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Friday, November 6, 2009
Hah! Humbug: The Muppet Christmas Carol with Michael Caine as Scrooge.

My reaction to "Disney's A Christmas Carol," the motion-capture animation released today, was that the Robert Zemeckis version of Charles Dickens evergreen was, "too much Halloween night and not enough Christmas morning." (Read my review here.) I scribbled in my notebook, "What would  Dickens think?"

Mr. Dickens is, of course, no longer with us. But his great-great grandson Gerald Dickens, 46, was happy to speak with Flickgrrl by phone from Oxford. (Not coincidentally, the actor will be touring the U.S. with his one-man show of A Christmas Carol next month and will bring it to Byers' Choice in Bucks County on December 11 and 12.) Dickens has yet to see the Zemeckis version, but among the many movie versions of Carol, he's fond of "the classic Alastair Sim version" (1951, by Brian Desmond-Hurst), because "it has the joyousness and captures the point that nasty Scrooge must get terrified and change his ways."

"I also enjoyed the George C. Scott version, with Scrooge as a big brash businessman of the sort you might see on Wall Street rather than this weaselly sort," Dickens  reflects. He has no thoughts about the 1988 Bill Murray update, Scrooged.

"But when it comes right down to it, you can't beat The Muppet Christmas Carol (1992), can you?," asks Dickens rhetorically. He thinks that if his ancestor were alive, it would probably be his favorite, too. "He was fond of color and splash."

Your favorite? While I like the 1951 verson and also the 1970Albert Finney musical Scrooge, I think the most effective cinematic Carol is the free adaptation: It's a Wonderful Life. You?

 

Posted by Carrie Rickey @ 2:35 PM  Permalink | 3 comments
Comments   
Posted 03:49 PM, 11/06/2009
xi_lives
"What Would Dickens Say About "Disney's Christmas Carol"? "....Most likely, 'how did they get those people up on that wall'?
Posted 06:20 PM, 11/06/2009
wwolfe
I'm a fan of "Scrooged," since its name was mentioned. Murray's willingness to lay it on the line emotionally in his big scene at the end works for me, and was a brave going-against-the-current of its time, the greed-is-good 1980s. (Plus, Michael Pollard, Carol Kane, and David Johansson are wonderfully apt American equivalents of the Dickensian love of juicy peripheral characters.) However, my favorite will always be the version starring Mr. Magoo that was made for TV in the 1960s. The animation, and Jim Backus's vocal performance as Scrooge, seemed to capture the spirit of the Dickens' original better than any other version I've seen. Plus, the Ghost in the black cowl (either Present or Future, I can't remember) scared the bejeezus out of the very young me.
Posted 06:41 PM, 11/06/2009
edwardcopeland
It's always the 1951 version with Alastair Sim that is the definitive version because there is no better Scrooge than Sim.
3 comments
About Carrie Rickey

Carrie Rickey has been The Philadelphia Inquirer’s film critic for 21 years. She has reviewed films as diverse as Water and The Waterboy, profiled celebrities from Lillian Gish to Will Smith, and reported on technological breakthroughs from the video revolution to the rise of movies on demand. Her reviews are syndicated nationwide and she is a regular contributor to Entertainment Weekly. Rickey’s essays appear in numerous anthologies, including The Rolling Stone History of Rock & Roll, The American Century, and the Library of America’s American Movie Critics.

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All blog items posted before May 23, 2008, can be accessed at http://blogs.phillynews.com/inquirer/flickgrrl/.