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Tim Burton : Fantasy Is Reality

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The reality of our world ruins a person’s innocent fantasies, as once spoken by an ingenious film maker, Tim Burton, “fantasy is reality.” Tim Burton has always portrayed himself as an outcast even in his childhood. His unique film style was enormously impacted from his childhood events. He didn’t fit in with the norms of society as a child, and he was often misunderstood for his actions. He believes that people should strive to stand out in a crowd rather than blend in with a crowd. Tim Burton perceives normal as ordinary, and he practically lives in a fantasy. Throughout both Edward Scissorhands and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Burton interprets conforming to reality as a form of self-destruction to one’s child-like natures.
Burton tends to feature judgmental antagonists who lack the slightest bit of originality throughout his films. For instance, in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Charlie’s fellow golden ticket winners are described as greedy and spoiled children. Each child is described with a different story, but each story traces back to a common theme. For example, when Veruca was informed about the golden tickets, she commanded her dad go to extreme measures for that ticket. Clearly Veruca has been greatly disrupted by the ways of our society. She has been raised in a reality of getting what she wants when she wants it. In Vercuca’s defense, the idea of the golden ticket was presented in the most magical way, thereby feeding to her obsession. The golden

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