WDCC The Nightmare Before Christmas Debonair Demon

Status: | Condition:New | Edition:The Nightmare Before ChristmasPorcelain Figurine | Dim:5 | WDCC | 4002128

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The Nightmare Before Christmas Debonair Demon

TIM BURTON�`s THE NIGHTMARE BEFORE CHRISTMAS Deviltry, singing skeletons, and undersea mayhem make things merrily macabre as the demented denizens of Halloweentown welcome their Pumpkin King in their own wonderfully warped way. While sweet rag doll Sally looks on amidst the eerily animated bony band of the vocalizing Skeleton Tree, (plussed with pewter and real rope cord) the delighted Devil (plussed with pewter tail and feet) and the charmingly repellent Undersea Gal (plussed with pewter arms and neck) give Jack the highest compliment possible: he made flesh crawl! Behind the scenes, the puppet kings (and queens) animated 227 individual characters for the grisly engrossing tale, leading to the creepy characters celebrated by these ghoulishly spook-tacular sculptures.

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The Nightmare Before Christmas, often promoted as Tim Burton's The Nightmare Before Christmas, is a 1993 American stop motion musical fantasy horror film produced/co-written by Tim Burton and directed by Henry Selick. It tells the story of Jack Skellington, a being from "Halloween Town" who opens a portal to "Christmas Town" and decides to celebrate the holiday. Danny Elfman wrote the film score and provided the singing voice of Jack, as well as other minor characters. The remaining principal voice cast includes Chris Sarandon, Catherine O'Hara, William Hickey, Ken Page and Glenn Shadix. The Nightmare Before Christmas originated in a poem written by Tim Burton in 1982, while he was working as a Disney animator. With the success of Vincent in the same year, Disney started to consider developing The Nightmare Before Christmas as either a short film or 30-minute television special. Over the years, Burton's thoughts regularly returned to the project, and in 1990, Burton and Disney made a development deal. Production started in July 1991 in San Francisco. Walt Disney Pictures decided to release the film under their Touchstone Pictures banner because they thought the film would be "too dark and scary for kids".[2] The Nightmare Before Christmas was met with critical and financial success. Disney has reissued the film annually under their Disney Digital 3-D format since 2006, being the first stop-motion animated feature to be entirely converted to 3-D.