Charlie y la fabrica de chocolate filmaffinity

Charlie y la fabrica de chocolate filmaffinity

Charlie y la fabrica de chocolate filmaffinity

Charlie and the chocolate factory movie

All the weight of the story ends up falling on this character, played by Johnny Deep. He does a good job, but I always find his stupid face repetitive: in Pirates of the Caribbean he does almost the same thing. I’m starting to see parallels in all of Deep’s characters, which makes me quite unsettled (I don’t deny that he’s a great actor, in Ed Wood he more than proves it, but maybe his choice of eccentric characters is typecasting him). Can you imagine what the staging of «Alice in Wonderland» will be like? I’m guessing a derivative of this one. And Deep’s performance? Well, you can imagine…
Forget this worthless psychedelic amalgam and read Roald Dahl’s original work without thinking about it. And let’s pray that the film sequel «Charlie and the Great Elevator», literary as delicious and with more doses of madness, will be a more acceptable cinematic product, made with love for the original work, and not simply to collect dollars. And, please, no more twists on the original plot to update it to the 21st century….

Big fish filmaffinity

El aclamado director Tim Burton aporta su estilo vivamente imaginativo al querido clásico de Roald Dahl Charlie y la fábrica de chocolate, sobre el excéntrico chocolatero Willy Wonka (Johnny Depp) y Charlie, un niño de buen corazón de una familia pobre que vive a la sombra de la extraordinaria fábrica de Wonka. Aislado desde hace tiempo de su propia familia, Wonka lanza un concurso mundial para seleccionar un heredero de su imperio de caramelos. Cinco niños afortunados, entre ellos …  [+]
Tim Burton es un genio, incomprendido por muchos y admirado por tantos otros, da muestras de su genialidad en esta obra maestra. Mezcla de ironía y humor, grandes actores y una trama llega de magia y de ilusión.

The corpse bride filmaffinity

Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory or A World of Make-Believe is a 1971 American film based on the Roald Dahl book Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, directed by Mel Stuart and starring Gene Wilder in the title role of Willy Wonka.[2] Charlie also succumbs to temptation, along with Grandpa Joe, as they stay in the bubble room and sample the sample of fizzy elevating drinks.
Charlie also succumbs to temptation, along with Grandpa Joe, as they stay in the bubble room and try the sample of fizzy elevator drinks against Wonka’s orders. They start out floating skyward and are nearly sucked into a ceiling-mounted extractor fan. To avoid this grisly fate, they must burp several times to get back to earth. Wonka initially seems oblivious to this incident.
Wonka, irritated, explains that there was a forfeiture clause in the contract Charlie and the other four ticket winners signed at the start of the tour on Charlie’s part in stealing the fizzy elevator drinks that violated the contract, and therefore he cannot claim the prize. Wonka furiously rejects the two.

Wikipedia

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Burton brought frequent collaborators Johnny Depp and Danny Elfman onto the project. This film is the first since The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993) in which Elfman wrote and performed songs for the soundtrack. Filming took place at Pinewood Studios in the UK between June and December 2004, where Burton tried to use visual effects as little as possible. The film was a critical and box-office success, grossing $475 million worldwide.
Scott Frank was hired as screenwriter in February 1999, after applying to Warners for the job.[6] Frank, an Oscar nominee for Best Adapted Screenplay for Out of Sight (1998), wanted to work on a film that his children could enjoy.[7][8][9] As a fan of the book, he tried to be more faithful to Dahl’s work than the 1971 film.[6] Nicolas Cage was considered to play Willy Wonka, but lost interest. [4][10] Gary Ross signed on as director in February 2000,[11] while Frank completed two drafts of the screenplay[9] before leaving the project with Ross in September 2001.[12] Warner and the Dahl estate wanted Frank to remain on the project, but he had scheduling problems and contractual obligations with the films Minority Report (2002) and The Lookout (2007).[9] The film was released in February 2000,[10] and the film’s director was signed on in February 2000,[11] while Frank completed two drafts of the script[9] before leaving the project with Ross in September 2001.