Development The genesis of
Edward Scissorhands came from a drawing by then-teenaged director Tim Burton, which reflected his feelings of isolation and being unable to communicate to people around him in suburban Burbank. The drawing depicted a thin, solemn man with long, sharp blades for fingers. Burton stated that he was often alone and had trouble retaining friendships. "I get the feeling people just got this urge to want to leave me alone for some reason, I don't know exactly why." During
pre-production of
Beetlejuice, Burton hired Caroline Thompson, then a young novelist, to write the
Edward Scissorhands screenplay as a
spec script. Burton was impressed with her short novel,
First Born, which was "about an
abortion that came back to life". Burton felt
First Born had the same psychological elements he wanted to showcase in
Edward Scissorhands. "Every detail was so important to Tim because it was so personal", Thompson remarked. She wrote
Scissorhands as a "
love poem" to Burton, stating "He is the most articulate person I know but I couldn't tell you a single complete sentence he has ever said". Shortly after Thompson's hiring, Burton began to develop
Edward Scissorhands at Warner Bros., with whom he worked on ''
Pee-wee's Big Adventure, Beetlejuice
, and Batman''. However, within a couple of months, Warner Bros. sold the
film rights to
20th Century Fox. Fox agreed to finance Thompson's screenplay while giving Burton complete creative control. At the time, the budget was projected to be around $8–9 million. When writing the storyline, Burton and Thompson were influenced by
Universal Horror films, such as
The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1923),
The Phantom of the Opera (1925),
Frankenstein (1931), and
Creature from the Black Lagoon (1954), as well as
King Kong (1933) and various
fairy tales. Burton originally wanted to make
Scissorhands as a
musical, feeling "it seemed big and operatic to me", but later dropped the idea.
Casting Although
Winona Ryder was the first cast member attached to the script, Fox was insistent on having Burton meet with
Tom Cruise. "He certainly wasn't my ideal, but I talked to him", Burton remembered. "He was interesting, but I think it worked out for the best. A lot of questions came up". Cruise asked for a "happier" ending.
Gary Oldman was on Burton's shortlist for the part, but he turned it down; Oldman didn't understand the script and found the story to be absurd, but understood it after watching "literally two minutes" of the completed film.
Jim Carrey was also considered for the role, while Thompson favored
John Cusack. although Burton did not converse with Jackson. Fox
studio executives were so worried about Edward's image, that they tried to keep pictures of Depp in full costume under wraps until release of the film. Burton approached Ryder for the role of Kim Boggs based on their positive working experience in
Beetlejuice.
Drew Barrymore previously auditioned for the role.
Crispin Glover auditioned for the role of Jim before
Anthony Michael Hall was cast. Filming
Edward Scissorhands created hundreds of (temporary) jobs and injected over $4 million into the Tampa Bay economy. Production then moved to a Fox Studios
sound stage in
Century City, California, where interiors of the mansion were filmed. To create Edward's scissor hands, Burton employed
Stan Winston, who would later design the
Penguin's
prosthetic makeup in
Batman Returns. Depp's wardrobe and
prosthetic makeup took one hour and 45 minutes to apply. The giant
topiaries that Edward creates in the film were made by wrapping metal skeletons in chicken wire, then weaving in thousands of small plastic plant sprigs.
Rick Heinrichs worked as one of the
art directors.
Music Edward Scissorhands is the fourth feature film collaboration between director
Tim Burton and composer
Danny Elfman. The orchestra consisted of 79 musicians. Elfman cites
Scissorhands as epitomizing his most personal and favorite work. In addition to Elfman's music, three
Tom Jones songs also appear: "
It's Not Unusual", "
Delilah" and "
With These Hands". "It's Not Unusual" would later be used in
Mars Attacks! (1996), another film of Burton's with music composed by Elfman. ==Themes==