DVD - Full Frame Learn more
Enter a zip code
FOR PARENTS
| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| DVD - Wide Screen / Thx | $14.99 |
| DVD - Full Frame | $13.49 |
| Blu-ray - Wide Screen | $19.99 |
Audio commentary tracks by Tim Burton & Danny Elfman; Featurette; Concept art; Original theatrical trailer; TV spots; Interactive 3-D menus; Scene selection; Languages: English 4.0 surround, French Dolby Surround, Spanish Dolby Surround; Subtitles: English, Spanish
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
1. Main Titles
2. A Story About Snow
3. Avon Calling
4. Peg Meets Edward
5. Local Gossip
6. Edward's Talent
7. The Neighbors
8. The Inventor
9. Backyard Barbecue
10. Remembering
11. Kim
12. Show and Tell
13. More Talents
14. Edward on TV
15. A Beauty Salon
16. The Need for Money
17. Drop Your Weapons
18. A Ruined Reputation
19. The Ice Angel
20. Edward Gets Mad
21. A Christmas Past
22. Jim's Revenge
23. The Story's End
24. End Titles
A contemporary fairy tale from director Tim Burton, Edward Scissorhands tells the unusual story of a man-made youth with scissor blades for fingers (Johnny Depp), who lives alone in the abandoned mansion of his dead creator (Vincent Price in a fantastic cameo). Soon poor Edward is discovered, and then adopted, by a kindly Avon lady (Dianne Wiest). In the first of his starring roles for Burton, Depp makes an arresting lead with his black latex jumpsuit, pasty white skin, and Medusa-like hair. But it is through an unusual warmth and tenderness that Depp's performance truly defines Edward. Weist and Alan Arkin are superb as the amiably clueless parents who welcome him into their home, and Winona Ryder, in a full turn from her brooding teen in Burton's Beetlejuice, is radiant as their cheerleader daughter on whom Edward develops a hopeless crush. As engaging as the love story is Burton's savage lampooning of suburbia, which he presents as innocuously bland-looking but seething with petty intrigues and thinly veiled intolerance. His sympathies clearly run to Edward, whose bittersweet experiences in the "real" world will both delight and haunt viewers of this charming cinematic fable. The tenth anniversary edition DVD cements Edward Scissorhands's place in Burton's oeuvre, featuring an entertaining and informative audio commentary from Burton and composer Danny Elfman. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
More reviews and recommendations
Dad serves Edward a drink, after which Edward gets visibly drunk and sick.
Only three occasions of suggestive talk, one expletive.
Edward accidentally nips his face, then a little boy's. Edward is beaten with a stick repeatedly, and he stabs an attacker in the chest, causing him to fall out a window to his death.
Mom is an Avon lady, but besides the focus on make-up and hair, film is brand-free.
A woman wears figure-hugging outfits and is also seen on top of Edward wearing a lace bra.
About Edward Scissorhands
Parents need to know that there is sporadic violence in this film. Aside from a woman attempting to seduce Edward wearing a lace bra, sexuality is limited to Fifties-style courting rituals (kissing and hugging). Some of the garish set pieces, like Edward's haunted mansion, and the title character, with mean-looking, scissors for fingers, may be terrifying for young children.
Families can talk about how the film is an 'Ugly Duckling' fable about a misunderstood, soft-spoken underdog who does not fit the cookie cutter mold. What is normal? How does conformity play a role in the townspeople's treatment of Edward? Can you think of instances in real life when people have judged others based on their appearances?