The fear of being judged is so great that she is afraid of the world around her, so the little girl is hiding in the shadow. This perception of the outside world forced the girl to wear a mask to hide his true self. "A friend who has the same reason as hiding under them, not a friend who has the same mask ..." (JAJAvankova). Based on the concept of Jaja Vankova, a real story, supported by Phillip Chbeeb, conveys a tragic story through the soundtrack of the Edward Scissorhands theme song.
Tim Burton's 1990 film "Edward Scissorhands" tells the creation of an inventor who died before humanoid creation was completed. The inventor used his creations of Edward's sharp scissors in his hand. Edward was succeeded by Avon salesperson, Peggy and her family. He found a gentle paradise where a woman carrying a clean lawn and a dog carries to the suburbs. He has a lot of impressions of his neighbors and left a good reputation for himself, but when some people try to use Edward's innocence, things will eventually get worse. The film touches the hearts of the audience and relies on sorrow to convey information. Telling this from a woman who loves Edward, she shares her and her granddaughter.
Tim Burton 's Edward Scissor Tim Burton' s only achievement at "Scissor Edward" is to create an older version if "beauty and the beast" is set in the center of the suburbs. By contrasting the scenery with the decoration of the house of the 1950s style, entertainment of about 2 hours brought about major innovation. In collaboration with Caroline Thompson, Burton created a story about an enchanting and non-cooperative beauty and the beasts that fell in love with her. - Jon Scieszka and Lane Smith 's comparison of Jon Scieszka and Lane Smith to Tim Burton The illustrations of Baloney (HENRY P.) by Lane Smith and The Nightmare Before Christmas by Tim Burton are encouraging to see the world through twisted lenses. I would like to compare how two illustrators display their work in a distorted view. Scieszka and Smith made Henry P. a boy of various types of SF adventure and explained why he was late for school.
Edward Scissorhands shows the subversive society's hostility toward a gentle man involved in perfect heterosexuality. Edward Scissorhands (Tim Burton, 1990) is an ethical story about young people using scissors to fill the landscape of foreigners in suburbs of the Americas. Like most moral stories, Edward Scissorhands studied the basic cultural categories that allowed us to understand the world. Edward, with scissors in hand, is a powerful stranger who enters the community and overthrows it by unrecognized social norms that do not recognize the promotion of social interaction. At the same time, he is a thoughtful monster like Frankenstein. He unconsciously embodies the best aspects of the code and proves that people failed to meet the standards that they set for themselves.