A Stocking Stuffer That Gives More

This holiday season brings three new animation masterpieces to DVD. Jacquie Kubin discusses the DVD format's benefits and the new releases with a special focus on The Nightmare Before Christmas.

Something special for the film and animation holiday stocking can be found on the DVD movie shelves. Enhanced with bonus footage that provides sneak peeks behind the scenes of favorite movies, DVD's are no longer just entertainment. They also provide how-to tutorials featuring the directors, artists and creative talents behind the movies. "Viewing a DVD has become more than the passive experience of watching a 2D movie," said Martin Blythe, VP Publicity, Paramount Home Entertainment. "It becomes a way for consumers to build their own narrative experience in and around a movie." Since it first launched in 1997 to today, the DVD format represents the fastest growing entertainment segment in history with more than nine million players already in consumer homes.

Meeting the demand for DVD enabled movies, studios have released more than 8,000 DVD video titles. While most movies run from approximately 75 to 100 minutes, DVD capacity allows for up to, and sometimes exceeds, two hours, or 120 minutes, of run time. Adding a new budget line item to film production, studios are filling the DVD's enhanced capacity with "behind-the-scenes" information explaining some of the how and why of filmmaking. These features normally include a documentary type short film introducing the key people that took part in the film's creation, "behind-the-scenes" information on the production of the film, interviews with starring cast members, movie trailers, sound track videos and even technical information about the film's pre-production stages.

"We have just released MI:2 (Mission Impossible:2) on DVD and it is a film that demands these bonus materials because it's so full of 'how in the world did they do that' stunts," Blythe says. "We have included almost 50 minutes of material on how Tom Cruise did the most dangerous stunt work himself and how the stunts were actually done. None of this material was released during the film's theatrical release and the DVD is full of surprises!" For film fans, filmmakers, animators and animation fans, bonus materials mean more than added entertainment value. They can also provide a virtual classroom on how some of the greatest films to hit the silver screen have been made.

Get Up Close to Burton's Nightmare
DVD's released for this holiday are the animation tours de' force of Tim Burton's Nightmare Before Christmas Special Edition, James and the Giant Peach Special Edition and Toy Story Collector's Edition The Ultimate Toy Box. Each of these films' DVD releases contain bonus features that explain the groundbreaking animation techniques and skills used in creating these films. Lauded with accolades such as "breathtaking" and "never before seen," Tim Burton's stop-action Nightmare Before Christmas (Touchstone, 1993) is highly regarded as the first modern, and in many viewers' opinion, best full-length stop-action feature film. (However, this is a much more hotly contested subject since Chicken Run hit the screens this past summer.) The story is of the Pumpkin King, Jack Skellington, who resides and lords over Halloween town. One day, following the annual Halloween celebration, he becomes disenfranchised and seeking something else, finds Christmas Town. Enamored of its colorful lights and buoyant spirit, The Pumpkin King plots to kidnap Santa Claus, or Sandy Claws as Jack refers to him, in order to become the red coated emissary of good will. Only Jack doesn't really get the concept, hence the nightmare begins.







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