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      • Yes, this was the year of Independence Day, but a far more entertaining take on the alien-invasion genre was Tim Burton’s Mars Attacks!, a sadistically silly spoof that uses a cheesy ray gun to blow away the tropes of science-fiction past.
      www.larsenonfilm.com › mars-attacks
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  2. Dec 16, 2021 · Speaking to Inverse for an oral history of the film, Tim Burton says that the reaction to Mars Attacks! represents his own relationship with Hollywood. “I felt very misplaced at that time,...

    • Jake Kleinman
  3. I’ve never seen the Tim Burton spoof. I am going to do a review on it, but curious what people think of it? From what I can tell the graphics are terrible, but it has a TON of stars in it.

  4. Evoking the alarmist horror classic of the fifties, with their quaintly unsophisticated conception of advanced Alien culture, Mars Attacks! found its genesis in a series of bold trading cards once considered too racy for the marketplace. More than a simply a spoof on Independence Day, Mars Attacks!

  5. Dec 13, 2021 · Based on popular trading cards depicting Martians brutally murdering everyone on Earth, Mars Attacks! was a weird, subversive project in which human heads were reattached to dog bodies.

    • Does Tim Burton spoof 'Mars Attacks'?1
    • Does Tim Burton spoof 'Mars Attacks'?2
    • Does Tim Burton spoof 'Mars Attacks'?3
    • Does Tim Burton spoof 'Mars Attacks'?4
    • Does Tim Burton spoof 'Mars Attacks'?5
  6. Dec 13, 1996 · The difference is mainly in tone. “Mars Attacks!” is broadly - sometimes wildly - humorous, with aspects of Burton’s eccentric obsessions presented throughout.

  7. Tim Burton’s 1996 alien invasion spoof MARS ATTACKS plays in 35mm. A fleet of Martian spacecraft surrounds the world’s major cities and all of humanity waits to see if the extraterrestrial visitors have, as they claim, “come in peace.”

  8. Yes, this was the year of Independence Day, but a far more entertaining take on the alien-invasion genre was Tim Burton’s Mars Attacks!, a sadistically silly spoof that uses a cheesy ray gun to blow away the tropes of science-fiction past.