r u s t e d e y e . c o m

CHARLIE AND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY

Everybody has had one and one is enough for anybody.  

-Gene Wilder as Willy Wonka.

It’s debatable whether the world really needs another film adaptation of Charlie And The Chocolate Factory, but director Tim Burton seems the obvious choice for adapting Roald Dahl’s much beloved children’s book.

Wickedly clever, Dahl’s mischievous morality tale follows Charlie Buckett, a saintly but poor lad who, along with four other horrible brats, wins a one-day visit to Willy Wonka’s magnificent chocolate factory. The contest is Wonka’s attempt to find a worthy successor. Providing the grist for the author’s misanthropic mill, the other children represent four of the seven deadly sins: obese Augustus Gloop (Gluttony), spoiled Veruca Salt (Greed), boastfully competitive Violet Beauregarde (Pride) and violence-addicted Mike Teaveee (Anger) all fall prey to their own selfish appetites and get their sadistic comeuppance.

Much has been made of how Burton’s version is more faithful to Roald Dahl’s original vision (he disliked the earlier film) but aside for superfluous flashbacks of Wonka’s troubled childhood and the filmmaker’s unique visual style, much as is as it was.

Along with screenwriter John August (who also scripted Burton’s last film, Big Fish), the director revisits his favorite theme: the dysfunctions of father-son relationships. Burton Shifting the story’s emotional framework away from Charlie, Burton focuses on Wonka’s relationship with his tyrannical dentist father. It’s an ironic twist, given the 1971 version was retitled Willy Wonka And The Chocolate Factory (for product marketing reasons) though it focused mostly on young Charlie’s dreams of a better life.

The true challenge in remaking Dahl’s classic story, however, is dispelling Gene Wilder’s definitively sinister portrayal of Willy Wonka. Casting Johnny Depp as the eccentric chocolatier would, at first glance, seem like an inspired choice. But while Wilder gave his character an undeniable sense of menace and mystery -- he seemed not so much to be testing the children as punishing them – Depp plays him as emotionally detached and socially uncomfortable. A bizarre amalgam of Michael Jackson and John Waters, Wonka comes off as an effete man-child. It’s a creepy, highly mannered performance that, unfortunately, falls flat.

Visually, Burton delivers in his typically twisted and flamboyant style. He directs with a light touch, never overplaying the humor and imbues the film with a goofier spirit than its predecessor. Though the chocolate factory lacks the furious imagination of his earlier films it boasts one particularly spectacular set piece: a room full of trained squirrels, sitting on tiny stools, shelling nuts for Wonka bars.

Finding Neverland's Freddie Highmore is likeably convincing as Charlie and Deep Roy, who plays every one of the Oompa Loompas, gives a hilariously deadpan performance. The song and dance numbers that follow each rotten child’s demise have a wonderfully loopy energy as composer Danny Elfman channels everything from Fleetwood Mac’s Tusk to George Clinton’s retro 70s funk.

Though always entertaining and at times quite sweet, Burton’s direction feels distant and aloof, lacking the giddy childlike passion the story calls for. As a result the film captures few of the charms of the original. Charlie And The Chocolate Factory is a delightful confection that delights while it lasts but ultimately leaves you hungry for more.