'The Nightmare Before Christmas' writer says a Disney live-action remake would be 'greedy and stupid'
- "The Nightmare Before Christmas" screenwriter Caroline Thompson told Insider that she definitely does not want a Disney live-action remake of the iconic movie.
- "That would be so awful," Thompson said. "I hope Tim [Burton] has enough rights that they can't do that."
- There were reported talks about a new "The Nightmare Before Christmas" movie in 2019, but nothing was clarified as to whether it would be an animated sequel, spin-off, or live-action remake.
The screenwriter behind "The Nightmare Before Christmas" definitely does not want a live-action remake of the iconic Halloween-Christmas movie.
"Do you really think they would do that? That would be so awful," Caroline Thompson, who co-wrote the screenplay after another writer exited, told Insider when asked.
It's no secret that Disney has been finding a lot of financial success with their remakes of their classic animated movies, including "Beauty & the Beast," which grossed over $1.2 billion worldwide, and "The Lion King," which grossed over $1.6 billion globally. "Maleficent" and "The Jungle Book" also grossed over $750 million and $950 million globally respectively.
However, when Insider asked Thompson what she would think if Disney decided to give the dark-hearted cousin of their animated movies the live-action remake treatment, she was not enamored by the idea.
"I hope Tim [Burton] has enough rights that they can't do that," Thompson continued. "It's superfluous. That's greedy and stupid."
There have been rumors of a "The Nightmare Before Christmas" sequel in animated form, but Burton has always swiftly shut them down. However, in February 2019, it was reported that talks for a new "Nightmare" movie were underway, but they didn't specify whether that would be an animated sequel, spin-off or a live-action remake.
Burton himself has actually already been involved in three Disney live-action remakes: "Alice in Wonderland" and it's sequel "Through the Looking Glass" along with "Dumbo." However, none of those movies fared that well with critics. "Alice in Wonderland" has a Rotten Tomatoes score of 55% while "Dumbo" has a rating of 46%.
The director isn't alone. Disney's live-action remakes may have all been financially successful, but they haven't always been that warmly received critically. "Mulan" and "The Lady and The Tramp" both scored 51% with critics while "Maleficent" managed a middling 70%. Still, there have been critic-favorites such as "Aladdin," which earned a score of 94%, and "The Lion King," which nabbed 88% from critics on Rotten Tomatoes.
Despite mixed critical reviews, the box-office returns of every movie guarantees that Disney will continue to raid their back catalogue of animated hits and churn them out into live-action remakes.
In fact, there is a slew of Disney live-action remakes already in the works, including "Cruella," "The Little Mermaid," "Peter Pan & Wendy," "Hercules," "Pinocchio," "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs," "Lilo & Stitch," and sequels or spin-offs to existing remakes to "The Lion King," "The Jungle Book," and "Aladdin."
Thompson hopes "The Nightmare Before Christmas" doesn't join that list anytime soon.
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