A Christmas Carol

A Christmas Carol (2009


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Overview

User Rating:
7.2/10   5,288 votes
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Down 36% in popularity this week. See why on IMDbPro.
Director:
Writers:
Charles Dickens (novel)
Robert Zemeckis (screenplay)
Contact:
View company contact information for A Christmas Carol on IMDbPro.
Release Date:
6 November 2009 (USA) more
Plot:
An animated retelling of Charles Dickens' classic novel about a Victorian-era miser taken on a journey of self-redemption, courtesy of several mysterious Christmas apparitions. full summary | full synopsis

NewsDesk:
(686 articles)
TV Recap: ‘Flash Forward: A561984′
 (From The Flickcast. 4 December 2009, 1:15 PM, PST)

Crowded Weekend At Box Office
 (From Studio Briefing - Film News. 4 December 2009, 11:22 AM, PST)

User Comments:
Both children and adults will gain more from this experience than most family films. more (120 total)

Cast

  (Cast overview, first billed only)

Jim Carrey
...
Scrooge / Ghost of Christmas Past / Scrooge as a Young Boy / Scrooge as a Teenage Boy / Scrooge as a Young Man / Scrooge as a Middle-Aged Man / Ghost of Christmas Present / Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come

Steve Valentine
...
Funerary Undertaker / Topper

Daryl Sabara
...
Undertaker's Apprentice / Tattered Caroler / Beggar Boy / Peter Cratchit / Well-Dressed Caroler

Sage Ryan
...
Tattered Caroler

Amber Gainey Meade
...
Tattered Caroler / Well-Dressed Caroler

Ryan Ochoa
...
Tattered Caroler / Beggar Boy / Young Cratchit Boy / Ignorance Boy / Young Boy with Sleigh / Tiny Tim

Bobbi Page
...
Tattered Caroler / Well-Dressed Caroler

Ron Bottitta
...
Tattered Caroler / Well-Dressed Caroler

Sammi Hanratty
...
Beggar Boy / Young Cratchit Girl / Want Girl

Julian Holloway
...
Fat Cook / Portly Gentleman #2 / Business Man #3

Gary Oldman
...
Bob Cratchit / Marley / Tiny Tim

Colin Firth
...
Fred

Cary Elwes
...
Portly Gentleman #1 / Dick Wilkins / Mad Fiddler / Guest #2 / Business Man #1

Robin Wright Penn
...
Fan / Belle

Bob Hoskins
...
Mr. Fezziwig / Old Joe
more
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Additional Details

Also Known As:
A Christmas Carol: An IMAX 3D Experience (USA) (IMAX version)
Disney's A Christmas Carol (USA) (complete title)
more
MPAA:
Rated PG for scary sequences and images.
Runtime:
96 min
Country:
Language:
Color:
Aspect Ratio:
1.44 : 1 more
Sound Mix:

Fun Stuff

Trivia:
In the Cratchit home, there is a portrait of the story's author, Charles Dickens, hanging by the fireplace. more
Goofs:
Anachronisms: Scenes showing London from the air incorporate numerous anachronistic features, including the Millennium Footbridge (opened 2000), the reconstructed Globe Theatre (opened 1997) and Southwark Bridge (opened 1921). more
Quotes:
[from trailer]
[soaring through the air past the moon]
Ebenezer Scrooge: Oh, my!
more
Movie Connections:
isney's A Christmas Carol (PG)
Ebert:     Users:     You: Rate this movie right now    


Disney's A Christmas Carol

BY ROGER EBERT / November 5, 2009


Cast & Credits
With the voices of:
Scrooge/Ghosts Jim Carrey
Cratchit/Marley/ Tiny Tim Gary Oldman
Fred Colin Firth
Fezziwig/Joe Bob Hoskins
Fan/Belle Robin Wright Penn
Wilkins/Fiddler Cary Elwes
Mrs. Dilber Fionnula Flanagan

Walt Disney presents a film written and directed by Robert Zemeckis. Based on the story by Charles Dickens. Running time: 95 minutes. Rated PG (for scary sequences and images).

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"Disney's A Christmas Carol" by Robert Zemeckis (and Charles Dickens, of course) is an exhilarating visual experience and proves for the third time he's one of the few directors who knows what he's doing with 3-D. The story that Dickens wrote in 1838 remains timeless, and if it's supercharged here with Scrooge swooping the London streets as freely as Superman, well, once you let ghosts into a movie, there's room for anything.
The story I will not repeat for you. The Ghosts of Christmas Past, Present and Future will not come as news. I'd rather dwell on the look of the film, which is true to the spirit of Dickens (in some moods) as he cheerfully exaggerates. He usually starts with plucky young heroes or heroines and surrounds them with a gallery of characters and caricatures. Here his protagonist is the caricature: Ebenezer Scrooge, never thinner, never more stooped, never more bitter.

Jim Carrey is in there somewhere beneath the performance-capture animation; you can recognize his expressive mouth, but in general the Zemeckis characters don't resemble their originals overmuch. In his "The Polar Express," you were sure that was Tom Hanks, but here you're not equally sure of Gary Oldman, Tim Roth, Robin Wright Penn or Bob Hoskins.

Zemeckis places these characters in a London that twists and stretches its setting to reflect the macabre mood. Consider Scrooge's living room, as narrow and tall just as he is. The home of his nephew Fred, by contrast, is as wide and warm as Fred's personality.

Animation provides the freedom to show just about anything, and Zemeckis uses it. Occasionally, he even seems to be evoking the ghost of Salvador Dali, as in a striking sequence where all the furniture disappears and a towering grandfather clock looms over Scrooge and a floor slanting into a distant perspective.

The three starring ghosts are also spectacular grotesques. I like the first, an elfin figure with a head constantly afire and a hat shaped like a candle-snuffer. Sometimes he playfully shakes his flames like a kid tossing the hair out of his eyes. After another (ahem) ghost flies out the window, Scrooge runs over to see the whole street filled with floating spectral figures, each one chained to a heavy block, like so many Chicago mobsters sleeping with the fishes.

Can you talk about performances in characters so much assembled by committee? You can discuss the voices, and Carrey works overtime as not only Scrooge but all three of the Christmas ghosts. Gary Oldman voices Bob Cratchit, Marley and Tiny Tim.

I remain unconvinced that 3-D represents the future of the movies, but it tells you something that Zemeckis' three 3-D features (also including "Beowulf") have wrestled from me 11 of a possible 12 stars.

I like the way that Zemeckis does it. He seems to have a more sure touch than many other directors, using 3-D instead of being used by it. If the foreground is occupied by close objects, they're usually looming inward, not out over our heads. Note the foreground wall-mounted bells that we look past when Scrooge, far below, enters his home; as one and then another slowly starts to move, it's a nice little touch.

Another one: The score by Alan Silvestri sneaks in some traditional Christmas carols, but you have to listen for such as "God Rest Ye Merry, Gentlemen" when its distinctive cadences turn sinister during a perilous flight through London.

So should you take the kiddies? Hmmm. I'm not so sure. When I was small, this movie would have scared the living ectoplasm out of me. Today's kids have seen more and are tougher. Anyway, "A Christmas Carol" has the one quality parents hope for in a family movie: It's entertaining for adults.




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