three time Academy Award winning American actor internationally renowned for his often dark-themed portrayals of neurotic characters. plays the president and Glenn Close the first lady, and everyone from Pierce Brosnan and Martin Short to cultural icons Tom Jones, Jim Jones, Jim, 1931–78, American religious leader, b. Lynn, Indiana. An influential Indianapolis preacher since the 1950s, Jones formed the People's Temple (1955), which he eventually moved to Ukiah, Calif. (1967) and then San Francisco (1971). Brown, Pam Grier This biographical article or section needs additional references for verification. Please help [ to improve this article] by adding additional sources. Unverifiable material about living persons must be removed immediately, especially if potentially libelous or harmful. and yodeling yo·del v. yo·deled or yo·delled, yo·del·ing or yo·del·ling, yo·dels v.intr. To sing so that the voice fluctuates rapidly between the normal chest voice and a falsetto. v.tr. country crooner Slim Whitman gets into the act. The tone and style of the movie, Burton says, were inspired by a 1962 series of Topps trading cards called ``Mars Attacks!'' that were brought to his attention by screenwriter Jonathan Gems. The Daily News talked to Burton as he struggled with a cold during the rainy final days before the movie's ``FryDay the 13th'' release, as the studio calls it. As he speaks, it's evident that Burton is someone who lives and breathes the popular culture of his generation. Q: How did you get the idea for the burning cows that run down the road at the beginning of the movie and tip everyone off that something strange is happening? A: It came right from the trading cards. They were like little paintings, and they had a certain quality to them that I really got into. I picked out some of my favorites and worked them into the movie. That one was called ``Burning Cattle.'' Another one was ``Washington in Flames In Flames is a melodic death metal band from Gothenburg, Sweden founded in 1990. Along with Dark Tranquillity and At the Gates, they pioneered what is now known as melodic death metal. .'' Q: How did (eccentric country singer) Slim Whitman get into the mix? A: I lived with my grandmother when I was younger, and she liked to watch ``Hee Haw'' and ``The Lawrence Welk Lawrence Welk (March 11, 1903 – May 17, 1992) was a musician, accordion player, bandleader, and television impresario, hosting "The Lawrence Welk Show" from 1951 to 1982. Show,'' and I remembered those commercials for his records. He was so surreal, you never forgot him. It was like when you heard Gomer Pyle Gomer Pyle was the simple-minded gas station attendant and later auto mechanic in the American TV sitcom The Andy Griffith Show, played by Jim Nabors. Nabors continued the character in his own starring vehicle, Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C. from 1964-69. sing; it just didn't add up. When it came time to killing the Martians, I thought about how in those old movies - it was always either sound waves or light waves or some stupid thing that did it. I went with sound waves, and I thought of Slim Whitman. He had always stuck with me. A: Did your relationship with your grandmother have anything to do with the relationship between Richie (Lukas Haas Lukas Haas (born Lucas Daniel Haas on April 16, 1976) is an American actor. Biography Early life Haas was born in West Hollywood, California, the son of Berthold Haas, a painter, and singer/songwriter Emily Tracy. ) and his grandmother in the movie? Q: (laughs) Yeah. I guess it did. A: What does blowing up Las Vegas mean to you? Q: About as much as it does to the people who are actually blowing it up, even as we speak. The Sands was blown up just last week and, to me, it's a tragedy, because there's so little of history in the West as it is, and those old Las Vegas buildings are beautiful - they're architecture. In my mind, the Martians would have no regard for what we, as humans, also show very little regard for. A: I take it you like Las Vegas? Q: I've loved going there ever since I was a little kid. There's no place like it for people-watching. I guess it's a symbol of instant gratification in a lot of ways. It's kind of tacky and retro [Latin, Back; backward; behind.] A prefix used to designate a prior condition or time. , and yet at the same time it seems like the most modern American city. It just intrigues me. You think of all the weird stuff - how it got started, and the way it's near nuclear test sites, and there are a lot of alien sightings around there. Whenever I drive in there, I'm always amazed a·maze v. a·mazed, a·maz·ing, a·maz·es v.tr. 1. To affect with great wonder; astonish. See Synonyms at surprise. 2. Obsolete To bewilder; perplex. v.intr. . I think, ``Why is this here?'' You can see it from a distance, set apart in the middle of this stark landscape. It's like ``Logan's Run.'' I imagine someday there'll be a dome over it. There's a dome over part of it already. Q: I heard that you initially had trouble getting people to be in the movie, and then after Jack Nicholson (whom Burton worked with in ``Batman'') signed on, it got a lot easier. A: I was really lucky to get a bunch of people who wouldn't ordinarily be in a movie like this. That became part of the energy of it. You watch it and you think, ``Why would they bring themselves to be in this movie?'' Well, I think it's because they usually have to do other kinds of things. Part of the fun, if I was ever an actor, would be playacting, making stuff up out of nothing. I have a strong resistance to categorization in anything, so I was grateful. It was very surreal to see them all on the set. Q: Tom Jones said in an interview that he was performing at the MGM MGM in full Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Inc. U.S. corporation and film studio. It was formed when the film distributor Marcus Loew, who bought Metro Pictures in 1920, merged it with the Goldwyn production company in 1924 and with Louis B. Mayer Pictures in 1925. Grand in Las Vegas, and you just came backstage and asked him to be in the movie. A: Yeah, I've always been a fan of his. Growing up in Burbank, it seemed like nobody in the neighborhood listened to music, but they listened to Tom Jones. I thought that was a compliment to him. He had a power with these people. I'd see him on TV, people throwing underwear at him, and I'd say, ``Wow, he's powerful.'' His voice is so great, and he makes you feel good. He's like this action-adventure hero to me. You feel as though he'd deal with any situation with the same kind of strength, whether it was a concert or a Martian invasion. He'd just get in there and go for it. Q: Do you think your fondness for space-invasion movies comes from growing up in the Cold War era? A: We had those ``duck and cover'' exercises in school and watched those little preparation films like ``Red Asphalt'' or something. Growing up, it seems like I watched hundreds of science-fiction movies on TV, but I can't remember what any of them are about. They're like some sort of collective primal imagery, a modern fairy tale fairy tale Simple narrative typically of folk origin dealing with supernatural beings. Fairy tales may be written or told for the amusement of children or may have a more sophisticated narrative containing supernatural or obviously improbable events, scenes, and personages . There's been more than one movie with big-brained little green men. Q: Your Martians always do the opposite of what the experts predict. Why is that? A: It's the concept that there are some things that can't be figured out that easily. The Cold War enemy is kind of gone, but what's replaced that is people trying to categorize and reduce everything. There are so many experts now when there's a trial or a war. It's like a movement to try to put everything into a box. People talk about how dark the movies are that I make, and then I'll turn on the news and see a war going on, and it's presented with a theme song and a title graphic - like it's a story. To me, that's really, really weird. It seems to me there's a gap between what some people think is weird and what others do. In my movies, I try to say, in some kind of under-the-surface way, that things aren't always what they seem. Q: Have you seen the movie ``Independence Day''? A: Not yet. When I'm making something, I usually don't go out and see other movies, because you don't want to be influenced one way or another. People have said there are similarities, so I don't want there to be any more connective connective - An operator used in logic to combine two logical formulas. See first order logic. tissue than that. But when I get done with all this, I'll be interested to see it, and I'm sure I'll probably like it. Q: Now that you've blown up Las Vegas, have you thought about making a movie where you blow up Disney World? A: Uh ... if they'd let me, it would be great. But there's no way in hell that they'd ever go for it. CAPTION(S): 6 Photos Photo: (1--Cover--Color) His favorite Martians (2--Cover--Color) Tom Jones as Tom Jones and Annette Bening Annette Carol Bening (born May 29, 1958) is a Golden Globe-, BAFTA- and Screen Actors Guild Award-winning American actress. Biography Early life Bening was born in Topeka, Kansas, the daughter of Shirley and Grant Bening, an insurance salesman. as a ray-gun-toting Martian killer in ``Mars Attacks!'' (3) The aliens always seem to do the opposite of what humans predict in Tim Burton's ``Mars Attacks!'' A set of Topps trading cards inspired the director to make the movie. (4) The movie became easier to cast after Jack Nicholson signed on to play the president. (5) Glenn Close is first lady and Martin Short is White House press secretary in ``Mars Attacks!'' (6) President James Dale (Jack Nicholson) finds himself under the (ray) gun in the Tim Burton send-up of B-grade sci-fi movies. |
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