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Nightmare Before Christmas

Originaltitel: Tim Burton's the Nightmare Before Christmas
  • 1993
  • 6
  • 1 Std. 16 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,9/10
404.676
IHRE BEWERTUNG
BELIEBTHEIT
542
62
Danny Elfman, Paul Reubens, Catherine O'Hara, Chris Sarandon, Randy Crenshaw, William Hickey, Ken Page, Greg Proops, Joe Ranft, Glenn Shadix, and Glenn Walters in Nightmare Before Christmas (1993)
Offcial Trailer
trailer wiedergeben1:14
13 Videos
99+ Fotos
Dunkle FantasieEin MärchenFeiertags-AnimationFeiertags-FamilienfilmSchwarze KomödieStop-Motion-AnimationÜbernatürliche FantasyAbenteuerAnimationsfilmFamilie

Jack Skellington, der König von Halloween Town, entdeckt Christmas Town, ohne jedoch genau deren Konzept zu verstehen.Jack Skellington, der König von Halloween Town, entdeckt Christmas Town, ohne jedoch genau deren Konzept zu verstehen.Jack Skellington, der König von Halloween Town, entdeckt Christmas Town, ohne jedoch genau deren Konzept zu verstehen.

  • Regisseur/-in
    • Henry Selick
  • Autoren
    • Tim Burton
    • Michael McDowell
    • Caroline Thompson
  • Stars
    • Danny Elfman
    • Chris Sarandon
    • Catherine O'Hara
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,9/10
    404.676
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    BELIEBTHEIT
    542
    62
    • Regisseur/-in
      • Henry Selick
    • Autoren
      • Tim Burton
      • Michael McDowell
      • Caroline Thompson
    • Stars
      • Danny Elfman
      • Chris Sarandon
      • Catherine O'Hara
    • 696Benutzerrezensionen
    • 251Kritische Rezensionen
    • 82Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Für 1 Oscar nominiert
      • 7 Gewinne & 17 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos13

    The Nightmare Before Christmas: 2018 Edition
    Trailer 1:14
    The Nightmare Before Christmas: 2018 Edition
    The Nightmare Before Christmas
    Trailer 2:00
    The Nightmare Before Christmas
    The Nightmare Before Christmas
    Trailer 2:00
    The Nightmare Before Christmas
    Top-Rated Holiday Movies to Watch
    Clip 2:01
    Top-Rated Holiday Movies to Watch
    From Script to Screen: 'The Nightmare Before Christmas'
    Clip 0:30
    From Script to Screen: 'The Nightmare Before Christmas'
    Paul Reubens In Memoriam
    Clip 1:13
    Paul Reubens In Memoriam
    Hidden Gems to Watch on Disney+
    Clip 3:20
    Hidden Gems to Watch on Disney+

    Fotos193

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    Topbesetzung16

    Ändern
    Danny Elfman
    Danny Elfman
    • Jack Skellington - Singing Voice…
    Chris Sarandon
    Chris Sarandon
    • Jack Skellington
    • (Synchronisation)
    Catherine O'Hara
    Catherine O'Hara
    • Sally
    • (Synchronisation)
    • …
    William Hickey
    William Hickey
    • Dr. Finkelstein
    • (Synchronisation)
    Glenn Shadix
    Glenn Shadix
    • Mayor
    • (Synchronisation)
    Paul Reubens
    Paul Reubens
    • Lock
    • (Synchronisation)
    Ken Page
    Ken Page
    • Oogie Boogie
    • (Synchronisation)
    Edward Ivory
    • Santa
    • (Synchronisation)
    • (as Ed Ivory)
    Susan McBride
    • Big Witch
    • (Synchronisation)
    • …
    Debi Durst
    • Corpse Kid
    • (Synchronisation)
    • …
    Greg Proops
    Greg Proops
    • Harlequin Demon
    • (Synchronisation)
    • (as Gregory Proops)
    • …
    Kerry Katz
    • Man Under Stairs
    • (Synchronisation)
    • …
    Randy Crenshaw
    Randy Crenshaw
    • Mr. Hyde
    • (Synchronisation)
    • …
    Sherwood Ball
    • Mummy
    • (Synchronisation)
    • …
    Carmen Twillie
    Carmen Twillie
    • Undersea Gal
    • (Synchronisation)
    • …
    Glenn Walters
    • Wolfman
    • (Synchronisation)
    • Regisseur/-in
      • Henry Selick
    • Autoren
      • Tim Burton
      • Michael McDowell
      • Caroline Thompson
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen696

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    8fernandoschiavi

    Technical elements aside, the film is able to please the whole family, saying that people are what they are born for

    The Halloween City has its customs greatly exalted by its residents, peculiar individuals who hum in all corners. All spread the spooky spirit through their shapes and features: the rolling heads, sticky worms and sharp teeth through the shadows. This is definitely a magical place that few would like to visit. But what does all this have to do with Christmas? This is precisely the questioning of the protagonist of "The Nightmare Before Christmas".

    Considered the ultimate celebrity of his city, Jack Skellington (played by Chris Sarandon, from the series "Orange is the New Black", and Danny Elfman, composer of "The Simpsons" and "Justice League", among others) is one of the organizers of Halloween. Every year he and the ambiguous Mayor (Glenn Shadix, "The Ghosts Have Fun") organize the festive plight the locals so love, spreading the dark spirit around the world. But Jack is in one of those phases of life where everyone questions themselves. On a walk in search of what may be his epiphany, he discovers a peculiar colored door: green, shaped like a tree, with colorful acorns and a star at its tip. Jack discovers Christmas Town.

    When we think of horror aimed at children, The Nightmare Before Christmas is the first work we imagine, always associated with the name of Tim Burton. Despite not being exactly a horror movie, we have, in the creation of this universe, a fantastic gothic feeling that assimilates many of the worst nightmares that children have, without ever causing repulsion, but without being easily digestible by them. For the kids Jack's Strange World frightens as much as it delights, allowing the tape to be an unforgettable milestone in their childhood. The name of Tim Burton, producer of the film, although not related to the direction, the responsibility of Henry Sellick, remains quite highlighted and in a fair way, as he has credit for the creation of the story and the world, with an aesthetic signature clearly his own. . Most interesting of all, in a behind-the-scenes thought, is the information that the film was produced by Skellington Productions, in a joint venture with Disney Studios. The reality is that, on second thought, it would be extremely complicated for a work with a villain composed of disgusting insects and worms to be directly linked to Disney, which is very different from the company. The creativity of Sellick and Burton, at least, is free from any ties, ready to give rise to a remarkable musical work, with peculiar and extraordinary characteristics in several of the areas in which we can analyze the work.

    The construction of the world, above all, is one of the great initial successes of the filmmakers. The stop-motion technique, while in other cases it would be an ally for image creation, here it is the basis for what is manufactured in terms of the universe. No wonder that Tim Burton and Henry Sellick would be involved in other animations with this style, such as The Corpse Bride and Coraline and the Secret World. Stop-motion is "weird" in itself, deforming nature in a way that doesn't make it rejectable, but extremely special, not to mention charming. Skeleton Jack's Strange World (Chris Sarandon) is an impressive visual composition, giving rise to a stunning contrast when, later, we see the work's protagonist, saddened, discover another universe, and, consequently, discover Christmas. We're talking about a scrawny being, contradicting himself when his posture is so elegant, but his ability to be terrifying is revealed later as he converses with some demonic children in his world.

    We are so used to thinking of terror, haunting or dark as elements aimed at an adult audience that we forget, or deny the fact that children can also feel fear and, in many cases, like that of little Izabel who discovered a new world to her. Coming across a film about a talking skeleton, much more than frightening or terrifying, ended up highlighting a universe where the different is also appreciated and does not cause any surprise or discomfort, but it becomes loved. Along with very few other examples of animations with details characteristic of horror, The Nightmare Before Christmas integrates small lessons and messages to a film whose visual aspect enchants and surprises precisely because we are so used to accompanying enchanted princesses or inanimate objects coming to life. Here, good intentions can lead to chaos, but knowing we made mistakes is part of the trajectory, and repairing our mistakes becomes even more important than admitting that we made mistakes. It's what we do with our mistakes that counts and, no one can deny that Jack, while creating the greatest chaos that Christmas has ever seen, was sincere and humble enough to look for a way to repair his mistake.

    Tim Burton's story, at first glance, is not intended to reflect on the breaking of stereotypes, although, in the path he decides to navigate, it begins a subversive thought, in which a monster is capable, as well as any person, of fall in love with a festivity that you didn't know before. The doors are theoretically open for exploring the new. We actually have, despite this anti-conservative surface, a split with thoughts of social integration. Each little world in this created universe is far from the other, reaching the point where the union between two different ones, Halloween and Christmas, causes chaos and not harmony. The onslaught is somewhat tragic, whereas Skeleton Jack fails to translate Christmas into the creatures of Halloween City, failing to be the character Santa Claus (Ed Ivory) who ultimately fixes the mistakes made by the protagonist. Tim Burton's cinema is, in a way, excluding, but not with a malice, arising, however, from a more saddened and pessimistic view of reality. By being seen as different, Tim Burton ends up looking at his own characters, sort of versions of himself, like Edward Scissorhands, and putting them apart from society, which cannot, even at the end of the story, accept them. Children, for example, completely reject Jack's gifts in Strange World.

    As good a fable as it is, this film takes us to Jack's questions when he finds himself creatively exhausted. On the other hand, we follow the rag doll Sally (Catherine O'Hara, "Frankenweenie"), whose curiosity complements what the Christmas spirit means so that it never becomes repetitive: a little creativity here; a bit of curiosity over there.

    But the big difference is in the direction of Henry Selick ("Coraline"), who takes us from Halloween City to Christmas City, composing characteristics of the characters, which are intertwined in the feelings of scary and cuteness. In this story, the stranger not only doesn't fit, but allows himself to be many things. But the central issue in this permissiveness is the problem of putting it above all in favor of self-acceptance. The protagonist Jack has a crisis with Halloween because he should accept himself and so he could also love himself and also be able to love. Soon the character Sally has her narrative counterpoint parallel with her visions, being oppressed by the scientist who created her, in her capacity to self-destruct and build, apart from empathic understanding. She is the symbol of love that the screenwriter is so fond of, as can be seen in the writer's work in the film "Edwards Scissorhands". She, Sally, puts fatality in front of Jack's fake, emulative, blind belief. Because in your project there is the ego, even if it glimpses your image, believe in the simplicity of recreating Christmas. The result is that with immoral means, even the convincing innocence in Jack's work, it still doesn't determine his understanding of what Christmas is, much less what happiness is, since the film is almost a theft of festivity, with each party having its way of being happy.

    Because "The Nightmare Before Christmas" recreates the Christmas spirit with the traditional gothic touches of Burton and Selick, without failing, with that, to lose its essence. Counting on the subtlety of the director and the inventiveness of the creator of this story, the apex of the film is precisely when we discover that the Christmas spirit here is also present in the union of individuals, whoever they may be. But what moves the most in the film is Sally's platonic passion (voice of Catherine O'Hara), a kind of monster of Frankenstein who is treated like a daughter by the mad scientist Dr. Finklestein (voice of William Hickey), for Jack. The most sensitive songs are on account of Sally, but the best ones are on account of Boggarts (voice of Ken Page), including the best musical number too, with a backdrop full of fluorescent colors. By the way, the entire art direction of the film is fantastic.

    Technical elements aside, the movie's greatest asset is really its brilliant story. Able to please the whole family, the tale of the skeleton who wanted to be Santa Claus for a day takes us back to the famous popular saying that people are what they are born for. In Jack's case, he passes on and renounces his status as the horror king in search of a world he has discovered and idealized and which he thinks is happy in it. And it will be from this new perception that he will look back and value his own universe and his real condition, as well as all of Burton's characters who look for nothing but ways to be happy. And isn't that exactly what we're all looking for? And that we are often blinded by the discoveries we make and only later realize the reality? That would be a good thought for everyone who comes to see the movie. Analogies aside, The Nightmare Before Christmas works very well as entertainment. A great movie that came from the imagination of a great character creator and excellent storyteller.
    10CheshireCatsGrin

    A true must see for all Halloween fans

    I am not a big Tim Burton fan, but this movie is in my top 3 of all time. Perhaps the fact that Halloween is my favorite holiday influenced my opinion, but I doubt it. The more I hear and read about this movie, the more I love it.

    Based on a parody of the famous "Night before Christmas" poem by Moore that Burton wrote and illustrated while employed at Disney, this idea was stagnant for many years prior to filming. In many ways this was a good thing, technology was able to catch up to Burton's ideas.

    In NBC, we see our hero Jack Skellington, aka The Pumpkin King, depressed as another Halloween passes. In the background we hear the residents of Halloween Town celebrate another wonderful holiday. But Jack is sad. The only one who notices is the Rag Doll-style woman Sally.

    Other characters, including many town-monsters, are introduced. We meet the wonderful mayor with two faces, the evil scientist and his assistant, three local children and our evil boogie-man.

    After an accident, Jack develops a plan to kidnap "Sandy Claws" and give presents out for Christmas in place of Christmas Town. You will have to view this movie to discover the rest.

    The claymation is not what I expected, it was of a high quality and the movements are not jerky like the old Christmas Specials. Danny Elfman's music has little resemblance to his work with Ongo Bongo and "What's this?" (which Jack sings when he discovers the colorful world of Christmas Town) is closer to a tune mixed from Cabaret and The Music Man. The voices match the mouth movements nearly perfectly. This was a project from the heart and all the little touches to make it 'just' right show this fact.
    10Quinoa1984

    One of the best films of 1993, highly re-watchable

    I was a kid when I first saw Tim Burton's Nightmare Before Christmas, but I wasn't scared by it in the slightest - this world is one entirely of the imagination, and in a sense saying that the film is scary for younger children is something of a compliment. 'Nightmare' is both a horror film and a musical, and fantasy and a suspense film, and like most Burton effort, comedy is thrown in at just the right moments.

    With Henry Selick as director and Michael McDowell & Caroline Thompson as the screenwriters, Burton has fashioned the worlds of Halloween-town and Christmas-town as real originals, working on the cliches that are in each holiday and surrounding the worlds with a host of terrific and terrifying characters. While Halloween-town has a mayor (appropriately with two faces, one smiling one distressed), the real leader is Jack Skellington (Chris Sarandon voices with a great Danny Elfman as the singing Jack) who orchestrates Halloween every year for its citizens. But he's grown weary over the years, and after stumbling upon Christmas-town, loaded with good will towards men and a large man in a red suit, he gets his town riled up to overtake the joyous holiday. Despite one protest by Sally (an amazing Catherine O'Hara), the doll-girl who loves him, the town goes on creating Jack's vision. The results are hilarious and, indeed, spellbinding.

    Much credit is given to Burton and Selick for their work on the film, but a lot should also be attributed to Denise Di Novi (co-producer and co-designer), Rick Heinrichs (visual consultant), Pete Kozachik (D.P.), and of course Danny Elfman for his perfectly fitting score and song creations. Along with the talented voice actors, Nightmare Before Christmas ends up a triumph of artistic ingenuity. Some could construe it as too weird or too stylish, but for the cult audience it has garnered over the past ten years it remains of of Burton's finest accomplishments. A+
    10dee.reid

    Burton's "Nightmare" is a dream come true

    By 1993, director Tim Burton was such a successful filmmaker in Hollywood that he was able to return to one of his most beloved early projects, "The Nightmare Before Christmas." It's certainly an inspired movie, as it is also very weird, and when I say "weird," I mean it's distinctly Burton.

    Even though it was directed with enough competency by Henry Selick, this groundbreaking stop-motion animation film is Burton all the way, as it contains ample "esque" qualities that make this "Nightmare" uniquely his vision.

    As the film opens in the twisted, "Burton"-esque village of "Halloweentown," Jack Skellington, who is dually voiced by Chris Sarandon and longtime Burton collaborator Danny Elfman, is celebrating another "horrible" Halloween. You'll be shocked and amazed at some of the town's inhabitants, who include jazz-playing zombies, Four Tenor-like vampires, a wolf man, and a wheelchair-bound scientist who occasionally opens up his cranium to (literally) scratch his brain; his creation, a Frankenstein-like scarecrow named Sally (Catherine O'Hara), yearns for contact with others and is quite fond of Jack Skellington.

    But Jack's quickly growing tired of the same old routine year after year, and because he's so downtrodden with boredom, he ventures into the dark forest outside the town's borders, and accidentally stumbles onto the wondrous, jolly world of "Christmastown." Enticed by its splendor, he decides to bring back his discovery to the residents of Halloweentown, who of which are just as shocked by Christmas as he is. Jack gets the brilliant idea to pose as Santa Claus but hires three mischief-makers to kidnap the real Santa so he can share his own, misguided vision of Christmas with an unprepared world.

    Painstakingly and meticulously crafted, "The Nightmare Before Christmas" is a beautiful and wonderful film from start to finish. The most famous image of this film is the cover art, which features Skellington eerily silhouetted against a full moon while he stands atop a coiled hill that overlooks a desolate graveyard.

    Burton is such a wonderful director, who had already brought us one unique "esque" vision after the other, especially with the first two "Batman" films and "Edward Scissorhands" behind him as of '93 when "Nightmare" was made.

    10/10
    9Movie-12

    One of the most memorable holiday classics of all time. A visual masterpiece. ***1/2 out of ****.

    THE NIGHTMARE BEFORE CHRISTMAS / (1993) ***1/2

    Starring the voices of: Danny Elfman, Chris Sarandon, Catherine O'Hara, Ken Page, Ed Ivory, and William Hickey Directed by Henry Celiac. Written by Michael McDowell. Running time: 76 minutes. Rated PG (for horrific images and some animated violence).

    Tim Burton seems like the only being on the planet who could come with characters such as the ones found in "The Nightmare Before Christmas." The feature is literally a tale likely to be found in a child's dreams. It creates a world of its own, inhabiting unforgettable characters and events that should be shared with generations. This film is a visual masterpiece; a movie that deserves to be a holiday favorite for some time to come.

    The atmosphere director Henry Celiac captures in "The Nightmare Before Christmas" is truly breathtaking. The cities and setting in which these characters live are visually perplexing, yet descriptive and develop the production's mood perfectly. We, as audiences starving for originality and imagination, are able to enter a scope so believable and unrelentingly convincing we lust for every last minute of it.

    The movie's protagonist is Jack Skellington, the pumpkin king of the holiday town of Halloween. Jack is the role model for much of the cities population. The only problem is that Jack has been around for ages, parked in a town where every single year builds up for a conventional holiday, Halloween. This character has grown depressed and saddened by the routine living style he inhabits. We learn of his passion for new events and a and new life through a musical number that is both effective and engaging.

    Later on that vary night, Jack wonders off into a nearby woods and stumbles upon an area surrounded with magical doors leading to specific holiday worlds. Jack, blooming with curiosity, enters Christmas town: a joyful, happy place with snow, glitter, children singing, and colorful lights decorating the village in its entirety. Jack is mystified by the glamorous atmosphere, and rushes home to tell the Town of Halloween about his adventures.

    We realize the internalconflict is Jack's boredom of routine. This becomes more complex when he tries to figure out the meaning of Christmas. The external problem comes later in the plot, where we predict an uneasy disaster upcoming due to his intentions of recreating Christmas in Halloween style.

    Other key characters are Sally, the puppet-like creation of an angry professor, the city's Mayor who has a head for both his good and bad personality, the Oggie Boogie, the film's villain who is everything we ever dreamed of regarding a diabolical animated bad guy, and the inevitable character of Santa Clause.

    "The Nightmare Before Christmas" is not necessarily a children's movie, it might be too strange or fanatical for the very young. It is certainly a musical production, and at times, I felt that the songs replaced essential development. However, the musical numbers are challenging and memorable, containing passion and emotion. The picture is a walk into the mind of some of the most wildly imaginative filmmakers of our time. "The Nightmare Before Christmas" is titled wonderfully, although the film is truly not a nightmare, but a dream--a dream brought to life on the big screen.

    Brought to you by Touchstone Pictures.

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    • Wissenswertes
      Tim Burton has said the original poem was inspired after seeing Halloween merchandise display in a store being taken down and replaced by a Christmas display. The juxtaposition of ghouls and goblins with Santa and his reindeer sparked his imagination.
    • Patzer
      (at around 15 mins) Jack doesn't know what snowflakes are ("What's this? There's white things in the air."), but knows what snowballs are ("The children are throwing snowballs instead of throwing heads.")
    • Zitate

      Jack Skellington: [singing] Just because I cannot see it, doesn't mean I can't believe it!

    • Crazy Credits
      Dr. Finkelstein is referred to on-screen by name, but is only credited as "Evil Scientist".
    • Alternative Versionen
      The special edition DVD version has never-before-seen footage of this movie and are the following:
      • Lock, Shock and Barrel (the trick-or-treaters) are bored so they grab some snacks and go inside their cage/elevator to watch oogie boogie torture Santa and Sally. And later, a thought to be dead Jack Skellington enters the lair by jumping on the cage/elevator with the kids inside and he scares them which can explain how he got inside the lair at the nick of time. Pictures of the scene were in the promotional booklets, postcard books, and storybooks.
      • Jack's further experiments with Christmas such as having a illustrating "Sandy Claws" as a human/lobster hybrid.
      • a deleted part of oogie boogie's song that shows his shadow dancing.
      • a scene where the vampires are playing hockey with the head of Tim Burton, this was corrected and Tim's head was replaced with a Jack O' Lantern.
    • Verbindungen
      Edited into The Nightmare Before Christmas: Deleted Scenes (2008)
    • Soundtracks
      Here Comes Santa Claus
      Written by Gene Autry and Oakley Haldeman

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 8. Dezember 1994 (Deutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Offizielle Standorte
      • Official Facebook
      • Official site
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • El extraño mundo de Jack
    • Drehorte
      • Skellington Productions - 375 7th Street, San Francisco, Kalifornien, USA(Studio, demolished in 1998)
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Walt Disney Pictures
      • Touchstone Pictures
      • Tim Burton Productions
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

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    • Budget
      • 18.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
    • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
      • 94.707.435 $
    • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
      • 191.232 $
      • 17. Okt. 1993
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 108.766.677 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 16 Min.(76 min)
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Dolby Stereo
      • DTS

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