Three decades on, and with a shiny new 12A certificate to show for itself, the film offers other reminders, too: of a time when studio doors were open to outsider sensibilities such as Burton, John Waters and David Lynch (Beetlejuice is Burton's Eraserhead), and when Burton in particular wasn't entirely drowning his films in CGI. There's a modicum of effects work here, certainly: the stripey sandworms bedevilling the house from without look like this director's response to Dune, and may have factored into the genesis of 1990's Tremors. But they're less well integrated than those tossed-off, doodly sightgags so essential to the fabric of certain 1980s comedies (I'm thinking Better Off Dead..., although I'm often thinking of Better Off Dead...): the leaflets tumbling out of Jeffrey Jones' copy of Practical Homeowner, the waiting room for the undead, complete with Man Half-Devoured By Shark and Tar-Blackened Victim of Fire, the human Test Your Strength machine that knocks a chuckle out of you amid the finale. Burton was at that stage where his sole aim was to make pages from his sketchbooks come to life, and if Beetlejuice barely seems to hang together as a narrative these days, it fair spills over with visual invention, gags that both do and don't pay off. Something (read: lots of things) went wrong after Burton gravitated towards Johnny Depp, with his blank-faced anomie, because here the director is still searching for eruptive displays of personality: he allows Keaton's horny hellbeast, all but repressed for the first 45 minutes, to gradually take over the whole show, livens up a dinner party with the help of Harry Belafonte (an enduring setpiece), and recalls Sylvia Sidney to snipe at Davis whenever the latter starts whining about how unhappy she is ("What did you expect? You're dead"). All this, and one genuine rarity for a 1980s motion picture: a scene where a character picks up binoculars with the intention of birdwatching, and somehow doesn't spy a comely neighbour in her bra and pants.
Beetlejuice is now playing in selected cinemas.
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