“You probably think this world is a dream come true…but you’re wrong”

So Coraline was very nice and beautifully animated. The film uses 3D very well — this is apparently your last weekend to see it in that format; next week, a 3D Jonas Brothers movie will be inflicted on the world — but as a whole, that’s not a technology that’s much improved since its invention. It’s a little like saying someone uses semaphore very well. I’m sure there are things you could do with semaphore, even better than with the other options, but there’s a reason nobody uses it anymore.

While watching, I sometimes wished I could pay less attention to the techniques and more to just enjoying the story. I think, then, that I might have preferred the non-3D version, whatever depth and effect it might lend Henry Selick’s movie.

That said, Coralineis quite delightful and delightfully dark. Judging from the crowd of mostly youngsters (and their parents) my friend and I saw it with, it’s not for every child. Just like Neil Gaiman’s original book, it may be too scary for some. But I think A.O. Scott said it best:

There are many scenes and images in “Coraline” that are likely to scare children. This is not a warning but rather a recommendation, since the cultivation of fright can be one of the great pleasures of youthful moviegoing. As long as it doesn’t go too far toward violence or mortal dread, a film that elicits a tingle of unease or a tremor of spookiness can be a tonic to sensibilities dulled by wholesome, anodyne, school-approved entertainments.

“How can we expect them to behave if we act barbarically ourselves?”

In what is shaping up to be my continuing zombie re-edification, last night I watched Day of the Dead. And yes, as someone via Twitter wondered, the Romero original. Until I was asked, I didn’t know there was an alternative.

I don’t know what more to say beyond that I really liked the movie. It was much less campy than I had feared. Sherman Howard’s zombie Bub, for instance, which is where I thought much of the camp might come, is really quite effective and quite the opposite of camp. The film can be tough to watch at times, with its claustrophobic setting and cynical depiction of humanity — there’s less black humor than in Dawn of the Dead, something Romero mentions in his DVD commentary — but I’d highly recommend it.

I guess it’s now on to Land and Diary of the Dead.