Tim BurÂton grew up watchÂing JapanÂese monÂster movies in BurÂbank, which must explain a good deal about his artisÂtic senÂsiÂbilÂiÂty. It seems to be for that reaÂson, in any case, that the new KonÂbiÂni “VidĂ©o Club” episode above takes him first to the Asian cinÂeÂma secÂtion of JM VidĂ©o, one of Paris’ last two DVD rental shops. EarÂly and repeatÂed expoÂsure to such kaiÂju clasÂsics as HonÂda Ishirō’s GodzilÂla and The War of the GarÂganÂtuas may have instilled him with an affecÂtion for poor EngÂlish dubÂbing, but it didÂn’t rob him of his abilÂiÂty to appreÂciÂate more refined (if equalÂly visÂcerÂal) examÂples of JapanÂese film like ShindĹŤ KaneÂto’s OniÂbaÂba and Kuroneko.
BurÂton describes those picÂtures as dreamÂlike, a qualÂiÂty he goes on to praise in othÂer selecÂtions from a variÂety of difÂferÂent eras and culÂtures. Even cinephiles who don’t share his parÂticÂuÂlar taste in viewÂing mateÂrÂiÂal — bound on one end, it seems, by The PasÂsion of Joan of Arc and The CabÂiÂnet of Dr. CaliÂgari, and on the othÂer by I Was a Teenage WereÂwolf and The Brain That WouldÂn’t Die, with the likes of Jason and the ArgÂonauts and The Fly in between — have to admit that this indiÂcates a deep underÂstandÂing of cinÂeÂma itself.
It may be the art form whose expeÂriÂence is most simÂiÂlar to dreamÂing, but only occaÂsionÂalÂly throughÂout its hisÂtoÂry have parÂticÂuÂlar films attained the staÂtus of the truÂly oneirÂic. One susÂpects that BurÂton knows them all.
In fact, one of the twenÂty-first cenÂtuÂry’s most notable addiÂtions to the canon of the dreamÂlike won the Palme d’Or with BurÂton’s involveÂment. This video includes his brief remÂiÂnisÂcences of being on the jury at the 2010 Cannes Film FesÂtiÂval, where ApichatÂpong Weerasethakul’s Uncle BoonÂmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives took the top prize. That same year saw the release of BurÂton’s own Alice in WonÂderÂland, which he describes as “the most chaotÂic movie I’ve ever made.” In 2019, he directÂed his secÂond live-action DisÂney adapÂtaÂtion DumÂbo, which, though hardÂly a pasÂsion project, wasÂn’t withÂout its autoÂbiÂoÂgraphÂiÂcal resÂoÂnances: “At that point, I kind of felt like DumÂbo,” he admits, “a weird creaÂture trapped at DisÂney.” PerÂhaps that long on-and-off corÂpoÂrate assoÂciÂaÂtion finalÂly havÂing come to an end, or so he sugÂgests, means he’ll now be freer than ever to draw from the depths of his own cinÂeÂmatÂic subÂconÂsciousÂness.
RelatÂed conÂtent:
Tim BurÂton: A Look Inside His VisuÂal ImagÂiÂnaÂtion
Watch VinÂcent, Tim Burton’s AniÂmatÂed TribÂute to VinÂcent Price & Edgar Allan Poe (1982)
Tim Burton’s Hansel and GreÂtel Shot on 16mm Film with AmaÂteur JapanÂese Actors (1983)
David CroÂnenÂberg VisÂits a Video Store & Talks About His Favorite Movies
Based in Seoul, ColÂin Marshall writes and broadÂcasts on cities, lanÂguage, and culÂture. His projects include the SubÂstack newsletÂter Books on Cities and the book The StateÂless City: a Walk through 21st-CenÂtuÂry Los AngeÂles. FolÂlow him on the social netÂwork forÂmerÂly known as TwitÂter at @colinmarshall.
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