In the small New England town of Blithe Hollow, Massachusetts, a boy named Norman Babcock is able to speak with the dead, including his late grandmother and various ghosts in town. Unfortunately, almost no one among the living believes his ability is genuine and he is isolated emotionally from his family while being ridiculed and bullied by most of his peers for his seemingly strange abilities.
However, Norman makes a friend with Neil Downe, an eccentric overweight boy who is bullied himself and finds Norman's earnest admission as a medium an intriguing part of a kindred spirit. During rehearsal of a school play commemorating the town's witch execution of 300 years ago, Norman has a harrowing vision of the town's past and being pursued as a witch by the town's citizenry. Afterward, the boys are confronted by Norman's estranged and seemingly deranged uncle Mr. Prenderghast who tells his nephew that the vision is a sign that he soon must take up his regular ritual to protect the town.
Norman refuses to take him seriously, but soon has another vision during the school play, creating a public spectacle of himself which leads to his embarrassed father unjustly grounding him, before hurting his feelings by muttering that he never asked for his son to have this supposed awful gift. His mother tells him that his stern manner is because he is afraid for him, just as ominous storm clouds begin to brew. The next day, Norman is confronted by the ghost of the recently deceased Prenderghast in the restroom who tells him that the ritual must be performed with a special book before sundown that day, before departing for the afterlife. After some consideration, Norman sets off to Prenderghast's residence to retrieve the book. Believing that Neil would not truly understand his situation, he drives him away. He arrives at the graves of the town's ancestors/founders, including Judge Hopkins, who were supposedly cursed by the witch they condemned, but finds the book is merely a collection of fairy tales.
Before Norman can ponder the situation, Alvin, a bully who overheard Norman's encounter in the restroom, intrudes and interferes with the reading until after sundown. With that, a ghostly storm resembling the witch appears in the air while the cursed dead arise and pursue the boys until they meet Norman's sister, Courtney, Neil and his older brother, Mitch, who have come to retrieve Norman. Together, the kids are relentlessly pursued by the zombies into town, but Norman manages to contact a classmate named Salma, who tells them to access the Town Hall's archives for the location of the witch's unmarked grave.
As the kids make their way to the Town Hall, the zombies eventually lose them and find themselves confused by modern society and then are beset by the citizenry, who attack them en masse. During the riot, the kids break into the archives but cannot find any information they need. As the mob moves to attack Town Hall, Norman (in frustration) temporarily drives away his companions only for them to be trapped by the mob. However, the Witch storm appears and Norman climbs the Hall's tower to desperately attempt to read the book to stop her, but the witch blasts it with lightning and causes him to fall back down into the archives.
Unconscious, Norman has a dream where he learns that the witch was actually Agatha Prenderghast, an innocent little girl of his age who was also a medium, unjustly condemned by the town's superstitious and frightened elite, who were then cursed to reawaken as the undead by Agatha as she was taken for execution. After awakening, Norman encounters the zombies and realizes that all they wanted was to speak with him to ensure he would take up the ritual to minimize the harm of the terrible mistake they made with Agatha. However, Norman decides that this gesture is not enough and resolves to find Agatha's ghost to arrive at a permanent solution.
Norman attempts to help the zombies slip away to have them guide him to Agatha's grave, but are cornered by the mob. However, Courtney, who has come to realize her brother's true abilities, heroism and task, confronts the crowd and convinces them to back off. As the witch storm rages ever more destructively, Judge Hopkins guides Norman's family to the grave in a forest. Unfortunately, Agatha's magic separates Norman from the others and he must reach the grave on his own to save the town.
Norman finds the grave, and soon confronted by the vengeful spirit of Agatha, interacting with her in the spirit dimension. She tries to drive him away, but Norman resolutely holds his ground, telling her that he understands how she feels as an outcast. As she struggles to drive him away, Norman endures her assault and eventually convinces her that, despite her legitimate grievance, her thirst for vengeance is accomplishing nothing but inflicting more pain and persuades her to stop. Norman tries to convince her that even in the darkest times, there must have been someone who was kind to her. Focusing only on the tragedies and forgetting the good things in her life is what reduced her to a malevolent force devoid of her true identity.
Eventually, the girl, nicknamed Aggie, calms down at Norman's eloquence, recalling her true personality and happy memories with her mother. She is able to find a measure of peace, knowing that she is not alone and one person in the town understands her, allowing her to let go and move on to the afterlife. At that resolution, the storm dissipates, and she and the zombies all peacefully fade away. As day breaks, the town cleans up and regards Norman as a hero even when the outside media tries to explain the disturbance as merely a powerful storm. Norman, realizing that he, too, should stop focusing on his memories of being ostracized and pushing others away, accepts Neil's companionship. At the end, Norman watches a horror film with the ghost of his Grandmother, and his family eagerly joins him.
Cast
Production
| Director: | Chris Butler |
| Sam Fell | |
| Producer: | Travis Knight (producer) |
| Arianne Sutner (producer) | |
| Matthew Fried (associate producer) | |
| Writer: | Chris Butler (written by) |
Reviews for ParaNorman
Eric D. Snider
The young boy in “ParaNorman” suffers from what you might call “Sixth Sense” syndrome, which is the ability to see and communicate with dead people. There are plenty of dead people for him to encounter, too: he lives in New England...
Mark Reviews Movies
The poor kid has no choice but to continually think about death; he is quite literally surrounded by it. For you see, Norman Babcock (voice of Kodi Smit-McPhee), the haunted hero of ParaNorman, can see ghosts. Perhaps worse, he can have full...
Read review16 Aug 2012
St. Petersburg Times
ParaNorman is funnier than any of those works, mixing the macabre material with juvenile angst John Hughes might have dreamed up. Norman (voiced by Kodi Smit-McPhee) has typically befuddled parents and a belligerent teacher.
Read review16 Aug 2012
Aisle Seat
Do you like any of the following things: the films of George A. Romero, “The Walking Dead,” The Cabin in the Woods, The Ring, Coraline,, “Tales From the Crypt,” Shaun of the Dead, Scream or Grindhouse? If you do, you're going to love ParaNorman.
Houston Press
ParaNorman is Laika Entertainment's second big screen release (after 2009's Coraline) and feels nearly as accomplished as their debut. I never thought I'd be nostalgic for stop-motion animation (Sinbad represent!), but having sat through just about...
Read review17 Aug 2012
External Links
| paranorman.com | |
| www.paranormanmovie.co.uk | |
| IMDb.com, Inc.: | www.imdb.com/title/tt1623288/ |
| Box Office Mojo: | www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=paranorman.htm |
| Rotten Tomatoes: | www.rottentomatoes.com/m/paranorman/ |
| Metacritic: | www.metacritic.com/movie/paranorman |
| Wikipedia: | en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ParaNorman |
Articles
LAIKA’s awesome 3D stop-motion feature, ParaNorman opens this Friday. Directed by Chris Butler and Sam Fell, the film centers on a young boy who can see the dead and must use this gift to lift a curse that threatens his small town.
Steve 'Frosty' Weintraub - 2012-08-18
Reviews for ParaNorman
Eric D. Snider
The young boy in “ParaNorman” suffers from what you might call “Sixth Sense” syndrome, which is the ability to see and communicate with dead people. There are plenty of dead people for him to encounter, too: he lives in New England...
Mark Reviews Movies
The poor kid has no choice but to continually think about death; he is quite literally surrounded by it. For you see, Norman Babcock (voice of Kodi Smit-McPhee), the haunted hero of ParaNorman, can see ghosts. Perhaps worse, he can have full...
Read review16 Aug 2012
St. Petersburg Times
ParaNorman is funnier than any of those works, mixing the macabre material with juvenile angst John Hughes might have dreamed up. Norman (voiced by Kodi Smit-McPhee) has typically befuddled parents and a belligerent teacher.
Read review16 Aug 2012
Aisle Seat
Do you like any of the following things: the films of George A. Romero, “The Walking Dead,” The Cabin in the Woods, The Ring, Coraline,, “Tales From the Crypt,” Shaun of the Dead, Scream or Grindhouse? If you do, you're going to love ParaNorman.
Houston Press
ParaNorman is Laika Entertainment's second big screen release (after 2009's Coraline) and feels nearly as accomplished as their debut. I never thought I'd be nostalgic for stop-motion animation (Sinbad represent!), but having sat through just about...
Read review17 Aug 2012
JoBlo's Movie Emporium
It is not hard to imagine certain audience members not appreciating a movie like PARANORMAN. The stop motion animated feature is drenched in horror references and it even offers a few jokes that might not sit well with some parents.
Read review17 Aug 2012
Film.com
“ParaNorman” is a powerful piece of filmmaking, elegantly and perfectly tying together every element, from the stunning stop-motion animation to the spooky and original story line and beyond. When a film like this starts out strong, so often it can...
Read review15 Aug 2012
NorthShoreMovies.net
Although not for the very young or easily frightened, PARANORMAN is the surprise of this summer’s animation schedule. This tale of ghosts, zombies, witches and one young boy who can talk to them all is funny, engaging, and creatively animated.
Read review17 Aug 2012
7M Pictures
It will be no surprise to anyone who knows me, has read my reviews and is aware of my love of animation that I simply adored “ParaNorman.” I suppose I was pre-disposed to love this film, for no other reasons than the sum of its parts: animation...
Seattle Times
Much of the fun of the stop-motion animated comedy "ParaNorman" lies in the whimsical physical detail of its characters. Norman, the skinny 11-year-old at the center of the story, has ears like saucers and hair that stands up on end, as if he's been...
Read review16 Aug 2012
New York Post
If you were as underwhelmed by the last couple of Pixar features as I was, try the spectacular-looking “ParaNorman,’’ which marries Pixar’s formerly sophisticated storytelling style to the mordant wit of Tim Burton’s animated projects.
Read review16 Aug 2012
FirstShowing.net
You don't have to be a fan of the horror genre to enjoy ParaNorman, the newest, stop motion, animated film from Laika Entertainment, the studio that brought us Coraline. It helps, but the film combines such a unique blend of awe-inducing animation...
Read review17 Aug 2012
MediaMikes
“ParaNorman” is the latest film from Laika, the studio behind one of my favorite films “Coraline”. It is a 3D stop-motion animated adventure but may be too scary for the kids and not entertaining enough for the adults.
Read review12 Aug 2012
Orlando Weekly
For about an hour, ParaNorman is just about what one might expect and hope for from animation studio Laika: a gorgeous-looking stop-motion cartoon that operates somewhere at the intersection of Monster House and The Monster Squad, slyly harkening back...
Read review15 Aug 2012
madison.com
The stop-motion animated “ParaNorman” unfolds tragically: So much drawing for such an unworthy script.
Read review17 Aug 2012
Rolling Stone
Hey, it's not just Pixar that kicks ass in animation. Case in point: ParaNorman, a small miracle in stop-motion 3D from the wizards at Laika (Coraline). Part ghost story and part teen-misfit manifesto, the movie puts the focus on Norman...
Read review16 Aug 2012
One Guy's Opinion
The mediocrity of most of the animated movies that cascade into theatres in an apparently unstoppable flood is made abundantly clear by “ParaNorman,” a witty, heartfelt fable that cleverly employs horror movie conventions to convey a message about...
Mania.com
Imagine Tim Burton at his creative height (and without the terminal self-regard that corrupted his once welcome vision), and you have a pretty good idea of what ParaNorman is all about. It celebrates the gothic outsider in familiar fashion...
Read review17 Aug 2012
Crave Online
ParaNorman is one of those interesting films that’s so admirable you might just forget to criticize it. Make no mistake, Chris Butler and Sam Fell’s stop-motion fantasy is exactly the kind of movie we want for our children. Smart, funny, dramatic full of
Read review16 Aug 2012
Shadows on the Wall
ParaNorman Like Monster House, this animated feature taps into horror movie history to tell a story that's both genuinely creepy and a lot of fun. Terrific characters and some underlying emotion also bring out some strongly resonant themes.
Read review19 Aug 2012
Express.co.uk
FROM the makers of Coraline, ParaNorman is a child-friendly horror comedy made in stop-motion animation about an ostracized kid, Norman Babcock (Kodi Smit-McPhee) who can see ghosts.
Read review13 Sep 2012
View London
ParaNorman is beautifully animated with terrific voice work, likeable characters and some delightfully creepy moments, but the poorly conceived script means that it's neither as funny, as exciting or as emotionally engaging as it should have been.
Read review14 Sep 2012
QNetwork Entertainment
ParaNorman, a 3D stop-motion horror-comedy love letter to misunderstood outcasts, begins in hilariously meta-fashion, with a bad horror movie-within-the-movie that features an endlessly screaming young woman, a slowly lumbering zombie, and a pulsating...
MovieXclusive.com
A word of caution for parents with younger tots – ‘Paranorman’ might not go down too well for the faint of heart. But its deliberately mature-skewing approach is also the reason why this is one of the most unique animated movies we’ve seen this year...
doddleNEWS
Norman’s got a lot riding on his underdeveloped, 11-year-old shoulders in ParaNorman, the second 3D stop-motion animated feature from Laika. Following 2009′s Coraline – a strong success with both the critics and the box office...
Read review17 Aug 2012
Cole Smithey
Fans of Aardman’s handcrafted style of animation will find much to enjoy in this wonderfully stylized stop-motion comedy-horror-thriller about a little boy named Norman who sees dead people, or at least their ghosts.
Read review28 Aug 2012
Screen Jabber
The latest offering from the studio that brought us Coraline is another stop-motion animated project that not only parodies the horror genre, it re-enforces its power to an inexperienced generation. This is a kids' movie that doesn't talk down to its...
RedEye
Eleven-year-old Norman (voiced by Kodi Smit-McPhee) did not ask for the ability to see and communicate with ghosts. Why would he? This young horror film fan surely would have seen “The Sixth Sense” and known that Haley Joel Osment doesn’t exactly spend...
Read review16 Aug 2012
Slant Magazine
Recently, a recognizable trend has emerged in animated films wherein the gothic and the supernatural become a means for youth to realign with reality and the living. The story of Norman (Kodi Smit-McPhee), a young suburban pre-teen who can see and...
Read review12 Aug 2012
Fresno Bee
There's a tricky line when it comes to making scary animated movies. If they're cartoonish enough for young moviegoers to enjoy, then they tend to lack enough edge to satisfy older viewers. But if they're too scary, then they can give young moviegoers...
Read review16 Aug 2012
Las Vegas Weekly
Stop-motion animation is a tedious, time-consuming process, and the effort required to meticulously set up and move tiny models one frame at a time often lends the final result a feeling of handmade care.
Read review13 Aug 2012
The A.V. Club
Modern animated films often come in suspiciously similar batches that indicate studios are keeping a wise eye on the competition: Antz and A Bug’s Life were released in close proximity, as were Finding Nemo and Shark Tale, and Madagascar and The Wild.
Read review16 Aug 2012
Sacramento News & Review
A timid, bookish kid (voice by Kodi Smit-McPhee), bullied at school and punished at home because he talks to ghosts, tries to save his town from a witch’s curse dating back 300 years, his mission complicated by an invasion of zombies.
Read review30 Aug 2012
Washington Post
“I see dead people.” Thirteen years have passed (almost to the day) since young Haley Joel Osment whispered his confession to a stunned Bruce Willis in “The Sixth Sense,” sending chills down our collective spines.
Read review17 Aug 2012
CinemaBlend.com
With 2009's Coraline the team at Laika Studios established themselves not just as skilled new talents in the specialized realm of stop-motion animation, but expert detailers of the loneliness and bizarre imaginative twists of childhood.
Movies.com
Most people are frightened of what they don't understand. If they weren't then there'd be no bullying, discrimination or wars and we'd all be scientists, employing our natural curiosity to explore the unknown. Of course, stripping that rotten strand of...
MovieCrypt.com
Meet Norman, a skinny middle school kid that everyone thinks is a freak because he claims he can talk to the dead. In a New England town that celebrates but doesn’t believe in witches and zombies, the 300th anniversary of a Puritan witch trial sets the...
Read review18 Aug 2012
TheCinemaSource
This delightful kids’ movie will entertain the whole family. With a plot simple enough for the younglings to understand and plenty of jokes for the parents, everyone in the family should leave the theater entertained.
Entertainment Weekly
Norman (Kodi Smit-McPhee), a kid whose ability to see dead folks gives this zombie-lite animated feature its name, has fantastic built-for-3-D hair that sticks straight up as if in a permanent expression of fright.
Read review17 Aug 2012
ABC Radio (Australia)
Norman Babcock (voiced by Kodi Smith-McPhee) is an outsider who can see dead people and prefers the company of his grandmother's ghost to any of the living inhabitants of the small town he lives in.
Read review14 Jan 2013
Empire
Ingenious and wonderfully detailed, though better in its imaginative horror than its slightly too-broad comic knockabout. It’s not quite on the level of Coraline, but it’s proper summer fun with some dark delights.
Channel24
This spring apparently really is the season of the witch, as we've had our cinemas invaded by no less than three ghoulish animated films for kids, one right after the other. First we had the rather weak Hotel Transylvania that was noteworthy only for...
Read review13 Nov 2012
TotalFilm.com
Zombies are everywhere these days: shambling around in movies, TV shows, comics... hell, even your local shopping centre, thanks to the joys of zombie flashmobs. But while this is great for anyone over 18, there hasn’t really been much laid on...
Read review31 Aug 2012
Cast
![]() | Anna Kendrick | ... | Courtney Babcock (voice) |
![]() | Christopher Mintz-Plasse | ... | Alvin (voice) |
![]() | Kodi Smit-McPhee | ... | Norman Babcock (voice) |
![]() | Leslie Mann | ... | Sandra Babcock (voice) |
![]() | John Goodman | ... | Mr. Prenderghast (voice) |
![]() | Casey Affleck | ... | Mitch (voice) |
![]() | Jeff Garlin | ... | Perry Babcock (voice) |
![]() | Bernard Hill | ... | The Judge (voice) |
![]() | Tempestt Bledsoe | ... | Sheriff Hooper (voice) |
![]() | Elaine Stritch | ... | Grandma (voice) |
![]() | Tucker Albrizzi | ... | Neil (voice) |
![]() | Alex Borstein | ... | Mrs. Henscher (voice) |
![]() | Jack Blessing | ... | Slob Guy / Civil War Ghost (voice) |
| Hannah Noyes | ... | Salma (voice) | |
![]() | Jodelle Ferland | ... | Aggie (voice) |
![]() | Jeremy Shada | ... | Pug (voice) |
| Ranjani Brow | ... | Movie Lady (voice) | |
![]() | Michael Corbett | ... | Movie Zombie (voice) |
![]() | David Cowgill | ... | Greaser Ghost (voice) |
![]() | Emily Hahn | ... | Sweet Girl (voice) |
| Bridget Hoffman | ... | Crystal / Parachutist Ghost / Librarian (voice) | |
| Wendy Hoffman | ... | Gucci Lady (voice) | |
| Holly Klein | ... | Hair Dryer Ghost (voice) | |
![]() | Alicia Lagano | ... | Female Tourist (voice) |
![]() | Scott Menville | ... | Deputy Dwayne / Rapper Guy (voice) |
| Nick Petok | ... | Blithe Hollow Kid (voice) | |
![]() | Ariel Winter | ... | Blithe Hollow Kid (voice) |
| Steve Alterman | ... | Blithe Hollow Townperson (voice) | |
| Kirk Baily | ... | Blithe Hollow Townperson (voice) | |
![]() | Jacob Bertrand | ... | Blithe Hollow Townperson (voice) |
| Liz Bolton | ... | Blithe Hollow Townperson (voice) | |
| Ava Benavente | ... | Blithe Hollow Townperson (voice) | |
![]() | Cam Clarke | ... | Blithe Hollow Townperson (voice) |
| Lara Cody | ... | Blithe Hollow Townperson (voice) | |
| Caitlin Cutt | ... | Blithe Hollow Townperson (voice) | |
| Susan Dudeck | ... | Blithe Hollow Townperson (voice) | |
![]() | Denise Faye | ... | Blithe Hollow Townperson (voice) |
| Eddie Frierson | ... | Blithe Hollow Townperson (voice) | |
| Matthew Ford Holt | ... | Blithe Hollow Townperson (voice) | |
![]() | Rif Hutton | ... | Blithe Hollow Townperson (voice) |
| David Jolliff | ... | Blithe Hollow Townperson (voice) | |
![]() | Ashley Lambert | ... | Blithe Hollow Townperson (voice) |
| Donna Lynn Leavy | ... | Blithe Hollow Townperson (voice) | |
| Evan R. Mehta | ... | Blithe Hollow Townperson (voice) | |
| Edie Mirman | ... | Blithe Hollow Townperson (voice) | |
| Juan Pacheco | ... | Blithe Hollow Townperson (voice) | |
| Kelsey Rootenberg | ... | Blithe Hollow Townperson (voice) | |
| Joshua Stern | ... | Blithe Hollow Townperson (voice) | |
| David Zyler | ... | Blithe Hollow Townperson (voice) | |
![]() | Nicholas Guest | ... | Hippie Ghost / Mobster Ghost (voice) |
Production
| Director: | Chris Butler |
| Sam Fell | |
| Producer: | Travis Knight (producer) |
| Arianne Sutner (producer) | |
| Matthew Fried (associate producer) | |
| Writer: | Chris Butler (written by) |
| Composer: | Jon Brion |
| Cinematographer: | Tristan Oliver (director of photography) |
| Editing: | Christopher Murrie |
| Production Design: | Nelson Lowry |
| Art Director: | Phil Brotherton |
| Francesca Berlingieri Maxwell | |
| Costume Design: | Deborah Cook |
| Production Management: | Kate Crossley (post-production supervisor) |
| Jan Johnson (producer: end credis sequence) |
Companies
| Production Studio: | Laika Entertainment |
| Focus Features |
| United States | 17 Aug 2012 | |
| Canada | 17 Aug 2012 | |
| Belgium | 22 Aug 2012 | |
| France | 22 Aug 2012 | |
| Germany | 23 Aug 2012 | |
| Singapore | 30 Aug 2012 | |
| Brazil | 7 Sep 2012 | |
| Norway | 14 Sep 2012 | |
| United Kingdom | 14 Sep 2012 | |
| Denmark | 20 Sep 2012 | |
| Sweden | 21 Sep 2012 | |
| Turkey | 19 Oct 2012 | |
| Russian Federation | 23 Aug 2012 | |
| Romania | 31 Aug 2012 | |
| Portugal | 13 Sep 2012 | |
| Ireland | 14 Sep 2012 | |
| Mexico | 3 Aug 2012 | |
| Hong Kong | 16 Aug 2012 | |
| Slovenia | 30 Aug 2012 | |
| Finland | 7 Sep 2012 | |
| Greece | 13 Sep 2012 | |
| Australia | 10 Jan 2013 | |
| New Zealand | 17 Jan 2013 | |
| Iceland | 15 Aug 2012 | |
| Netherlands | 15 Aug 2012 | |
| Peru | 16 Aug 2012 | |
| Colombia | 17 Aug 2012 | |
| Taiwan | 17 Aug 2012 | |
| Vietnam | 17 Aug 2012 | |
| Chile | 30 Aug 2012 | |
| Philippines | 5 Sep 2012 | |
| Czech Republic | 6 Sep 2012 | |
| Estonia | 7 Sep 2012 | |
| Pakistan | 7 Sep 2012 | |
| Poland | 21 Sep 2012 | |
| Lithuania | 28 Sep 2012 | |
| Thailand | 4 Oct 2012 | |
| Italy | 11 Oct 2012 | |
| Spain | 21 Dec 2012 | |
| El Salvador | 14 Sep 2012 | |
| Argentina | 25 Oct 2012 | |
| Israel | 29 Nov 2012 | |
| Hungary | 10 Jan 2013 | |
| Japan | 29 Mar 2013 |
















































