Is Corpse Bride A Cult Classic?

Corpse Bride, directed by Tim Burton, is a cult classic that has gained a dedicated fanbase and continues to be celebrated for its unique blend of macabre humor, beautiful animation, and heartfelt storytelling. The film follows a shy groom, Victor, who practices his wedding vows in the inadvertent presence of a deceased young woman, who assumes he has married her. The film’s success has set the stage for other macabre animated children’s films like “Corpse Bride,” “Paranorman,” and the Henry Selick-directed “Coraline.”

The movie follows a nervous man named Victor, who is overthinking his arranged marriage while taking a stroll through the cemetery. The film’s cult success has set the stage for other macabre animated children’s films like “Corpse Bride,” “Paranorman,” and the Henry Selick-directed “Coraline.”

Crosse Bride is not only directed by Burton himself but also features better animation and visuals, as well as great songs. It deserves the same re-appraisal and attention as Nightmare eventually got.

The film takes inspiration from the Jewish folktale The Finger and creates a dark love triangle about transcendence and learning to let go. Despite its strong cult influence in the goth sub-culture, Corpse Bride lingers in the shadows of that filmography. The Burton-Verse Theory connects some of the famed creators’ cult classics, with Corpse Bride earning $53 million in 2005.


📹 Corpse Bride is a Halloween cult classic

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Corpse bride gothic elements
(Image Source: Pixabay.com)

Is Corpse Bride inappropriate?

This movie includes references to dead bodies, skeletons, decay, and death, but they’re all in good fun. The corpse bride’s eye pops out to show the talking maggot who lives inside and offers romantic advice.

A Lot or a Little? What you will and won’t find in this movie. Corpse Bride begins with Victor Van Dort and Victoria Everglott getting married. Their parents, Nell and William Van Dort (Tracey Ullman and Paul Whitehouse) and Maudeline and Finis Everglot (Joanna Lumley and Albert Finney), expect the marriage to make both families better off. When Victor messes up the rehearsal, Pastor Galswells sends him to practice his vows. Victor finally gets it right, slipping the ring onto a twig in the dark woods. But it’s not wood. It’s the finger of the Corpse Bride (Helena Bonham Carter). Victor goes to the Bride’s netherworld. Victor wants to go back to Victoria, who is being courted by another man. He also feels sorry for the bride, who is lonely. He hesitates, lies, and watches his life and possible death go on around him. Families can talk about Victor’s dilemma. He loves both the Corpse Bride and his arranged bride. He must choose between them.

Is Corpse Bride dark fantasy?

Both films are dark fantasy, but Corpse Bride is different from Burton’s first animated feature, The Nightmare Before Christmas.

Corpse bride eyeshadow palette
(Image Source: Pixabay.com)

Can a 9 year old watch Corpse Bride?

A classic Halloween movie with a spooky theme. I was worried it would be short, but it wasn’t. The ending is great. It’s rated PG, but it’s PG-13 because of alcohol, tobacco, and violence. I recommend it.

A sweet, cute movie. I love Tim Burton’s work. I like the live-action stuff better, but the animated films remind me of when I was a kid. My daughter loves this kind of artwork and animation too. My daughter is 8, so she knows about marriage and death. There are some jokes for adults, but this is a great movie for the whole family. There are references to bones, maggots, and death, but in a silly Halloween style. It has singing, fantasy elements, and the dead/Underworld. It’s all in fun, so I don’t have any issues as a parent.

How is A Rose for Emily feminist?

A Rose for Emily shows how a woman’s mental health can be damaged by a patriarchal society.

Is Corpse Bride gothic?

Corpse Bride Tim Burton’s spooky, beautiful, and groovy gothic love story. Tim Burton’s “Corpse Bride” is a great film, overshadowed by “The Nightmare Before Christmas.” It’s a Victorian gothic film with an all-star cast.

Why is the Corpse Bride gothic?

This movie is a gothic story with a creepy atmosphere. The settings are the most important part of Corpse Bride to make it gothic. Victor’s castle is old and empty, which is creepy. Later, Emily takes Victor to the Undead World. There, he meets the Undead. These supernatural events and spooky characters are typical of the gothic genre. The death theme is present throughout the movie. When Victor discovers the other world, when undead people appear, or when Emily’s murderer reappears, the terror increases. The atmosphere is gloomy and the characters seem like ghosts. They are disturbing and can scare us. The idea of ghosts is important in Corpse Bride. The setting is unrealistic. The movie is influenced by the imaginary because of the deaths. The characters are undead, and the bride is dead but alive. The imaginary is in all animation movies. It’s in the settings, characters, and events. The story is gothic because it’s based on the imaginary.

Why did Lord Barkis drink the poison?

Barkis toasts Emily for dying unwed and unwittingly drinks the poison that Victor nearly took, causing him to die and allowing the dead to take retribution against him for his crimes. Emily frees Victor from his vow to marry her and returns his ring, allowing him to marry Victoria. As she steps into the moonlight, she fades away into butterflies and flies into the sky, finding peace, as Victor and Victoria watch and embrace.

What myth is Corpse Bride based on?

Tim Burton’s Corpse Bride has a sad real-life inspiration. The Corpse Bride story was inspired by a Jewish folktale called The Finger. It’s about a man who accidentally marries the undead ghost of a murdered bride.

Is Corpse Bride Victorian era?

Corpse Bride is a 2005 stop-motion animated musical fantasy film directed by Mike Johnson and Tim Burton. It is based on characters created by Burton and Carlos Grangel. The story is set in a fictional Victorian village in England. Johnny Depp is Victor and Helena Bonham Carter is Emily, the bride. Corpse Bride is a stop-motion film directed by Tim Burton and distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures. It is the first film he has directed in this style and the first he has distributed through Warner Bros. Pictures. Corpse Bride is based on a Jewish folktale. Joe Ranft introduced it to Burton while they were finishing The Nightmare Before Christmas. Filming started in November 2003 when Burton was making Big Fish. He also made Charlie and the Chocolate Factory at the same time. The stop-motion animation was made at 3 Mills Studios in East London. It was shot with digital cameras, not film cameras. Burton brought Depp and Elfman on board. The film was dedicated to Joe Ranft, who died during production. Corpse Bride premiered at the Venice Film Festival on September 7, 2005, and was released in the US on September 23, 2005, and in the UK on October 13, 2005. It was praised for its animation, characters, songs, and humor. The film won the National Board of Review for Best Animated Feature and was nominated for the 78th Academy Awards for Best Animated Feature. The film won the Annie Award for Technical Achievement in 2006 and was nominated for Best Animated Feature, Best Character Design, and Best Direction.

Is A Rose for Emily considered Gothic?

“A Rose for Emily” mixes the old South and the modern age. This is a big part of Southern Gothic. Faulkner looks at old Southern traditions from a modern point of view.

What ethnicity is Emily from Corpse Bride?

Emily met Lord Barkis Bittern, a poor man she fell in love with. Her parents didn’t approve because he was poor. Barkis convinced her to elope with him using his charm when her parents rejected him. They met at 3 a.m. under an oak tree in the woods. On that foggy night, Emily left wearing her mother’s wedding dress and carrying a small fortune (a gold bag with the family jewels) with her, the last at Lord Barkis’ request. The young lady didn’t know her groom-to-be only wanted her family’s fortune. After waiting in the dark forest, Emily was robbed and murdered by Barkis. We don’t know how she died. Barkis is a skilled swordsman, and Emily said he left her for dead. It’s likely he stabbed her and left her in the woods to die. Before she died, she promised to stay under the tree until her true love asked her to marry him. Emily comes out of the ground to accept Victor’s marriage proposal.

Corpse bride makeup
(Image Source: Pixabay.com)

Did Victor ever love Emily?

After thinking Victoria gave him a rebound since he’s married, why not get married too? Heartbroken, Victor decided to devote himself to Emily. He even agreed to give up his life for her. But Victor didn’t love Emily. He might have only agreed to marry Emily out of sympathy. He tried to apologize to Emily for being different. Despite his nervousness, Victor is brave in urgent situations. He fought Lord Barkis with a fork thrown to him by Mrs. Plum during his and Emily’s wedding ceremony. Lord Barkis was armed with a sword.

Plot. Victor’s family are fish merchants who recently became rich by inventing canned fish. Victor was unsure of marrying someone he didn’t know until he met Victoria, the daughter of Finis and Maudeline. They fell in love and before they could have a romantic moment, they were called for the wedding rehearsal.


📹 Why Everyone LOVES Corpse Bride

Edited by: @Replayed Socials: https://linktr.ee/Bionicpig.


Is Corpse Bride A Cult Classic
(Image Source: Pixabay.com)

Christina Kohler

As an enthusiastic wedding planner, my goal is to furnish couples with indelible recollections of their momentous occasion. After more than ten years of experience in the field, I ensure that each wedding I coordinate is unique and characterized by my meticulous attention to detail, creativity, and a personal touch. I delight in materializing aspirations, guaranteeing that every occasion is as singular and enchanted as the love narrative it commemorates. Together, we can transform your wedding day into an unforgettable occasion that you will always remember fondly.

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  • My parents love to tell the story of how I, as a small child, would watch this movie religiously, and every single time cry so hard when Emily turned into butterflies. then again, I also cried when donkey turned back into a donkey after being a horse in the second Shrek movie, so I think I just cry when beautiful things go away.

  • I feel like it’s really subtle, but how I interpreted Victor’s decision to die like this: It’s been implied throughout the movie that Victor is quiet and has low-self esteem (he can barely practice wedding vows for a person he just met, he’d rather draw or play piano then socialize, and he doesn’t have the same objections that Victoria has about the marriage.) He just goes along with what his parents want. This sort of implies he is used to not thinking or acting for himself. He is also very timid. So, when he learns Victoria is getting married to another man, his thought process may very well have been, “Well, I guess she doesn’t love me like I do her, we have only known each other for a few days, that person is probably better than me anyways,” etc etc. While also being pressured by the Underworld to be with Emily, and seeing her so distraught, he figures he can still at least make her happy and decides to die. (My point being, he has never lived his life for himself, and has made decisions solely based on what others want from him, and to please others.) He also values Emily as a friend, so he feels it is the right thing to do since his other role has been taken by someone else (ie Victoria will be fine and happy). It is only when he realizes that she does love him, and that Baccius is actually a scheming murderer, (added to that is the confidence Emily was building in him), that he sees his worth and decides to do what he wants (marry Victoria). He still fulfills his promise to Emily in the end by setting her free.

  • Emily’s “death” (technically not since she was already dead, but it feels like one) at the end always makes me tear up, without fail. just hearing you describe it made me cry. I’m glad she’s free but her life was so tragic. I wanna hug that woman, even though she’d probably fall apart if squeezed too tightly. 😂

  • I think the reason why Victor didn’t decide to stop Victoria’s weddings is a combination of a few things: everyone thinks he ran off with another woman, he messed up the vows and nobody thinks he’s serious, his self esteem issues, and Victoria’s parents would not let him near Victoria if he did come back.

  • I honestly just always assumed Victor changed his mind so quickly because he heard at that point that Victoria was getting married to someone else, he assumed he wasn’t an option anymore. So, I assumed he just felt quite bad for Emily and after their moment he thought it would be worth it to make Emily happy and with their moment at the piano (the same way he had his first moment with Victoria who I also assume was his first real interaction with a woman) he could probably be happy with her. Kind of like he was going to be the selfless one, but then they turned it on us. I assume that song could help explain it better tho as you said.

  • I love this movie so much. Victor’s decision to marry Emily and die was a reaction to Victoria seemingly moving on and him feeling bad for messing up the vows & embarrassing his family. He spent the beginning of the movie wanting to get to Victoria. He felt like there was nothing left to live for and he saw Emily as a friend and he felt bad for her situation so, he thought marrying her was the best thing to do. Once he goes to the land of the living and Lord Barkis reveals himself he’s a lot more sure of himself. Victor and Victoria were meant to be. Emily grew during the movie. I just love how each character went through their own journey. Emily learned to let go and she was finally able to pass over. Victoria became more assertive and daring in her attempts to help Victor. Victor also gained confidence throughout the movie as well.

  • I watched corpse bride when I was like 7 years old. It didn’t scare me but I cried like a bitch when it was over. Every time I watch it I feel like a kid again and yeah I think this formed what I believe love to be. Something that can be so strong and profound as to transcend something as final as death.

  • The unused song really should’ve been put in. It explains his internal dilemma and why he doesn’t go back to the living world immediately. Also I just rlly liked it and think it makes more sense.. also it’s like a minute and 54 seconds… like it would still be a short movie even if that was in it I don’t understand why they cut it.

  • I like to imagine that in an alternate universe the family’s got what they wanted and Victor got married, and then afterwards they’re all in the parlor sneering and wringing their hands in celebration thinking they just made themselves very rich, only to realize that both families are fucking poor and they did all this for nothing. The comedic irony would be unparalleled

  • This movie does have a bittersweet ending, but I think that’s why it’s fondly remembered. In Western animation (i.e. Disney, DreamWorks) there’s a goal of having a happy ending. Even Coco with its depressing themes presented throughout (visiting family being inaccessible to certain groups, someone dying young…) still presents the satisfying happy ending for the main characters. Whereas Corpse Bride is almost like a French animated film: acknowledges that not everything worked out but at least certain things have improved.

  • I, personally, think victor is the other victors grandpa. This victor is clearly from an older time, and I think it makes a ton of sense. Sometimes people get their names and looks from their grandparents, and maybe some pits of their personality. This explains the difference of parents, them both having a thing with death, them both having dogs, and many other things. But thats just a theory, A FILM THERORY-

  • Do I as an adult understand that Emily probably fell in love with the idea of being loved rather than Victor himself? Yes I do understand that and accept and respect that’s how it played out…HOWEVER the selfish person within me can not let go of the want for Victor to die and be with Emily. This is no hate to Victoria I just didn’t feel the investment in her relationship with Victor. After hundreds of times of perusal this movie I still can’t connect with their relationship. I accept their relationship and others that like it, I just can’t change my opinion of wanting Emily and Victor to spend eternity in the afterlife together with Scraps!

  • I would just like to add that I think the real reason why Tim Burton’s character in Frankenweenie is called “Victor” is because it’s stemming from the original Frankenstein, as in the novels itself. In the original Mary Shelley novel, “Victor Frankenstein” is the name of the science scholar who is telling the story of how he created a monster. I don’t think it has any relation to Victor from Corpse Bride. But it is still an interesting theory nonetheless.

  • I really think that Victor’s sudden change of heart to marry Emily was just as he overheard her saying that she could never ask him to give up his life for her and that entirely selfless act in his interest made him realize that she really does care about him and want him to be happy and he wants the same for her and after hearing this he is a little more comfortable with the idea of spending the rest of his life (ironic ik) with her. Definitely would love to hear the song with him experiencing the dilemma though it would’ve made that decision a lot less rushed and a little less nonsensical.

  • i think what i like about this movie is the idea of “yeah. death is scary but it’s not that bad. we all die but live the best life to enjoy your afterlife”. weirdly enough: my mind randomly thought about what would happen if i just died and never went anywhere… then i just kind of overlooked it cause that is some many many years away for me to think about.

  • I love this movie because I’ve loved it for different reasons through out my life and when I look back at it it kinda shows me how I’ve matured. Like in middle school, I liked it because it was different and edgy and about “true love” but I hated that Emily and Victor didn’t end up in the end. I saw myself in Emily and I didn’t see her get her “happy ending” because she didn’t end up w the guy. Now, I still relate to Emily, but I realize that this is her happy ending and that’s okay. Like she became happy with herself and her place in the world enough to be at peace, in spite of not achieving her romantic goals. Idk if I’m describing that right but I just like the way that it reflects my own personal philosophies about love, it’s just kinda neat lol

  • I love everything about this movie. It was beautifully made, the music is amazing, and the story never fails to make me secretly cry. I relate to all three characters in a strange way. Emily having to come to terms that Victor wasn’t for her, Victor’s battle to get back to Victoria and Victoria wanting Victor to get back before she gets trapped in a loveless marriage. I absolutely adore the vows and can’t wait for one day to say them in my own.

  • My favorite thing about this movie and what I remember the most about it thats beautiful that doesn’t get talked about enough is the relationship of Humphrey and Gertrude. Yes they’re mere background characters and are played for humor for most of their screen times, but Humphrey and Gertrude’s relationship actually breaks the mold of what this Victorian society is. People in this living society are depressed and the world is bleak considering most people are destitute, and therefore most of the time probably only marry for security and money. There’s really no hints of romance anywhere since no one is really happy, proven when you learn Victoria’s parents don’t even like each other and Victor’s parents basically see themselves as mere business partners. Love between two spouses is very much a rare thing in this world. Love was something Emily literally died for since her parents forbid her from getting married to a commoner, Victor was foreign to the concept of romance before he met Victoria, and Victoria always had hopes one day of finding true love. Romantic love is very much a rare thing in this universe. So to see Humphrey and Gertrude together again, you immediately understand why Gertrude is a miserable, grumpy old lady, since her late husband was what gave her joy and completed her despite the two being married in this bleak world. They were happy together and very much in love. So Humphrey appearing to Gertrude from beyond the grave in my opinion is arguably the most romantic thing about this film,, the two embracing each other and not “giving a damn” as he puts it may also be a comment that despite the norm they live in and no matter what condition each of them is in, no force or laws in this world can stop them from loving each other😊🥰❤

  • every time my mom would take us to family article (a article renting place) I would always grab the corpse bride. and then once she bought it for me I would watch it Coraline and James and the giant peach in a row over and over. I dont know how my mom did it lmao. but the skeleton song goes hard in corpse bride

  • The movie is actually based on a 17th-century Jewish folktale that Burton was introduced to called “The Finger”. The original story is inspired by real events in Russia, when pogroms would sweep Ashkenazi Jewish communities and many would-be brides were murdered still in their wedding gowns and later thrown into shallow graves.

  • the way u said “i may not have heart,,,, BUT ITS BREAKING” actually made me almost start crying. i love this movie so much. It makes me cry and break down honestly. I’ve realized that I myself needed to let go of people i’ve had feelings for and it was so hard because of my selfishness, but in the end it always feels so much better. and perusal this film reminds me to keep doing that. and keep giving selfless love without hope of anything in return.

  • I love this movie so much, this is one of my favorite Tim Burton movies. I remember seeing this movie in theaters too 😂😂😂 I love the songs and I like the certain beauty that it has with d*ath and things like that, I loved the ending when Emily turned into the butterflies we saw in the beginning of the movie.

  • I just noticed the parallel in how the antagonist use the golden cups in this movie the first time he does this he is ” helping ” victoria mother by putting down the fire on her robes but figuratively it’s him starting to spread his ” secret poison “, his evil intentions in the group, here the cup is his tool but in the end the secret poison is more concrete and thus his karmic undoing by the same golden cup we can also make a parallel between the cups and the corpse bride emilie that, at first were the tools of barcus helping him get what he want, wich is money, and then his karma by killing him ( the second cup being filled with poison being emilie plan ) victor indirect tie with emilie is the butterfly and barcus tie with her is the golden cups, of course I could go on analyzing how said characters interact with theses ties or why one tie is animal and the other an object but I don’t think I need to damn is this movie awesome

  • The Victor From Frankinweeine and Corpse Bride being the same character is an interesting theory there’s just one problem, the time periods. Corpse Bride takes place in the 1800s while Frankinweeine from the looks of it seems like it takes place in the 50s or 60s. Plus they’re both set in different countries so unless Victor is a Time Lord that also traveled to the England they can’t be the same person. Me personally I’ve always thought 💭 that Vic from Frankinweeine is actually Victor’s descendant. It would make sense why they both have similar facial features as well as similar sames. 🤔

  • Love how you keep going into Marxist critical analysis tangents throughout the article. Although i’d add that at 26:31 in the wedding, Victoria was physically manifesting the idea of being a puppet. She became a puppet of these fools at the table. There’s so much to unpack here and we also take away something personal from this film too, which is why this is one of my much loved films.

  • I know a lot about the Carl tanzler case I’ve listened to a few podcast about it because I became so interested after hearing about it. He supposedly had visions of one of his ancestors telling him his wife is supposed to be this beautiful “exotic” woman. Also he just up and left his wife and kids. It was also Alaina’s sister who discovered this was going on and brought the police. One day she went to Carl and was like hey you’re the only one with a key to the mausoleum so give it to me because I want to see my sister and then Carl was like oh you can see her now she’s right upstairs in my bedroom. The sister didn’t believe that was Alaina she thought it was a doll but then they did test to confirm that it was Alaina.

  • This is my favorite movie and has been since I saw it back in 2005. I absolutely love the music, the acting, the juxtaposition between the living and dead, everything. I saw the love and care into making the movie and the robotics used. It is amazing and I love it. I also really love the song Victor was supposed to sing that they cut for some reason.

  • Dead dogs tend to be a recurring thing in Tim Burton movies. When he was a kid, his family dog was hit by a car and Burton never really got over the grief. The incident wound up being the inspiration for his original Frankenweenie short film (and the remake), and why Victor and Jack Skellington both have undead pet dogs.

  • Omg I love your deep dive articles! I didn’t know about the missing song thought it does help make the movie make more sense I can see that. I guess I took that plot jump as a more of a there is a major difference between being forced into a situation you don’t want and then there is choosing your life as it is messy and all adjust kinda embracing the strange hilarity of human existence and even celebrating that! Okay maybe I tend to analyze movie pretty hard as well…anyway loved your articles this one in particular!

  • Looking good, Pig! I can’t believe this movie (and Chocolate Factory, which I actually preferred over CB) came out 17 years ago. I remember being able to listen to snippets of the songs online and I would take my tape recorder and record them from my computer speakers. It was a good day when I finally got the full CD (that I still own!) Fun fact: Elder Gutknect was voiced by the same actor who portrayed Alfred in both of Burton’s Batman films.

  • Corpse bride has been my favorite movie since I was 2. Store bought costumes weren’t really a thing back then, so my granny handmaid 2 BEAUTIFUL wedding dresses, complete with trains, viels, and little pillows for rings. I wore it them both eeeeeeeverywhere. I will always be thankful for this movie giving me those memories of perusal it over and over with my granny or working on those dresses with her, or running up and down the hall while her cats tried to catch the dress’s train.

  • I love this movie, I’ve watched it many, many times. Some fun bits I noticed while perusal, a couple of continuity errors I enjoy and can remember off the top of my head: 1) When Viktor puts the ring on Emily’s finger in the woods, before she rises, it’s the rong finger. But later in the scene, when she grabs his wrist, it’s on the right finger. 2) When Viktor is asking for ‘Questions’, the sword in Napoleon is facing one direction but after being picked up it’s the other wha around – so Viktor can grab the hilt.

  • I remember perusal the Corpse Bride back in 2020 it was pretty wonderful movie and the movie even gave me an idea about a parody idea and I made two versions one is where Vincent Valentine is the corpse groom and the other is Lucretia as Corpse Bride even a collaboration with a user to make a fanfiction and a comic adaptation, although I do thank the movie for giving me an idea to this very day.

  • I agree with these points immensely! I had the same little issues with understanding Victor’s character arc and his motives and I’m glad someone else sees that as well! I do still adore this movie, though. AND when I first watched it, Danny Elfman’s song was meh but I’ve grown to really like it. Overall, this one is definitely a part of my Tim Burton rewatch list!

  • I love The Nightmare Before Christmas, Coraline, and Corpse Bride. These stop motion movies are very charming, have good music, good stories, and lovely characters. I appreciate all the hard work these artists put into these movies, and although I understand why there aren’t many of these movies today, I wish more of these types of movies would be made.

  • Actually I think Victor from corps bride is the great great great great grandson of victor from Frankie weenie also I think Victor is Jack skeleton also they said they were making a second nightmare before Christmas where Jack has his kids so that could be Victor’s other great great grandfather that’s my theory

  • HE DID IT! he mentioned how he didn’t do the sponser in another article/stream because it seemed weird to just do it to have the title BUT then he found it was for charity/good cause/planting trees and he said he might check it out then AND THE MAD LAD DID IT! Pig literally being the sigma grindset male he is did it! ima actually watch this add bc of that good on your bro <3

  • I have a theory: What if Jak is Victor waayyy in the future. Time has passed in death, corpse bride’s afterlife is in limbo, then she turns into butterflies at the end. well what if decades past, Jak lost his memory of being Victor, and Sally could have some of the Victoria’s pieces. That’s why Sally feels the urge for such freedom and exploration of the world around her. she doesn’t want to bend to the doctors will. Just as Victoria craved to live life with someone she truly loves, instead of traditional conformity. Their love still carried on in the afterlife.

  • 14:58 Actually, the families have different reasons for their offsprings to get wed. On Victoria’s family, of course they need the money. But for Victor’s family it’s the status. See, Victoria’s family comes from a long line of, I think, royalty. Or something similar to that. For Victor’s family, they sell fish for a living. And they get a lot of money from that. But no one wants the title of being fish sellers. So that’s why they’re getting their kids married. It’s kind of like a win win for both of them.

  • i love the story of victoria; how she at least tries to do something in her limited way–sure, she fails, but she tried. it made me happy in the end, that she and victor got to be together, and then a bonus that emily got to move on. i hate that the merch they make for this movie is all emily based. (also, victoria’s parents say she’s got the face of an otter in disgrace, not just utter disgrace)

  • The one thing I love about the Corpse Bride is the way it works in the Victorian era and especially the different forms of music that go on throughout the movie cuz I wanted to say this and lines up with another movie I love which is Queen of the Damned because one of my favorite scenes in the movie is basically where the main vampire character list at is walking on the beach with his mentor and he comes across this young woman and her father basically playing on the beach with their instruments and one of the instruments he picks up and starts to understand very quickly is the violin and I don’t know what it is about like movies when they do stuff with like an instrument neither it’s a piano a guitar a cello a violin whatever it may be it’s the weight it sets the tone and it kind of speaks who the character is as a person if anybody gets what I’m basically trying to say but I don’t know what it is but I feel like movies like The Corpse Bride and Queen of the Damned they can’t be perfect unless they have it element of music that was put in there to begin with and I feel like without being as simple as music it wouldn’t make movies like this so great and I also filled out music it wouldn’t show you the type of person the main character is and I feel like a lot of movies don’t do that anymore

  • As much as I agree that Victor’s song should’ve been put into the movie, I also think that what they did instead makes sense. In the scene where Victor is talking to the recently departed coachman, the coachman says that Victoria has a new groom and is getting married that night. So, Victor was obviously distort by this because he thought they had something together. And on top of that, he had just had a heartfelt moment with Emily just before he heard about Victoria. He then realized that maybe Emily was right for him after all and he was just conflicted about their relationship at the beginning. And that’s why he came to his conclusion of dying to stay with Emily. And, again, the song would’ve made it feel more drawn out and thought through on Victor’s part, but I also like the final product. Or it could very well just be me though. Either way, thanks for coming to my TED Talk 🙂

  • i think the butterflies symbolise hope and happiness, at the start of the movie, everyone in the town (real world) dismisses the butterfly, showing their lack of happiness within the real word compared to the dead. from my perspective, i think emily bursting into butterflies sort of shows her tragedy but her achievement of hope and happiness through letting victor and victoria marry each other but also accomplishing her purpose of setting each other free. such a good movie

  • So Victor flipping to marry Emily is a bit of a build up at this point. from the beginning Victor doesn’t think he’s good enough for her, “shouldn’t she marry a lord or something”, he believes Victoria has moved on and is marrying someone else. now he’s developed a genuine liking and friendship with Emily so if he can save her, that’s the best thing he can do.

  • I agree that they should’ve kept Victor’s deleted song in the movie. Not including it made his decision seem so rash and like he was doing it not because he wanted to but because he wanted to forget about Victoria. The song still makes it feel like he had no other choice, but with the song his decision seems more thought through.

  • That beginning just threw me off wtf Awesome review! I did leave a comment in the “your thoughts on the movie” post which was: I can’t say I love this movie. But I do like it, it’s unique, the music is great, atmosphere is wonderful, fantastic cinematography and animation. The whole story uh… Definitely moments of: “Holy fuck Emily, how do you not see how uncomfortable Victor is”. And I think it’s not okay that Victor just decided “yeah I’m gonna kill myself to marry someone I don’t love”. Yes, his bride was marrying someone else but still……… Just Thank God, Emily stopped him and realized the whole thing was wrong.

  • I could see the child being a reincarnation of the adult one, or at least an ancestor. The technological differences between the two settings makes it impossible for them to be same person though. Especially since the timeline would be backwards since the town in CB has carriages and lanterns while FW looks to be in a 2000th century town.

  • I loved your article, I am a big fan of Tim Burton and the Corpse Bride. I do have to say that you misunderstood one thing about the movie. Victor’s parents weren’t interested in getting money out of marrying off their son. I’m pretty sure they knew that Victoria’s parents were destitute (you can’t hide that kind of juicy gossip in a small town), but what they wanted out of the union was the power that came with the family name. They had gotten wealth from their successful business but wanted to forget that they had come from poverty, something that they could achieve by becoming Victoria’s in-laws.

  • They’re a Russian fairytale where a boy gets married to a tree as a joke with his friends, and there was a dead woman inside the tree. When she wakes up they all run away, for years and years she remembers this. When it was time for that boy to get married, she crashed the wedding saying “you’re already married to me” …I forgot what happened after that but yea

  • I feel like In the movie they see life as bleak and not worth much while death is almost like the other world in a way to link it to another stop motion (Coraline) where everything is better there. Also it is kinda similar how at first the main character is skeptical and has to learn to like the other world

  • I honestly like the corpse bride song in the portuguese translation better. Even the chorus hits harder I mean, “It will, it will, your turn will come. Death will arrive doesn’t matter the customer. You can even hide and pray, but you won’t escape your funeral” it’s more straightforward and the way it sounds out is perfect. I couldn’t like the English version better than the translation.

  • I know this is out of the blue, but I was wondering if you would like to review “The Missing Link”. It’s another stop motion film that I would love to get your opinion on. It’s bearly ever talked of and I’d love to know why. I know it’s not the greatest film in the universe and not up with the greats like Coroline or fantastic Mister Fox, but I know you can’t get enough of stop motion animated movies.