
While he’ll be honored this weekend at SpikeTV’s Scream Awards, the Los Angelest Times’ Hero Complex caught up with director Tim Burton on the set of Alice in Wonderland. And while he had a bit to say on Batman, it’s the rabbit hole that has us more curious:
“It’s a funny project. The story is obviously a classic with iconic images and ideas and thoughts. But with all the movie versions, well, I’ve just never seen one that really had any impact to me. It’s always just a series of weird events. Every character is strange and she’s just kind of wandering through all of the encounters as just a sort of observer. The goal is to try to make it an engaging movie where you get some of the psychology and kind of bring a freshness but also keep the classic nature of ‘Alice.’ And, you know, getting to do it in 3-D fits the material quite well. So I’m excited about making it a new versionĀ but also have the elements that people expect when they think of the material.”
And while his response to Depp’s ever-changing screen face (” He doesn’t like to be the same way twice.”) is normal by now, the question of Burton’s reimagination with pop culture through literature (Big Fish), musicals (Sweeny Todd) and existing film (Planet of the Apes) is surprising:
“Hmm. That’s interesting. I don’t know. I think we’re all a product of our upbringing, you know, in a sense. I wasn’t a very literary person. I loved movies. What you grow up with is what influences you. Whether you were a reader and there’s a lot of books that you sort of want to translate to film or if it’s other things that took in. I was definitely of a generation where the things I grew up watching still have impact on me. There’s something about exercising that aspect of your personality or working with something that’s meant a lot to you. It’s just another way of processing ideas and all. So it’s not really a conscious decision. I don’t open up old ‘TV Guides’ and sit there and think, ‘Hmmmm, ‘Sanford & Son’, that’s the the movie I want to do. I watched that when I was a child…’ “




