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Monday 4 June 2012

God Save the Queen...?

Monkeybone
Henry Selick, 2001


4 Stars

Yesterday, whilst every other true-blooded Brit was adorning himself in bunting or pumping out patriotism along the Thames in celebration of the Queen`s jubilee, I, upon a Sunday evening nonetheless, had the flat to myself. As such, I think I can be forgiven for putting on my jim-jams, pouring a Bell`s and coke and settling down to a much-loved film that no-one remembers.

Said film, in this instance, was Henry Selick`s oft-forgotten little gem Monkeybone.

After critical success with his previous stop-motion movies, The Nightmare Before Christmas and James and the Giant Peach, Selick decided to play his hand at bringing his unique style of animation to purely adult audiences. Taking inspiration from the wickedly dark Canadian graphic novel Dark Town, Monkeybone centers around successful cartoonist Stu Miley (Brendan Fraser back when he was fun), creator of the cheeky simian Monkeybone, as he finds himself knocked into a coma and thrust into a world of nightmares. Therein he becomes the unlucky patsy in a plot by nightmare king Hypnos to infiltrate the real world.

But, as with so much of Selick`s work, it`s not the story that sells it; it`s Selick`s mix of stellar animation, dark comedy and outright strangeness. And for the most part, it`s here that Monkeybone excels. The nightmare world is realized with fantastic aplomb, with each and every character and set piece detailed to the utmost. Rose McGowan`s turn as the mouthwatering Miss Kitty is simply icing on the cake.

Unfortunately, the film does fall a little short during its final act, when the action returns to the real world, but quite frankly, enough delightful groundwork comes before it, that I find myself forgiving this lapse in action. That said, Chris Kattan does provide a good giggle as Organ Donor Stu.

Having been desperately trying to find a little of the old Burton in Big Tim`s recent films, watching Monkeybone, I find myself wondering why he doesn`t team up once again with his erstwhile partner, Selick… Burton, you could learn something here old bean.