James and the Giant Peach (1996)

James and the Giant Peach (1996)
8 / 10

James and the Giant Peach is Henry Selick’s second feature and one of the strangest American family films of the 1990s. Tim Burton produced it. Selick directed it. The film adapts Roald Dahl’s 1961 children’s novel about an orphan who escapes his abusive aunts by climbing inside a magically enormous peach and floating across the Atlantic with a crew of human-sized talking insects. Paul Terry plays the live-action James in the bookend sequences. The stop-motion middle of the film features Susan Sarandon as Miss Spider, Simon Callow as Grasshopper, David Thewlis as Earthworm, Richard Dreyfuss as Centipede, and Jane Leeves as Ladybug. Joanna Lumley and Miriam Margolyes play the aunts.

The film made approximately twenty-eight million dollars on a thirty-eight million dollar budget. It was Selick’s follow-up to The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993) and was Disney’s attempt to repeat that film’s success. It did not repeat that success commercially but it has aged into a cult favorite, particularly among adults who grew up with the Dahl novel.

The Structural Conceit

The film opens in live action, transitions to stop-motion when James enters the peach, and returns briefly to live action at the end. The structure is the film’s most distinctive choice. Selick is signaling that the magical interior of the peach is a different kind of reality than the dull world James is escaping. The visual shift between formats is the actual transformation. The audience does not just hear that James’s life has changed. They see the format of the film change to match.

The decision is consistent with Dahl’s source novel, in which James’s escape is meant to be the discovery of a more vivid life than the one his aunts forced him into. The format shift makes the metaphor literal. The peach is not just safer than the aunts’ house. It is more real.

For Writers

A formal shift in a story can carry meaning that no plot beat can carry. The change from live-action to stop-motion in James and the Giant Peach is the film’s central statement. The audience does not need to be told that James has entered a different kind of life. The film’s medium changes around him. The lesson is that the form of a story is part of its content. If you can use the form to communicate something the words could not, the formal choice is doing the heaviest lifting.

The Stop-Motion

The peach interior sequences are the film’s strongest material. The insects are designed as full-bodied stop-motion characters with elaborate puppet work. Miss Spider’s articulated legs, Centipede’s segmented body, and Grasshopper’s wings are some of the most carefully rendered insect characters in any film of the era. The peach itself is a fully realized stop-motion set with rooms, corridors, and exterior surfaces.

The Atlantic crossing sequences include a shark attack, a storm, and an encounter with the cloud-dwelling Cloud-Men. The Cloud-Men sequence is the film’s most visually adventurous moment. Selick imagines the cloud-dwellers as faintly menacing rain-controlling spirits who hurl hailstones at the peach. The sequence is short and goes nowhere narratively, but the imagery is striking.

For Writers

An imaginative sequence can stand on its own merit even if it does not advance the plot. The Cloud-Men in James and the Giant Peach do not move the story forward in any meaningful way. The sequence exists because Dahl invented them and because Selick wanted to put them on screen. The audience accepts the sequence because the imaginative reward is high. The lesson is that not every scene needs to be a plot beat. Pure imagination has its own value if the execution is committed.

What Does Not Work

The songs are weak. Randy Newman wrote them. They are competent but not memorable. The film is structurally a musical and the songs do not earn their interruptions of the action. James’s emotional arc is also less developed than the Dahl novel allowed. The film does not have the runtime for the full development of James’s grief over his dead parents, his relationship with the insects, and his eventual escape from his aunts. Some emotional beats are signaled rather than earned.

The live-action bookend sequences are the weakest part of the film. Lumley and Margolyes as the aunts are appropriately grotesque but the live-action human James does not have the same magic as his stop-motion incarnation. The film knows it. The bookends are kept short.

For Writers

A weak song in a musical is more costly than a weak scene in a non-musical, because the song interrupts the action and demands the audience’s full attention. James and the Giant Peach has several songs that do not earn their stops. The lesson is that musical numbers are high-risk story beats. If the song does not advance plot, character, or theme, it should not be in the film. Songs that pause the story to sing about feelings are usually a sign that the script could not figure out how to convey the feelings through action.

Craft Note

Henry Selick directed. Tim Burton produced. Karey Kirkpatrick, Jonathan Roberts, and Steve Bloom wrote, adapted from Roald Dahl’s 1961 novel. Paul Terry as live-action James. Susan Sarandon voiced Miss Spider. Simon Callow voiced Grasshopper. David Thewlis voiced Earthworm. Richard Dreyfuss voiced Centipede. Jane Leeves voiced Ladybug. Joanna Lumley and Miriam Margolyes as Aunt Spiker and Aunt Sponge. Randy Newman composed the songs and score. Released April 1996. Approximately thirty-eight million dollar budget. Twenty-eight million worldwide gross. Skellington Productions produced the stop-motion sequences.

The Verdict

8/10. A visually inventive adaptation that does not entirely solve the structural challenges of Dahl’s source. The stop-motion peach sequences are excellent. The live-action bookends are functional. The songs are the weakest element. Watch it for the visuals and for the insect characters. Read the book first.


FAQ

Is it faithful to the book?

Reasonably. The major plot beats are present. Some incidents are compressed or modified. The peach’s destination at the end is faithful to the novel.

Did Tim Burton direct it?

No. Tim Burton produced. Henry Selick directed. Selick also directed The Nightmare Before Christmas and Coraline. The Burton-Selick confusion is common because Burton’s name was given prominent billing on both Nightmare and James.

Are the songs good?

Randy Newman’s score is competent. The songs are not memorable. Newman’s better musical work is elsewhere in his filmography.

How does it compare to other Henry Selick films?

Below The Nightmare Before Christmas and Coraline. James is Selick’s weakest of the three.

Is it appropriate for children?

Yes. The aunts are scary but not traumatic. The peach interior is enchanting. The shark sequence has some danger.

Who is Henry Selick?

American director specializing in stop-motion. The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993), James and the Giant Peach (1996), Coraline (2009), Wendell & Wild (2022) are his feature work.

Should I watch this?

Yes, especially if you grew up with the Dahl novel.

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