Den of Geek

Coraline review

Michael Leader


We review Coraline and discover Henry Selick's new animated fantasy is Grimm enough to entrance children and their jaded parents

Published on Apr 29, 2009

The grotesque is something you really don't see in many children's films. Today's big successes - the Pixars, the Harry Potters - deliver broad chuckles, wide-canvas thrills and eye-popping visuals, yet in terms of depth, subtlety and pure imagination come up a little short.

Not to tie oddity with inspiration, but for all their well-crafted charm and brilliance, modern family classics such as Toy Story, or even Wall-E peddle a mundane sort of fantasy, lacking the expressive weirdness found in some of the best children's literature from the 19th and 20th centuries. Coraline, the new stop-motion 3D film from director-artisan Henry Selick, bucks this trend with admirable, awesome skill.

Adapted from the original novel by author and geek icon Neil Gaiman, Coraline starts slowly and gracefully, impressively shying away from relying on early peaks and other attention-grabbing stunts. Instead, the audience is introduced to the title character as she adjusts to life in a new house with her writer parents. Coraline (Dakota Fanning) must make her own entertainment, as her mother and father (Teri Hatcher and John Hodgman) are both distracted, typing away on their computers at work on a gardening catalogue.

Luckily for her, they live in a large, Addams Family-style mansion called the Pink Palace, which is also home to a barrel-chested Russian gymnast Mr. Bobinsky (a hilarious, Russian-dropping Ian McShane) and two retired actresses Miss Spink and Miss Forcible (Jennifer Saunders and Dawn French). The old mansion houses many secrets, including a hidden doorway which appears to be bricked over,; but, at night, Coraline is transported to an eerily alluring Other House. This world is populated by alternate, fantastic versions of her nearest and dearest, with one common difference - their eyes have been replaced with big, black buttons. Presiding over this realm is the Other Mother, whose initially ideal demeanour (and constant attention and affection) gradually erodes away into something a lot more sinister.

Selick's Coraline is shot through with a healthy dose of the macabre; indeed, Gaiman's source novel reaches back stylistically towards Roald Dahl, Lewis Carroll and The Brothers Grimm, creating a wildly imaginative tale with creepy, chilling undertones.

The book and the film manage to cook up an intelligence when dealing with its central character and her story. Coraline is a clever, strong-willed adventurer - not a daddy's girl or a damsel in distress - who looks on adult life with an equal amount of perplexity and weary boredom.

The Other house, meanwhile, manages to symbolise the allure of the unknown, the joy of constant play and the ideal of domestic bliss while still creating a tangible sense of off-kilter tension. This atmosphere avoids simple binaries and extremes, communicating that something is a little wrong even before Coraline is given a present by her Other Mother - a box containing a needle, some thread, and two shiny buttons.

Crucially, the film looks both beautiful and surreal. In adapting the work for the screen, Selick has expanded and warped Gaiman's story, which very much divided the fantastical and the mundane sides of Coraline's journey. In the cinema, each scene bursts with creative energy, as Selick balances his multiple design influences and flights of kooky fancy.

This results in some wonderful moments of expressionism and characterisation, such as Coraline's bleary-eyed, crane-necked real father, looking like a Ronald Searle or Gerald Scarfe satirical figure come to life. His counterpoint is the Other Father - a smoke jacket wearing, piano playing hipster, who bashes out They Might Be Giants micro-pop, and rides around his psychedelic garden on a mechanical insect-wagon.

The film itself is a triumph of craft, from the hand-made miniatures and settings, to the artfully-framed direction and Bruno Coulais' eclectic, nuanced score. The 3D treatment, one of many films pioneering this new cinema spectacle format, is used with surprising subtlety, providing an early shock as a needle pokes through a length of fabric towards the viewer in the opening credit sequence, before settling in to creating an illusion of depth and space in the screen.

One quality that stop-motion films have over CGI is a sense of real texture, and this is heightened by the 3D format. However, this technical charm would be nothing without the simple, stylistic economy of its story; it is refreshing to be told a tale that does not over complicate matters with ambitions of great deeds or epic encounters, or over-crowd the stage with a bulked-up cast. Furthermore, it is lovely to see a film that excites as much as it challenges. For sure, Coraline is a spooky treat.

4 stars

Coraline opens in the UK on 8th of May

 

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Re: Coraline review
Posted By cordas 1 April 29, 2009 10:31:15 AM

"the Harry Potters - deliver broad chuckles, wide-canvas thrills and eye-popping visuals, yet in terms of depth, subtlety and pure imagination come up a little short." Have you watched the Harry Potter movies? Yes they are book adaptations and do suffer for it a bit, but they do keep the darkness and edge of the novels, becoming increasing bleak and dark as the series progresses.

Re: Coraline review
Posted By MLeader 1 April 29, 2009 11:36:11 AM

Fair enough point about the darkness of Harry Potter (that swipe was more at Pixar/Dreamworks), although I still stand by my point on its relative lack of depth and subtlety - especially the butchered/condensed/still-too-long film versions.

Re: Coraline review
Posted By cordas 1 April 29, 2009 03:26:56 PM

If only they did 4-6 hour movies from goblet of fire onwards.... Strangely enough I think the movie adaptation of Deathly Hollows will be the easiest to pull off as they can probably chop large chunks out fairly easily and use the film medium to display the bleak picture Harry and friends are on a lot quicker and simpler than JK Rowling did in the novel. Oh and I am eagerly looking forward to seeing Coraline!!!

Re: Coraline review
Posted By cordas 1 April 29, 2009 03:28:52 PM

special editions I meant... or split the movies in 2. The later books as they stand are just to big and complex to be made into a "normal" movie, especially as they are primarily kids movies.

Re: Coraline review
Posted By vader100 1 April 29, 2009 06:03:06 PM

Having watched a preview of this last night I have to agree with the review. An excellent tale with imagery and imagination. Also I am now officially excited by 3D, every scene was granted depth and complexity.

Re: Coraline review
Posted By Superpien 1 May 1, 2009 12:05:58 PM

I really want to see Caroline. Too bad i cant take my 2 nephews to se it (i use them to go see kid movies) the trailer scared them to death. the whole button eye thing didnt really work for them
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