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#41 |
Blu-ray Prince
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I see the Patrick Stewart version as the best adaptation of the story.
The Jim Carrey CGI-animated one struck me as the most entertaining. The Alistair Sim version is the classiest. Last year, I saw a made-for-TV version 1954 version, which must be the most unintentionally hilarious version I know of. ![]() The musical with Albert Finney is my favorite musical version. The Bill Murray version is my favorite non-traditional adaptation of the story. Hope all that helps. ![]() |
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#43 |
Blu-ray Guru
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I was not a fan of the cgi Jim Carrey movie. They left out some scenes that are usually in the others. A Tiny Tim scene comes to mind, however I cannot recall the exact scene.
I prefer the Alistair Sim version and George C. Scott version, both are very classy and great acting. |
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#44 |
Expert Member
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I absolutely love Mickey's Christmas Carol. It just takes me right back to my childhood. My only complaint is that it's too short. If only it got to be a full-length film!
Another childhood favorite is the Jetson's Christmas Carol where Spacely plays Scrooge. |
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#48 |
Expert Member
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I'd have to go with the Patrick Stewart version. He owns the role.
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#50 |
Special Member
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What, no love for the Barbie animated version???!!!
![]() ![]() (I have three daughters). The Muppet version also gets a lot of play around my house. I've also heard good things about the Richard Williams' Animated TV Special, but have not seen it. This is a story that never gets old, you just see new things in it as your life advances. I was about 35 before I could identify with Scrooge the character. By the time I'm 80 I'll probably BE Scrooge ![]() |
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#54 |
Power Member
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Mickey's Christmas Carol was always my favorite as a kid. That same sentiment remains the same today, but now I can enoy watching it with my two children.
As far as Blu Ray is concerned, it has to be Jim Carrey's version. The cgi is simply incredible. If I ever do buy a 3D TV, this will most likely be the first movie that I watch. |
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#55 | ||
Blu-ray Guru
Feb 2011
London, UK
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I like most versions of this classic - especially The Muppets - but my favourite (perhaps because it was the first I saw) is this classic 1971 animated version by Richard Williams, in which Scrooge is also voiced by Alastair Sim. I'd love to see this get a proper release :
I'd also point you to the BBC version starring Michael Hordern, which is typically low budget but very atmospheric: Last edited by duggie walker; 12-02-2011 at 03:06 PM. |
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#58 |
Blu-ray Guru
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I actually thought the 2009 Zemeckis was a terrible adaption, half the movie was Scrooge running around aimlessly, way too much distracting slapstick even going as far as Scrooge surfboarding? (link please)
Ironically it is the most visually exciting, faithful and even powerful of it's adaptions, conveying much of Dicken's vision (like the end of Christmas Present's warning), and even including scenes largely forgotten in most adaptions (such as his uncle's backstory, he wasn't simply raised rich). How come it can convey such power, and imagination from the novel and become such a misguided, redundant mess? I have to say the Muppet Christmas Carol is my personal favorite, but It's not a terribly faithful adaption. |
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#60 | |
Banned
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In the scene with Marley, Stewart doesn't come off as the least bit scared of seeing a ghostly apparition in his room--which even George C. Scott managed to be--and talks down to Marley as if he's trying to talk a friend out of buying a car. ("Ja-cob, you were always a good man of business...") Robert Halmi Hallmark series can be either very good (like Gulliver or the Odyssey) or very bad (like Merlin), but never ever very deep, and most of the stuff that was sent to TNT Network was in the aggressively-mediocre middle. Stewart only co-x-produced the movie so he could cash in on his popular stage reading of the book, but reading Scrooge and playing him are two different things--As Dickensian misers go, he's more suited to iron-fisted Ralph Nickelby than Scrooge. |
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