Coraline

Coraline

77% Liked It
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Coraline

Dakota Fanning, Dawn French, Ian McShane, Jennifer Saunders, John Hodgman

A young girl walks through a secret door in her new home and discovers an alternate version of her life. On the surface, this parallel reality is eerily similar to her real life - only much better. Bu...( read more  read more... )t when her adventure turns dangerous, and her counterfeit parents (including Other Mother) try to keep her forever, Coraline must count on her resourcefulness, determination, and bravery to get back home - and save her family.

Id: 10973834

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Recent Reviews


  • November 13, 2009
    Very interesting film. Beautiful, colorful art for sure. Very creative story that kind of wraps you into both worlds.
  • November 3, 2009
    This is probably due more stars but being an adult watching a childrens movie I liked it but like other films more.
  • October 18, 2009
    Pitch perfect animation with gorgeous visuals and a nice sense of the macabre, which you would expect from Selick. 'Nightmare before Christmas' fans will not be disappointed.
  • October 15, 2009
    Coraline: Back home, cats don't talk. So how are you able to...
    Cat: I just can.

    An adventurous girl finds another world that is a strangely idealized version of her frustrating home, but it has sinister secrets.

    Dakota Fanning: Coraline Jones

    C...( read more)oraline is a surreal merging of new and old techniques. Utilizing beautiful stop motion animation and presented in luscious 3D, the film offers a time-honoured message in a state of the art package. 3D has advanced to the point where it actually serves the story as opposed to being an end unto itself. In the opening credit sequence, we see long, spindly iron fingers above the screen as they construct a button-eyed doll. There is menace in these metallic hands and the three dimensional effect adds to the sense of dread. The hands seem close and capable of reaching out to ensnare our vulnerable selfs. When the characters on screen stand outside a doorway, the viewers are tempted to lean forward in order to peak into the room on display. The 3D is effective and enriching, Coraline pleasingly is the first film I have watched in 3D, making it even more of a pleasure to behold.

    Coraline (Dakota Fanning), the pre-teen heroine of the film, is moving into an apartment complex in the filled with eccentric neighbors. Her parents both write and leave Coraline feeling alone and neglected. She hates her dad's cooking and misses her old friends. And then she finds a mysterious door in the wall and while playing one evening chases a little mouse through the door and into a mirror universe that looks similar to her own, but seems better. The food is better, the world never boring, and her button-eyed Other Mother and Father give her everything she wants.

    ''You know, you could stay forever, if you want to. There's one tiny thing we have to do first...''

    The film, based on an excellent novel for children by Neil Gaiman, has a strong message at its heart. Coraline posits that hedonism is both empty and dangerous. Also, in order to fully indulge you must become blind to the suffering your pursuits will result in. It's slightly surprising that in a package as aesthetic and mesmerizing as Coraline that we are essentially being presented with a traditional moral warning of wishing for more than we have. The film is not pummeling us into submission with learning this however, and possibly younger viewers will not quickly pick up on the deeper aspects on offer. In the context of the film, the message is completely viable.

    The animation on display is excellent and smooth, but as the movie showcases its character design and animation set pieces the story sometimes loses some momentum and it's pace halted. Once Coraline discovers her quest, however, the movie becomes engrossing, tense and something of a horror/thriller. In fact, the film's extended climax will likely be too intense for the very young or squeamish. The voice work is delightful with Terri Hatcher surprising in two vibrant roles as Coraline's mother and the film's spidery villain. She is obviously enjoying the layers of her characters and it enriches the experience as a whole. The artistry on display is delightful and the film offers a unique animated experience. Go see this one soon, Coraline is up there with favourites, Monster House, Nightmare before Christmas, Corpse Bride...Coraline is unique enough to be an entirely new story, a thrilling twisting ride, and yet another fulfilling success to its genre and medium.

    ''You probably think this world is a dream come true... but you're wrong.''
  • October 12, 2009
    "Be careful what you wish for."

    An adventurous girl finds another world that is a strangely idealized version of her frustrating home, but it has sinister secrets.

    REVIEW

    Excellent stop-motion ...( read more)animated film adaptation of Neil Gaiman's book by wunderkind filmmaker Henry Selick about a young girl named Coraline (Fanning) whose seemingly unhappiness with her family discovers a doorway into a parallel world where she finds an Other Mother and Father, and realizes the motto of 'be careful what you wish for' as a golden rule. Filled with phantasmagoric elements of fantasy not unlike "Alice In Wonderland" but with a slightly darker edge and spookiness but a truly remarkable display of an art form that is rarely given its props and Selick and his team of magicians create an amazingly incredible tour-de-force of painstaking artistry to behold. One of the year's very best.
  • December 17, 2009
    Messed up kid's film. Like "MirrorMask" with a younger target audience.
  • December 17, 2009
    It has ideas from Alice in Wonderland... but they are minimal... Apart from this, the story still is very creative. The tale teaches something very important: we have to be grateful for the family we have.
  • December 16, 2009
    Dakota Fanning reminds ALOT of Becca
  • December 15, 2009
    Been waiting for something like this since the corpse bride
  • December 13, 2009
    i love it ist the friggin best

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