Plot Details: This opinion reveals minor details about the movie''s plot.
When Beetlejuice was first released in 1988, a friend of mine spent his entire lunch hour explaining the plot to me. I couldn't imagine anyone being enamored of such a bizarre-sounding comedy. I saw it a year later on cable TV, and it has become synonymous with Halloween for me ever since. Besides which, it's as riotously funny as any movie I've ever seen.
Strangely enough, it didn't start out that way. Director Tim Burton, fresh from his success with Pee-Wee's Big Adventure, originally planned the movie as a macabre drama about a sweet couple named Adam and Barbara Maitland (played straight, and to perfection, by Alec Baldwin and Geena Davis). The Maitlands accidentally die in a car crash, and the movie was supposed to be a ghoulish look at the deceased couple's coping with the afterlife.
Then Michael Keaton signed on to play the title role of a ghostly "bio-exorcist" who helps the Maitlands cut through Death's red tape (but only to help himself in the end). Keaton uncovered the movie's black-comedy potential and turned around Burton's vision of the movie.
And what a turn-around! Keaton's role takes up only one-fifth of the movie, but when he appears, it's like all the Marx Brothers set loose in one ghostly spirit. Lascivious, vociferous, and hilarious, Keaton made comedy history and won the National Society of Film Critics' best-actor nod.
The supporting actors are no slouches, either. Winona Ryder as a death-obsessed girl who is surprised by her encounter with the real thing, Jeffrey Jones as her smug dad, and most of all, Sylvia Sidney as a beleaguered afterlife clerk...all are wonderful.
The music is one of cinema's great scores, courtesy of the offbeat Danny Elfman--with a huge assist from Harry Belafonte's "Banana Boat Song" (in the funniest lip-synch routine ever put on film). And when the movie isn't all-out funny, which is seldom, it's a marvel to look at, thanks to production designer Bo Welch (who makes his mark this year by directing the adaptation of Dr. Seuss' The Cat in the Hat).
If you want to do Halloween right, forget all those cutesy, just-kidding cartoons floating around TV in October. Beetlejuice is the real deal.
Beetlejuice is rated PG for intense imagery, double entendres, and one use of the F-word.
Recommended:
Yes
Viewing Format: VHS Video Occasion: Fit for Friday Evening Suitability For Children: Suitable for Children Age 9 - 12
What s a couple of stay-at-home ghosts to do when their beloved home is taken over by trendy yuppies? They call on Beetlejuice, the afterlife s freela...More at Buy.com Marketplaces
Epinions.com periodically updates pricing and product information from third-party sources, so some information may be slightly out-of-date. You should confirm all information before relying on it.