Pan's Labyrinth and Hansel and Gretel: The World of Fantasy

Both Guillermo del Toro and Tim Burton bring viewers into a mystical fantasy world. In Pan's Labyrinth  del Toro brings viewers into a fantasy world that is barely different from our own, and truly hidden within our own. Whereas in Burtons Hansel and Gretel short the fantasy world is relatively removed from our own. This removal from our own world seems to be a Burton style. Burton is able to make viewers still feel as though they are enveloped in the film is something so difficult for most directors to do, but something Burton is able to do easily. 

Burton's Hansel and Gretel is an amazing first look into what would become his iconic style. In the short the two children and their father feel out of place in a Burton film, as they are normal characters dropped into a Burton fantasy world, where the Stepmother and Witch belong. These two characters are very cartoonish compared to the kids and they live in very cartoon like homes, though the house of the witch is more cartoonish than the one the kids live in, which is only cartoon like in the sense that it looks tiny on the outside and huge when viewers are "inside" it. 

All in all, this was the start of the Burton style that we all know and love today, shown in films like The Corpse Bride, and The Nightmare Before Christmas.

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