Wouldn't be surprised if they did that. When Randy Newman won, he won for a song that is barely memorable in a non-musical (Monsters Inc), because he had been nominated like ten times and had not won at all. So if Frankenweenie wins, it is a pity win.PatrickvD wrote:Frankenweenie winning just to throw Burton a bone would be such a typical thing for the Academy to do. He was robbed a Best Picture and Best Director nomination twice before (for Ed Wood and most notably Big Fish).
I mean I get that his films aren't the academy's cup of tea, but Big Fish is both better and more memorable than Seabiscuit or Master & Commander. Easily his most sincere and beautiful film.
I'm rooting for Ralph to win, but if it doesn't, I'd say Paranorman is a worthy winner.
But in all honesty, I would rather have it so that Frankenweenie wins instead of ParaNorman, even if neither deserve the win. That's right, I said it.
Both movies have severe story issues and it STUNS me that they have gotten great to fantastic reviews as if they were flawless. In fact, I dare to say that had they been conceived as CG movies, they would have been trashed left and right for it. Both movies suffer from characters that are archetypes, thus making them hard to relate and root for. Frankenweenie, at least, edges it out because the characters at least are a tad more endearing in their homage to classic horror characters.
Frankenweenie also raises a lot of story points that are ignored and never resolved, like how it was suggested that a relationship would blossom out of Victor and Elsa's friendship, but they don't go anywhere with it, or how the movie is pro-science yet focuses on the dangers science can bring. That's not even counting all the cliches related to Burton's productions (fat jerk, undead dog, too much eye shadow). But even with all of that, Frankenweenie's story does a lot better than ParaNorman's, which has a heinous story featuring some of the deplorable characters ever.
ParaNorman is a very angry movie that has characters that you hate. There was NO character that I liked, not even Norman. It doesn't even know who it targets itself to. The humor at times is too adult for children, and at times too childish and morbid for the adults. Coraline had similar issues, but avoided a lot of them by focusing on the eerie whimsy of the fantasy world along with characters that, while unnecessarily quirky, were still charming. ParaNorman fails to do that.
Again it stuns me that both movies seemed to get a pass on that when other movies with less flaws get much lower scores and harsher criticism. I get that we should welcome new stories and form in animation, but all the ambition and new ideas of the world do not excuse poor story and characters, and I think animation fans and critics should realize that before putting a movie up on a pedestal.













