Guillermo del Toro is returning to The Criterion Collection, as his 2022 Oscar winner Pinocchio will be released on December 12th as spine #1201. What, no love for Robert Zemeckis’ version?
Here are the special features for The Criterion Collection’s upcoming release of Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio, which also comes complete with stunning cover art by James Jean:
Pinocchio is the fourth standalone Guillermo del Toro film to make The Criterion Collection after Cronos (#551), The Devil’s Backbone (#666, appropriately enough) and Pan’s Labyrinth (#838). Those three were packaged in the Trilogía de Guillermo del Toro box set, the Blu-ray of which is listed as out of print on Criterion’s website.
Here is the official write-up: “A classic tale is reborn through the inspired imagination of cinematic dream-weaver Guillermo del Toro, directing alongside Mark Gustafson. Realized through boundary-pushing, breathtakingly intricate stop-motion animation, this dark rendering of the fable of the puppet boy and his maker—which won the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature—daringly transfers the story to Fascist Italy, where the irrepressible Pinocchio gradually learns what it means to be human through his experiences of war, death, and sacrifice. Featuring the voices of Ewan McGregor, Cate Blanchett, Tilda Swinton, and Christoph Waltz, this Pinocchio imbues the oft-told tale with a bold new resonance about living with courage and compassion.”
The Criterion Collection is relatively light on animated films, but Pinocchio – which was one of the best-reviewed movies of last year– will be joining a strong group: Wes Anderson’s Fantastic Mr. Fox, Pixar’s WALL-E, sci-fi classic Fantastic Planet, adaptation Watership Down, and films by pioneer Karl Zeman. But considering del Toro has said he wants to focus exclusively on animation, he may help pad Criterion’s animation lineup even more.
Do you think Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio is a good fit for The Criterion Collection? Which other animated films should be included?