General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWhat is your favorite A Christmas Carol - or - Scrooge movie?
Mine is the 1970 musical version Scrooge with Albert Finney. No others match up for me. The greed is still applicable today. But we need more scrooges waking up.
Plan to watch it tonight with maybe some Chinese food & a Baileys on the rocks.
Merry Christmas Eve Duers!
buzzycrumbhunger
(1,607 posts)The *only* one, IMHO, if fo no other reason than the scene where he yells out the window to a boy to bring him a butcher to send a turkey to Bob Cratchitt and later, his pretended craziness as he reveals his transformation to Cratchitt, who's just apologized for coming in a minute late.
boston bean
(36,850 posts)Easterncedar
(5,423 posts)His Christmas morning happiness scene makes me happy, too. Every time. Mrs. Dawber too!
buzzycrumbhunger
(1,607 posts)... in keeping with the situation..🙂
Easterncedar
(5,423 posts)I love the warm way he laughs, gets rueful and then gently presses the coin into her hand. I love how he shyly walks into his nephews party and then gamely and happily polkas.
All the period details, including the costumes, are gorgeous, too.
Sneederbunk
(17,212 posts)Easterncedar
(5,423 posts)ProfessorGAC
(75,695 posts)1951 movie.
In other versions, especially the 1939 version with Clive Owen, Scrooge becomes repentant far too soon.
This is the same reason I'm partial to Bill Murray's take in Scrooged.
More comedic, but it takes some serious shock to get his Frank Cross character too see the light.
buzzycrumbhunger
(1,607 posts)And Bill Murray would be tied for first here, as well. 💖
ProfessorGAC
(75,695 posts)...an American Christmas Carol. That made me find it on Xumo & am watching it now.
Love Henry Winkler in it.
Auggie
(32,820 posts)rampartd
(3,583 posts)boston bean
(36,850 posts)Unfortunately not showing for free anywhere. If one subscribes to peacock can catch it there at no additional cost.
johnnyplankton
(597 posts)boston bean
(36,850 posts)johnnyplankton
(597 posts)It's got a musical score by legendary Broadway composer Jule Styne (Gypsy, Funny Girl, and dozens more) and really conveys the storys central message
https://vimeo.com/376167170
boston bean
(36,850 posts)GoCubsGo
(34,637 posts)I like the modern, Bill Murray version. It's one of the few Christmas-themed movies I'll watch every year, if it's on.
boston bean
(36,850 posts)Only on streaming services it seems.
ProfessorGAC
(75,695 posts)Day before yesterday.
I don't do much streaming. We pay too much for cable to add other services.
ProfessorGAC
(75,695 posts)As I mentioned above. I like that and the 1951 version for pretty much the same reason.
Phoenix61
(18,684 posts)One of my favorite scenes is Thank ya very much, Thank ya very much , thats the nicest thing that anyones ever done for me
boston bean
(36,850 posts)PhilosopherKing
(414 posts)Fantastic!
Scrivener7
(58,151 posts)Carol story and weaves it into events in Dickens's life at the time. It was new to me and I liked it a lot.
mwmisses4289
(3,106 posts)Gonzo as Charles Dickens the narrator is quite a trip. It's just a good version of the story. Always makes me smile after I watch it.
Maeve
(43,328 posts)Altho "The Love is Gone" is sometimes fast forwarded thru...or used as a bathroom break
mobeau69
(12,208 posts)tavernier
(14,217 posts)Leo G Carroll as Marley, and the ever popular Tiny Tim announcing God Bless Us, Every One.
Hands down my favorite!
If you like Spooky, Jim Carey as Scrooge in the animated version is spine tingling.
I watched about five this season and even a very old one that was really bad that Id never seen before. Only got halfway through it.
Looking forward to seeing Johnny Depp as Ebeneezer.
Ms. Toad
(38,095 posts)You get a very different understanding performing than viewing (living with the stories 20-24 hours a week for 6-8 weeks). Between the two (we did Scrooge first), I would have said Scrooge. I hadn't seen it before performing, and there were less of slightly different takes on the story that I liked. But performing Christmas carol, I fell in love with that one, to.
I do like how Christmas Carol handles the ghosts better (especially the Ghost of Christmas Future) - I played that role in both. As a method actor, that role is juicier in Christmas Carol.
QED
(3,243 posts)It is set in the Depression era. I like this different version of the story with Winkler as Mr. Slade (Scrooge). Although he sounded a bit like Winkler, he looked nothing like the Fonz with the make up.
ProfessorGAC
(75,695 posts)I really like that take! Quite true to the original story but a very different time & place.
Now, I have to search my system to see if I can watch it.
See what you did?
Nixie
(17,936 posts)a solid second place. Were watching tomorrow since our Christmas Eve is so busy later.
There have been years where we binge all the versions but this year will pick only one. Its not Christmas without seeing this classic story at least once. Merry Christmas Eve!
SocialDemocrat61
(6,662 posts)#1 1938 version with 100%
#2 1984 version with 98%
#3 1951 version with 86%
#4 The Muppet Christmas Carol with 78%
#5 Scrooge with 74%
#6 Scrooged with 71%
bluestarone
(21,066 posts)Keepthesoulalive
(2,098 posts)Every Christmas it would play for a week on WOR and I was there every night for it also Mr Magoos Christmas Carol.
SheltieLover
(76,148 posts)A host of movies: Ernest Saves Christmas, Elf, Miracle on 34th St., Chrisymas Story... all of most folks' favs.
Merry Christmas, DU! 🤶🎄
mcar
(45,598 posts)Happy holidays to all!
ananda
(34,308 posts)I watch it every year.
betsuni
(28,644 posts)Probably a bad movie that I should be ashamed of watching, but I liked it.
GPV
(73,366 posts)Prairie_Seagull
(4,589 posts)This year the Reginald Owen 1938 version of "A Christmas Carol"
Scrooge seems a more changed man at the end of his visitations.