Coraline review – delightfully creepy coming of age fantasy offers more than just scares

about 1 year in The guardian

Henry Selick’s adapted from Neil Gaiman’s book about a young girl who finds new parents with buttons for eyes is a nifty stop-motion animation Henry Selick’s 2009 animated supernatural fantasy Coraline is now rereleased for its 15th anniversary; it is based on a novella by Neil Gaiman, the author now the subject of sexual assault allegations. This stop-motion film looks as amiably creepy as it did when I saw it first – though, as with The Nightmare Before Christmas, another of Selick’s movies, which was produced by Tim Burton, the chills are mixed with adventure, exotic strangeness and comedy, certainly a recipe that has entranced audiences. As before, though, I wondered if this story might have been more frightening if it had been filmed in conventional live-action with regular human beings showing us their eerie smiling faces with buttons for eyes. But straight-up scariness may not be the point.Coraline (whose name sounds like a twist on “Caroline”) is voiced by Dakota Fanning and comes with her hard-working mom and dad to a strange old house in remote Oregon where the adults plan on working on the gardening catalogue they’re writing. Coraline encounters an odd kid in the house’s grounds called Wyborn (a twist on “why-born?”), voiced by Robert Bailey Jr, and also meets the neighbours: two weird old ladies (Dawn French and Jennifer Saunders) who once had a saucy act in a circus show, and a performing mouse trainer, Mr Bobinsky (voiced by Ian McShane), whose funky accent surely influenced Steve Carell’s Gru in Despicable Me. Continue reading...

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