LONDON (AP) â The imagination of has produced ghosts and ghouls, Martians, monsters and misfits â all on display at an exhibition that is opening in London just in time for Halloween.
But you know what really scares him? Artificial intelligence.
Burton said Wednesday that seeing a website that had used AI to blend his drawings with Disney characters âreally disturbed me.â
âIt wasnât an intellectual thought â it was just an internal, visceral feeling,â Burton told reporters during a preview of âThe World of Tim Burtonâ exhibition at Londonâs Design Museum. âI looked at those things and I thought, âSome of these are pretty good.â ⌠(But) it gave me a weird sort of scary feeling inside.â
Burton said he thinks AI is unstoppable, because âonce you can do it, people will do it.â But he scoffed when asked if heâd use the technology in this work.
âTo take over the world?â he laughed.
The exhibition reveals Burton to be an analogue artist, who started off as a child in the 1960s experimenting with paints and colored pencils in his suburban Californian home.
âI wasnât, early on, a very verbal person,â Burton said. âDrawing was a way of expressing myself.â
Decades later, after films including âEdward Scissorhands,â âBatman,â âThe Nightmare Before Christmasâ and âBeetlejuice,â his ideas still begin with drawing. The exhibition includes 600 items from movie studio collections and Burton's personal archive, and traces those ideas as they advance from sketches through collaboration with set, production and costume designers on the way to the big screen.
London is the exhibitionâs final stop on a decade-long tour of 14 cities in 11 countries. It has been reconfigured and expanded with 90 new objects for its run in the British capital, where Burton has lived for a quarter century.
The show includes early drawings and oddities, including a competition-winning âcrush litterâ sign a teenage Burton designed for Burbank garbage trucks. Thereâs also a recreation of Burtonâs studio, down to the trays of paints and âCurse of Frankensteinâ mug full of pencils.
Alongside hundreds of drawings, there are props, puppets, set designs and iconic costumes, including Johnny Deppâs âEdward Scissorhandsâ talons and the black latex Catwoman costume worn by Michelle Pfeiffer in âBatman Returns.â
âWe had very generous access to Timâs archive in London, stuffed full of thousands of drawings, storyboards from stop-motion films, sketches, character notes, poems,â said exhibition curator Maria McLintock. âAnd how to synthesize such a wide ranging and meandering career within one exhibition was a fun challenge â but definitely a challenge.â
Seeing it has not been a wholly fun experience for Burton, who said heâs unable to look too closely at the items on display.
âItâs like seeing your dirty laundry put on the walls,â he said. âItâs quite amazing. Itâs a bit overwhelming.â
Burton, whose long-awaited horror-comedy sequel opened at the Venice Film Festival in August, is currently filming the second series of Netflixâ Addams Family-themed series âWednesday.â
These days he is a major Hollywood director whose American gothic style has spawned an adjective â âBurtoneqsue.â But he still feels like an outsider.
âOnce you feel that way, it never leaves you,â he said.
âEach film I did was a struggle,â he added, noting that early films like âPee-weeâs Big Adventureâ from 1985 and âBeetlejuiceâ in 1988 received some negative reviews. âIt seems like it was a pleasant, fine, easy journey, but each one leaves its emotional scars.â
McLintock said Burton âis a deeply emotional filmmaker."
âI think thatâs what drew me to his films as a child,â she said. "He really celebrates the misunderstood outcast, the benevolent monster. So itâs been quite a weird but fun experience spending so much time in his brain and his creative process.
âHis films are often called dark,â she added. âI donât agree with that. And if they are dark, thereâs a very much a kind of hope in the darkness. You always want to hang out in the darkness in his films.â
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âThe World of Tim Burtonâ opens Friday and runs until April 21, 2025.
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Associated Press journalist Kwiyeon Ha contributed to this story.
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This story has corrected that the Catwoman costume is from âBatman Returns,â not âBatman.â
Jill Lawless, The Associated Press