Tim Burton, a visionary filmmaker, has been captivated by strange characters and stories since childhood, passionately embracing horror, weirdness, and oddities, leaving an indelible mark on the cinematic landscape. Burton’s distinctive visual style and storytelling firmly establish him as an important and prominent filmmaker.
“I can’t remember any dreams in my life. There’s so much strange in real life that it often seems like a dream.” -Tim Burton
Burton’s fascination with the macabre and the strange permeates many of his iconic works, including Beetlejuice, Edward Scissorhands, and The Nightmare Before Christmas. His films showcase gothic elements, dark humour, and a whimsical blend of fantasy and reality, demonstrating that his love for horror transcends mere scares; it’s a celebration of the peculiar and the unconventional.
The director’s affinity for oddities extends beyond films to his distinctive visual style. Burton’s artistic choices, from his characters’ exaggerated, angular shapes to the gothic, fantastical landscapes he creates, reflect a deep appreciation for the bizarre and unconventional.
Tim Burton’s cinematic world blurs the boundaries between the normal and the bizarre, where the eerie and the enchanting coexist. His influence extends beyond the screen, inspiring a generation of filmmakers and artists. In a world often bound by conventions, Tim Burton’s love for horror, weirdness, and oddities remains a refreshing, eccentric breeze in cinema.
Top 10 Best Tim Burton Quotes About Nightmares and Oddities Share on X10 Tim Burton Quotes About Horror and Oddities

Tim Burton
“I never really got nightmares from movies. In fact, I recall my father saying when I was three years old that I would be scared, but I never was.”
Tim Burton
“I can’t remember any dreams in my life. There’s so much strange in real life that it often seems like a dream.”
Tim Burton
“I started to do stop-motion when I was a kid. You take a Super 8 and make some models, and move, click, move, click. All that. I love all forms of animation, but there is something unique and special to stop-motion: it’s more real, and the set is lit like a set. But I think it’s also a kind of lonely and dark thing to want to do.”
Tim Burton
“It’s people who you’ve seen that have given you a lot. In some ways, I felt they helped me psychologically because you see these people up on the screen going through torment and being on the outside, and somehow you relate to them, and it helps you get through life. It’s a real honour and pleasure to then meet these people.”
Tim Burton
“If I had a choice about going to a meeting at a studio or changing a nappy, I’d choose the nappy.”
Tim Burton
“I never saw Frankenstein or King Kong or the Creature from the Black Lagoon as bad guys. They were the good guys.”
Tim Burton
“I guess I feel so tortured most of the time. When I see someone else feeling tortured, I get a little perverse glee out of it.”
Tim Burton
“Working on ‘Nightmare Before Christmas,’ I had endless arguments, like the studio saying, ‘You can’t have a main character that’s got no eyeballs!’ ‘How is anybody going to feel for somebody with just eyesockets?’ You know? So, it’s those kind of things that really wear you down.”
Tim Burton
“I’ve always been misrepresented. You know, I could dress in a clown costume and laugh with the happy people but they’d still say I’m a dark personality.”
Tim Burton
“I always liked strange characters.”
Tim Burton

Drawing by Tim Burton
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