Tim Burton's Ex Ordered to Revise Suit
Tim Burton's Ex Ordered to Revise Suit

Tim Burton's ex-girlfriend was ordered Wednesday to revise her lawsuit against the movie director after a judge ruled it didn't sufficiently support claims that Burton had backed out of a promise to financially support her.
Lisa Marie, an actress who appeared in several of Burton's films, sued last December, alleging Burton used fraud to cheat her out of assets he promised to share with her during their nearly 10-year, live-in relationship.
Burton said he and Marie would "combine their efforts and earnings and would share equally any and all" accumulated property, her lawsuit claimed.
When Burton suddenly ended their relationship, Marie claimed she was referred to an attorney who convinced her to agree to a contract with the director. By signing it, she said, she gave up the right to make further claims to his assets. She also accused the lawyer of secretly acting on Burton's behalf.
Court papers filed by Burton's attorneys countered that the director gave Marie $5 million to sign the contract, which released him from any further claims to his assets. He contended that if she wanted to rescind the deal she was obligated to return the money.
Superior Court Judge Teresa Sanchez-Gordon said Marie's complaint didn't sufficiently support her allegation that Burton used fraud to cheat her out of assets. The judge gave her attorneys 10 days to revise the action.
Burton directed Marie in "Ed Wood," "Mars Attack!" and "Planet of the Apes."
Tim Burton's Ex Ordered to Revise Lawsuit
HOLLYWOOD - Moviemaker Tim Burton has won the first round of a court battle with his ex-girlfriend - a judge has ordered she revise her suit.Actress Lisa Marie Smith, who has appeared in a string of Burton's films as well as dating the director for nearly 10 years, claims he cheated her out of assets they promised to share together.
She sued Burton in December alleging she was tricked into signing a contract with the filmmaker giving up the right to make further claims to his fortune. She also accused a lawyer of secretly acting on Burton's behalf.
However, Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Teresa Sanchez-Gordon said there wasn't enough evidence in Smith's complaint to support her claim Burton used fraud to cheat her out of assets. She has 10 days to revise her suit.
Burton maintains Smith was given $5 million to sign the contract, which released him from any further claims to his assets. He added if she wanted to rescind the deal she must return the money.
Tim Burton
A pale and lonely dark-eyed boy, out of place in the suntanned Burbank world of his youth, filmmaker Tim Burton refused to yield to the cookie-cutter homogeneity demanded by suburbia (and later by Disney), translating his alienation into a dark and highly personal vision that would resonate resoundingly with movie audiences. He drew great inspiration from Roger Corman's movies starring Vincent Price and as a natural progression immerse himself in the German expressionism of the 1920s and the Gothic horror of the 1930s....
Full Biography
A pale and lonely dark-eyed boy, out of place in the suntanned Burbank world of his youth, filmmaker Tim Burton refused to yield to the cookie-cutter homogeneity demanded by suburbia (and later by Disney), translating his alienation into a dark and highly personal vision that would resonate resoundingly with movie audiences. He drew great inspiration from Roger Corman's movies starring Vincent Price and as a natural progression immerse himself in the German expressionism of the 1920s and the Gothic horror of the 1930s. Ill-equipped to do things the Disney way while briefly toiling at the studio as an apprentice animator, he impressed future collaborators Henry Selick and Rick Heinrichs with his brilliant doodles. Despite being perceived as a weirdo, he also managed to make his own six-minute animated short, "Vincent" (1982), a wryly amusing little film portraying the dual life of a tortured, but seemingly normal suburban child who lives in a fantasy world of Gothic horror and imagines he is Vincent Price (who incidentally served as narrator). The autobiographical character was a prototype for the misunderstood, sympathetic outsider at the center of all the director's subsequent films.
Burton's follow-up, the 29-minute, partially live-action "Frankenweenie" (1984), was an inventive twist on the "Frankenstein" story. A young boy (Victor Frankenstein) brings his dead dog Sparky back to life (a la his namesake) thanks to the wonders of electricity, even jump-starting the canine later with a little jolt from a car battery, and Sparky eventually finds love with a poodle that recalls Elsa Lanchester's famous hairdo from 1935 classic "The Bride of Frankenstein". Considered too outre for a Disney product, it did not receive a proper release until 1992 when it finally became available on video and on The Disney Channel. A private showing for Paul Reubens, however, landed Burton his first feature directing assignment on the superlatively silly "Pee-Wee's Big Adventure" (1985). Though his first two films had been in black and white, the director adjusted readily, using primary colors to create Pee Wee's surreal, cartoon-like world without completely abandoning the dark side revealed in Pee Wee's nightmares. Though most critics savaged it, "Pee-Wee's Big Adventure" found a sizable audience, and a surprised industry duly took notice.
Building on the live-action cartoon style of his debut, Burton's "Beetlejuice" (1998) employed a fantastic array of outstanding special effects to tell its campy ghost story. When it too became a sleeper hit, Burton became an intriguing choice to direct "Batman" (1989), a project which allowed him, together with Oscar-winning set designer Anton Furst, to return to his beloved long shadows, jagged angles and distorted perspective for the imagery of the appropriately named Gotham City. If it had not been apparent before, "Batman" and Burton's even darker "Batman Returns" (1992) made it evident that a coherent narrative was an afterthought when compared with the director's remarkable visual style. For the former feature, that capability overcame the clunky story and somewhat leaden action sequences to bring in more than $400 million worldwide and a cool billion in merchandising. Unfortunately, the latter's performance at the box office (a mere $150 million), was decidedly lackluster, particularly considering it cost more than the first one. His decision to pass the reins to Joel Schumacher for "Batman Forever" (1995) probably brought a sigh of relief from studio execs, ecstatic to be free from the grim Burton vision.
In between "Batman"s, Burton delivered a strikingly original fable about a man-made boy whose creator dies before attaching hands to his body. Visually, the pastel plasticity of suburbia in "Edward Scissorhands" (1990) contrasted sharply with the Gothic angles of the scientist's mountaintop home, just as that day-glo community's superficial welcome vanished in the face of mob frenzy when Edward's difference became too threatening for the close-knit society. As the title character, former teen idol Johnny Depp was extremely effective in his mute, wide-eyed performance, and Burton's mentor Price provided a real emotional context in his cameo as the inventor. Despite his success, Burton has remained the misunderstood outsider, and "Scissorhands", a moderate hit in commercial terms, represents the movie that is perhaps closest to his heart. Expressing his deep affection for fairy tales, he weaves an underlying threat of love being a fatally attractive lethal weapon as Edward can't hold the girl he adores most (Winona Ryder), fearing he will cause her harm.
Burton returned to animation for the first time since "Vincent" as producer, creator and guiding sensibility behind "Tim Burton's 'The Nightmare Before Christmas'" (1993), the first full length stop-motion (three-dimensional figures, not drawings, repositioned from frame to frame) animated film produced by Disney. Burton had come up with the idea while employed by the studio in the early 80s, and when he tried to rescue it from the black hole it had fallen into there, he found Disney loathe to part with it and also leery of his ability to helm it what with his commitment to "Batman Returns". He got the project green-lighted when he turned it over to friend Selick, who had himself left Disney long ago but was a stop-motion veteran, having directed Pillsbury "Doughboy" commercials and an award-winning short called "Slow Bob in the Lower Dimensions" (1981), among other credits. Wildly imaginative in its excursion to the macabre, this twisted cousin to the cuddly Disney classics normally unveiled at Christmas featured trademark Burton designs and thematic concerns and had execs holding their collective breath waiting for the bomb to explode. The success of "Nightmare" again confounded the supposed experts and confirmed Burton as a commercial wunderkind.
The director's decision to shoot the biopic "Ed Wood" (1994) in black and white caused Columbia to pull out, leaving the field clear for Disney. Starring Depp as "the world's worst director", Burton's first period piece also featured Martin Landau in an astonishing, Academy Award-winning supporting turn as an aged and impoverished Bela Lugosi. (Rick Baker also won an Oscar for his makeup.) While smaller in scope than his last three outings, "Ed Wood" was also the first Burton movie grounded in a truthful, if bizarre, historical reality, unlike the internally consistent but fictional worlds of "Scissorhands" and the "Batman" movies. The cinematic love letter to Hollywood's Poverty Row, like "Scissorhands", was an extremely personal film, and many critics cited parallels between Wood's relationship with Lugosi and Burton's with Price. Despite its vivid recreation of time and place, it unfortunately did not appeal to mass tastes, bringing his string of box office successes to an end. Perhaps Columbia had been right about b/w not being commercial, or maybe the project just missed the touch of Danny Elfman, whose music had provided the perfect complement for Burton's vision on all his previous films.
Burton turned his attention next to "Mars Attacks!" (1996), a high-budget, special effects laden adaptation of a series of bubble gum trading cards spoofing the sci-fi thriller of the 50s and 60s. Boasting an all-star cast (including Annette Bening, Glenn Close, Michael J Fox and Jack Nicholson in a dual role), the film combined live-action with superb animation (the Martian characters) to tell its overly self-satisfied, ultimately one-note tale of alien invasion. A fabulous production design could not carry the day, proving that Burton's unquestioned visual genius had not yet mastered or found a way of doing without narrative. Its American box office failure, due in part to the success of the similarly themed blockbuster "Independence Day" released some five months earlier, though not branding the wunderkind an overnight pariah, certainly gave studios pause to wonder whether his delightfully demented vision would continue to sell. (European receipts vindicated him somewhat.)
Undaunted by his inability to get his troubled "Superman" off the ground, he rebounded with "Sleepy Hollow" (1999, loosely based on Washington Irving's famous story), starring Depp as discredited professor Ichabod Crane, exiled for his outrageous theories to Sleepy Hollow, where he confronts the local myth of the headless horseman. While "Sleepy Hollow" successfully grafted Burton's unique sensibilities onto a well-known tale, he was far less successful with the next established property he tackled, a overdone, over-the-top remake of "Planet of the Apes" (2001) that failed to capitalize on either the principal appeal of the source material or Burton's established cinematic style. "Big Fish" (2003), the tale of a disgruntled young man (Billy Crudup) and his dying father (Albert Finney) trying to reconcile reality with his father's fanciful and exagerrated tales of his youth (played in flashback by Ewan McGregor, was a well-received step back into familiar (or what passes for familiar in Burton's off-kilter world) territory, providing the director with a heartfelt tale of father-son angst and sentiment upon which to graft his visionary quirks. Then it was on to another even more fanciful and outrageous project, this time with his frequent collaborator Depp as the magical candymaker Willie Wonka for Burton's version of author Roald Dahl's "Charlie & the Chocloate Factory" (2005) which had also inspired the 1971 children's favorite "Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory." Burton's interpretation hewed closer to the book, and was thus predictably darker, but the filmmaker also imbued it with his uniquely imaginative touch, making what The Hollywood Reporter called "a film about kids and for kids that has not lost touch with what it is like to actually be a kid." That same year, Burton conceived, produced and co-directed another stop-motion animated opus for youngsters, "Tim Burton's Corpse Bride," the story of a young Victorian man (voiced by Depp) who is whisked away to the underworld to wed a mysterious undead woman (Burton's frequent collaborator and personal companion Helena Bonam Carter) but seeks to escape and reunite with his true love.
Lisa Marie
This tall, striking blonde starlet has done impressive, attention-grabbing bits in films directed by her offscreen companion Tim Burton. The New Jersey-born Lisa Marie (nee Smith) was a ballet student as a child, then ran away from her unhappy home life at age 15. She went on to be featured in Bruce Weber's jazz documentary "Let's Get Lost" (1988) and landed a small role as a party guest in Woody Allen's "Alice" (1990). Additionally, she carved a secondary career as a model, posing for photographer Robert Mapplethorpe as well as appearing in Calvin Klein ads....
Full Biography
This tall, striking blonde starlet has done impressive, attention-grabbing bits in films directed by her offscreen companion Tim Burton. The New Jersey-born Lisa Marie (nee Smith) was a ballet student as a child, then ran away from her unhappy home life at age 15. She went on to be featured in Bruce Weber's jazz documentary "Let's Get Lost" (1988) and landed a small role as a party guest in Woody Allen's "Alice" (1990). Additionally, she carved a secondary career as a model, posing for photographer Robert Mapplethorpe as well as appearing in Calvin Klein ads.
Her first film with Burton was the biopic "Ed Wood" (1994), playing 50s horror show hostess Vampira (nee Maila Nurmi). Decked out in Vampira's trademark black fishtail gown and long wig, eyebrows winging off her forehead, Lisa Marie lurched elegantly through her role. She was even more attention-getting in Burton's "Mars Attacks!" (1996), as a silent and deadly Martian Girl, disguised as a Marilyn Monroe-like sexpot to gain access to the White House. Again, Lisa Marie teetered about in a clinging, skin-tight gown, this time topped by a huge blonde wig, ostensibly to cover her Martian brain. She subsequently acted in Burton's "Sleepy Hollow" (1999, as Ichobod Crane's mother) and "Planet of the Apes" (2001, as one of the simians).

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