Sally_Jack_Skellington_Nightmare_Before_Christmas
Image via Buena Vista Pictures

‘The Nightmare Before Christmas’ director hoping to team with Neil Gaiman for the perfect passion project

The director previously adapted Gaiman's work in 'Coraline'.

If there are two distinct slices of the entertainment world that you’d be laughed at for writing off, they would have to be Neil Gaiman adaptations, which recently hit another homerun in the form of The Sandman Netflix adaptation, and stop-motion animation, arguably among the most timeless mediums in the history of filmmaking.

Recommended Videos

Naturally, the idea of a stop-motion animated Gaiman adaptation would cause many a mouth to water, but none more so than Henry Selick (The Nightmare Before Christmas, Coraline), who hopes to nab Gaiman’s approval and cooperation for bringing one of the author’s works to haunting life.

The work in question is The Ocean at the End of the Lane, a dark fantasy novel published by Gaiman in 2013, which follows the plight of an unnamed protagonist who begins to remember the tumultuous, magical nuances of his childhood when he attends a funeral in his hometown.

Per Entertainment Weekly, a couple of years after the success of Selick’s 2009 stop-motion film Coraline (which was also a Gaiman adaptation) the director, then armed with an unfinished script for an adaptation of The Ocean at the End of the Lane, approached animation studio LAIKA, who was responsible for the creation of Coraline, about an adaptation for Gaiman’s 2013 novel. Evidently, the project never came to fruition.

And unfortunately, it’s hard to say if it ever will; film company Focus Features acquired the rights to an adaptation of The Ocean at the End of the Lane back in early 2013, with Tom Hanks attached to produce and Joe Wright (Black Mirror, Pride & Prejudice) set to direct. To this day, no further information surrounding the film, including the state of its rights, has come about.

Nevertheless, we’ll be crossing our fingers for Selick’s dream to come true down the line. In the meantime, fans can catch Selick’s latest stop-motion venture, the Jordan Peele-produced Wendell & Wild, in select cinemas before it lands in its permanent home on Netflix on Oct. 28.


We Got This Covered is supported by our audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn a small affiliate commission. Learn more
related content
Read Article AMC R2D2 Popcorn Bucket: Where to get the ‘Phantom Menace’ popcorn bucket
R2-D2 in Star Wars: A New Hope
Read Article Who is Paul Walter Hauser playing in ‘The Fantastic Four?’
Paul Walter Hauser attends The 2024 BAFTA Tea Party at The Maybourne Beverly Hills on January 13, 2024 in Beverly Hills, California./official The Fantastic Four artwork
Read Article Will there be a ‘Kingdom Hearts’ movie?
Read Article Review: ‘The Idea of You’ is Hollywood taking ‘Ella Enchanted’ and ‘Red, White, and Royal Blue?’ and saying ‘Why stop there?’
Anne Hathaway and Nicholas Galatzine in The Idea of You
3.5 stars
Read Article ‘Scary, gross, well made’: Stephen King knows exactly what you should watch after ‘Baby Reindeer’
Infested on Shudder
Related Content
Read Article AMC R2D2 Popcorn Bucket: Where to get the ‘Phantom Menace’ popcorn bucket
R2-D2 in Star Wars: A New Hope
Read Article Who is Paul Walter Hauser playing in ‘The Fantastic Four?’
Paul Walter Hauser attends The 2024 BAFTA Tea Party at The Maybourne Beverly Hills on January 13, 2024 in Beverly Hills, California./official The Fantastic Four artwork
Read Article Will there be a ‘Kingdom Hearts’ movie?
Read Article Review: ‘The Idea of You’ is Hollywood taking ‘Ella Enchanted’ and ‘Red, White, and Royal Blue?’ and saying ‘Why stop there?’
Anne Hathaway and Nicholas Galatzine in The Idea of You
3.5 stars
Read Article ‘Scary, gross, well made’: Stephen King knows exactly what you should watch after ‘Baby Reindeer’
Infested on Shudder
Author
Charlotte Simmons
Charlotte is a freelance writer for We Got This Covered, a graduate of St. Thomas University's English program, a fountain of film opinions, and probably the single biggest fan of Peter Jackson's 'King Kong.' Having written professionally since 2018, her work has also appeared in The Town Crier and The East.