Burton is the most overrated director of all fucking time.
Still, I will go see this Friday. There's a possibility it will be good. I mean, he's adding blood to the same tired fucking art style he's placed in the majority of all of his movies since Beetlejuice (Batman and Batman Returns included). Maybe that will spice things up, some red to the black and white world that Burton continually paints in his films and never really changes it up, knowing that it will bring in tons of money to pad his fat wallet from the scene/emo/gothic wannabe poser commercialites from the past 20 years. And when he doesn't paint this world, his movies fucking suck worse (Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Planet of the Apes, Mars Attacks), although Big Fish was at least halfway decent and I hear Ed Wood is worth watching. I just hope the blood isn't dark red so that it blends in with the black well.
Still, after seeing the musical numbers in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, I have a feeling that Sweeney Todd is going to fucking blow chunks that once resided in my ass, but left there after I took a massive shit after eating a bowl of chili mixed with about three days' worth of Taco Bell. I would like to be proved wrong, but that probably won't happen. Johnny Depp will continue to look like some type of gothic idiot, except this time, Helena Bonham Carter joins him, basically wearing her Marla Singer make-up from Fight Club.
Saying this, I'm not familiar with the musical. I hope it doesn't suffer from the fate of most musicals, which basically means "let's stop the entire plot progression in this film and sing a pointless song for about five or ten minutes and add dancing and shit to it in an attempt to be interesting" Movies like Moulin Rouge had shit happening during the songs. Movies like Across the Universe had shit happening during the songs. They were fucking part of the fucking plot, and they actually PROGRESSED THE STORY. Maybe Sweeney Todd will do this, and maybe someone can enlighten me on if the stage version does or not.
Please prove me wrong, Tim Burton. I doubt you will, but give it your best shot.