The Nightmare Before Christmas: Christmas Movie or Halloween Movie?
It’s that time of year again. No, not Halloween, and no, not Christmas. It’s time for every movie lover to express their extreme and passionate opinion about whether Henry Selick’s beloved classic The Nightmare Before Christmas is a Christmas movie… or a Halloween movie.
The Nightmare Before Christmas, produced by Tim Burton and based on one of his poems, tells the story of Jack Skellington, the Pumpkin King of Halloween, who lives in Halloweentown and orchestrates the scariest night of the year, every single year. But he’s suffering from serious artistic burnout, so when he accidentally stumbles into Christmastown, he decides to try his hand at Christmas instead.
The film deftly combines Halloween and Christmas by adding freaky touches to beloved yuletide iconography, like a giant snake instead of a stocking, or a sleigh driven by skeletal reindeer. Even the stop-motion imagery of The Nightmare Before Christmas is a pastiche; before Burton’s film came along, the most famous stop-motion cartoons were beloved Rankin/Bass holiday specials like Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer and Santa Claus Is Comin’ to Town.
The Nightmare Before Christmas: Christmas Movie or Halloween Movie?
It’s that time of year again. No, not Halloween, and no, not Christmas. It’s time for every movie lover to express their extreme and passionate opinion about whether Henry Selick’s beloved classic The Nightmare Before Christmas is a Christmas movie… or a Halloween movie.
The Nightmare Before Christmas, produced by Tim Burton and based on one of his poems, tells the story of Jack Skellington, the Pumpkin King of Halloween, who lives in Halloweentown and orchestrates the scariest night of the year, every single year. But he’s suffering from serious artistic burnout, so when he accidentally stumbles into Christmastown, he decides to try his hand at Christmas instead.
The film deftly combines Halloween and Christmas by adding freaky touches to beloved yuletide iconography, like a giant snake instead of a stocking, or a sleigh driven by skeletal reindeer. Even the stop-motion imagery of The Nightmare Before Christmas is a pastiche; before Burton’s film came along, the most famous stop-motion cartoons were beloved Rankin/Bass holiday specials like Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer and Santa Claus Is Comin’ to Town.
Red Dead 2 Is Not for Short Attention Spans
Welcome back to Game Scoop!, IGN's weekly video game talk show. On a special Halloween episode we're discussing Red Dead Redemption 2, horror games, Assassin's Creed Odyssey, and more. Watch the video above or download the podcast below.
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Twitter May Be Removing the ‘Like’ Button
Twitter may be removing the 'like' button feature on the social media platform.
CEO and co-founder, Jack Dorsey, mentioned the news at a Twitter event last week, originally reported by The Telegraph.
Twitter responded Monday in a tweet from their communications team, saying they have been rethinking the service to make sure they provide options for "healthy conversation" among its users.
As we've been saying for a while, we are rethinking everything about the service to ensure we are incentivizing healthy conversation, that includes the like button. We are in the early stages of the work and have no plans to share right now. https://t.co/k5uPe5j4CW
Twitter May Be Removing the ‘Like’ Button
Twitter may be removing the 'like' button feature on the social media platform.
CEO and co-founder, Jack Dorsey, mentioned the news at a Twitter event last week, originally reported by The Telegraph.
Twitter responded Monday in a tweet from their communications team, saying they have been rethinking the service to make sure they provide options for "healthy conversation" among its users.
As we've been saying for a while, we are rethinking everything about the service to ensure we are incentivizing healthy conversation, that includes the like button. We are in the early stages of the work and have no plans to share right now. https://t.co/k5uPe5j4CW
The Best Wireless Headphones
Be sure to visit IGN Tech for all the latest comprehensive hands-on reviews and best-of roundups. Note that if you click on one of these links to buy the product, IGN may get a share of the sale. For more, read our Terms of Use.
There is so much audio out there to consume: music, audiobooks, podcasts, news, games. With our busy lives a lot of this consumption needs to happen on the go, and while regular wired headphones are a perfectly viable solution, there’s nothing better than the freedom afforded by a set of wireless headphones. Plus, phone manufacturers seem intent on killing the headphone jack for good, so it seems certain the future for audio on-the-go will be wireless.
THQ Nordic Bought My Teenage Years – So What Are They Going to Do With Them?
In 2002, I was 13, and I spent as much of my time as possible playing TimeSplitters 2. Six years later, I spent a sizeable portion of my 19th year in the extremely purple company of Saints Row 2.
Between those two fairly formative experiences, I invented my own game modes with my brother in Red Faction 2. I had my mind blown by blowing up minds in Second Sight. Adult pangs of nostalgia already setting in, I rented Stuntman: Ignition to recall its PS2 predecessor. Friends introduced me to Destroy All Humans, and Painkiller. I’m also fairly sure I played doomed racing sim Juiced but, looking at it now, god knows why I would have chosen to.
Aside from the fact that I played them at some point, there’s little to connect these games. That list represents different genres, developers, publishers, levels of quality. Some games I can remember as well as the alphabet, others I’d forgotten about until looking them up for this piece. Now, 16 years after I lost myself to TimeSplitters 2, they’re all connected – because THQ Nordic bought them.
Out This Week: Kingdom Hearts: The Story So Far
With so many new games and movies coming out, it can be hard to keep up. Lucky for you, IGN is here to help with a weekly round-up of the biggest releases each and every week. Check out the latest releases for this week, and be sure to come back next Monday for a new update.
Note: The prices and deals compiled below are accurate at the time we published this story, but all are subject to change.
No Man’s Sky: The Abyss Update Adds Aquatic Narrative, Submarine Vehicle and More
No Man's Sky's continuous stream of improvements continue today with the launch of The Abyss, a free update that focuses on underwater exploration and even adds a new story, The Dreams of the Deep.
Available now on PlayStation 4, Xbox One and PC, The Abyss is the first major update since No Man's Sky's NEXT which introduced full multiplayer, a third-person viewpoint, and much more.
The Abyss introduces players to "aquatic environments with over five times more variety, new submersible vehicles, improved underwater visuals and much more."
The Abyss' new story, The Dreams of the Deep, has players exploring the deepest depths of oceans by discovering the fate of a crew that was stranded from a freighter crash by the rising tides or exploring underwater ruins to "uncover the tale of a lost soul trapped beneath the waves."
Tetris Effect Hands-On: It’s Like a Bacon-Wrapped Hot Dog
Tetris Effect is the video game equivalent of a bacon-wrapped hot dog. It is two great things joining forces to create something even better. The hot dog: Tetris, a timeless, proven puzzle game that needs no introduction. And the bacon is Tetsuya Mizuguchi, whose puzzle chops – not to mention audio-visual prowess – are Hall of Fame-worthy. I won’t go so far as to say that Tetris Effect (out November 9) is the best-ever version of the legendary block-dropping game from the hour or so I played recently, but I will confidently say that Tetris has never looked or sounded better. That should come as no surprise to anyone who’s played Rez, Lumines, or any of Mizuguchi-san’s other classics.
