I loved it, too. I didn't even bother with the Disney live action remake with Tom Hanks. Del Toro's version was the Pinocchio adaptation I had long awaited for. Which is why I had such high hopes for this adaptation, too.^I loved Pinocchio. That was an amazing version of the story.
That's a fair and valid assessment. I fully admit my feelings for the film have probably been rather romanticized over the years (ironic, I know), especially since I haven't watched it again in a long time. I also know that this particularly kind of storytelling appeals to me (regards of my own feelings about horror in general), but I can understand why it wouldn't appeal to some people such as yourself.I've probably mentioned this before elsewhere, and I'm likely in the minority, but I did not care much for Pan's Labyrinth. I didn't even know much about it when I agreed to see it with a friend, and I wasn't familiar with Del Torro's movies at the time. I was very much unprepared for the kind of movie I'd be seeing. I'm not much into horror movies, and the blunt brutality of the movie really affected me. I felt misled by the trailers claiming a dark adult fairy tale, when instead I got a bloody war drama, with a girl who tried to escape the war drama by hiding within a fantasy that wasn't even kind to her. In the end, too much trauma, even within the fantasy world, and it all left me feeling rather numb when I left the theatre. In fact, I felt rather sick for days after seeing it.
So, to my eyes, it felt like a horror movie with a WWII setting.
Right...and I don't think del Toro quite hit the mark, at least in the way Shelley intended.Now mind you, I've always liked Frankenstein, because as Gothick Horror, it's more about exploration of character, in this case the exploration of what it means to be human.
