Christmas
is a time of celebration, of getting together with relatives,
exchanging presents, and sitting down to a sumptuous holiday meal.
But for the cinephile, Christmas season also means movies - and lots
of them. As one who has seen more than his fair share of Christmas
movies over the years, I’ve compiled a list of my favorites. I
was at first tempted to title this “The Twelve Best Christmas
Movies,” but it’s patently absurd, not to mention preposterous,
to preach to fellow cinephiles what their favorite Christmas movies
should be. What I do ask of readers is to comment - tell us what your
favorite Christmas movies are and in what order. We’ll publish your
lists on the website.
National
Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation (WB, 1989): As
usual, inept, disaster-prone Clark Griswold (Chevy Chase) wants to
celebrate in the traditional way, even though his idea of celebration
is typically over-the-top. But his plans are ruined when his redneck
relatives, led by Cousin Eddie (Randy Quaid), decide to visit in this
oft-times hilarious movie. Clark seemingly can’t do anything
halfway. His Christmas lights blind the neighbors while sending the
city’s electrical meters into a spin. His idea of a family
Christmas tree is an oversized pine he cuts down in the forest and
had trouble getting into his house. And, of course, the grand finale
of disaster when Uncle Lewis (William Hickey) throws his lit cigar
down a sewage drain into which Cousin Eddie had earlier dumped his
port-a-potty sewage from his trailer. It explodes, sending a flaming
Santa and reindeer across the sky.
3
Godfathers (MGM, 1948): This poignant John Ford
film is not only one of my favorite Christmas movies, but it’s also
one of my favorite Westerns. John Wayne, Pedro Armendariz and Harry
Carey, Jr. are outlaws who just held up the bank at Welcome, Arizona.
Pursued by lawman Ward Bond, they are on the way to making their
escape when they come across a dying woman (Mildred Natwick) who has
just given birth. They promise her they will take care of the baby,
and what begins as a standard Western soon morphs into a beautiful
Christmas story, with the three bandits taking the place of the three
wise men carrying the Christ child through the desert to safety in a
town named Jerusalem. Though the religious parallels are there, Ford
never forces them, leaving it to the three outlaws, and us in the
audience, to discover them.
The
Bishop’s Wife (Goldwyn/RKO, 1947): Cary Grant
was never more debonair than as Dudley, an angel sent to help a
Bishop Henry Brougham (David Niven), who is too busy with fundraising
for a elaborate new cathedral to tend to his family, especially wife
Julia (Loretta Young). Henry is losing sight of his family and why he
became a churchman. Dudley is sent to remedy the situation, and not
necessarily in the way everyone would have preferred. Though everyone
loves Dudley, Henry begins to think that Dudley has come to replace
him, both at work and in his family’s affections. It was remade in
a fashion as The Preacher’s Wife (1996), with
Denzel Washington in Grant’s role.
A
Christmas Carol (MGM, 1938): Dickens MGM style,
with Reginald Owen as Scrooge, Gene Lockhart as Bob Cratchit, and
wife Kathleen Lockhart as Mrs. Cratchit. Look for daughter, June, as
one of the Cratchit children. Speaking of the children, one of the
main flaws in the film is that Tiny Tim is none too tiny, almost as
tall as Bob. Leo G. Carroll is the ghost of Jacob Marley, and Ann
Rutherford shines as the Spirit of Christmas Past. Lionel Barrymore
was originally penciled in a Scrooge, but illness forced him to
withdraw.
Remember
the Night (Paramount, 1940): Christmas, Preston
Sturges style. Sturges wrote the screenplay for this story of Lee
Leander (Barbara Stanwyck), a shoplifter arrested for the third time
and remanded to court. Prosecutor John Sargent (Fred
MacMurray) postpones the trial because it is hard to get a
conviction at Christmas time. However, because this would
necessitate Lee being in jail over the holiday, Sargent takes pity
and arranges her bail. His first move is to take her to her mother’s
for the holiday, but after witnessing the cold reception she gets, he
decides to take her to his family’s Christmas gathering. Surrounded
by a loving family, they fall in love, which in turn creates a new
problem: how do they handle the upcoming trial? It’s typical
Sturges, with periods of caustic comedy broken up with scenes of
sentimentality. Stanwyck and MacMurray are terrific in their roles
with great supporting work from Beulah Bondi, Elizabeth Patterson,
Sterling Holloway, and Paul Guilfoyle. As for Sturges, the film "had
quite a lot of schmaltz, a good dose of schmerz and
just enough schmutz to make it box office."
Un
Conte de Noel (A Christmas Tale,
Why Not Productions, 2008): To say the Vuillard family is
dysfunctional is putting it mildly. They hate each other, and are
only getting together this one Christmas because the family
matriarch, Junon (Catherine Deneuve) has a rare bone cancer and needs
a marrow donor. The matches for the marrow come down to her alcoholic
son and her mentally disturbed nephew, and after a day spent with
them, she’s wondering if it’s even worth going to the trouble of
asking one of them to donate. It’s not your usual Christmas movie,
but reflective of how most families really are during the holidays,
sniping at each other over long-simmering resentments, getting into
jealous arguments, and just plain acting obnoxiously. All of which
makes it a perfect Christmas movie.
Christmas
in Connecticut (WB, 1945): Given her wonderful
performances in dramas and noirs, it’s easy to overlook
Barbara Stanwyck as a comedienne. However she shines in this movie as
Elizabeth Lane, a popular food writer for “Smart Housekeeping”
magazine. In truth, she cannot boil water and gets her award-winning
recipes from her friend, chef Felix Bassenak (S.Z. Sakall). The
bucolic life she describes herself living on a farm in Connecticut
with husband and baby is also a fiction. She lives alone in an
apartment in New York City. Unfortunately for her, war hero Jefferson
Jones (Dennis Morgan) is also an avid fan of her column, and after
his harrowing life and death struggle at sea, he dreams of nothing
more than sampling her dishes at her farm. Her publisher, Alexander
Yardley (Sydney Greenstreet), not only thinks it would be great
publicity, but he has also invited himself along. Now Stanwyck has to
improvise a husband, baby, farm and cooking skills at the last minute
if she’s not to be exposed as a fraud. Only someone like Stanwyck
could take this paper-thin plot and make it into a hit. She pulls it
off brilliantly, knowing when to put forth and when to pull back on
the characterization, and interacting beautifully with her co-stars.
Stanwyck is the reason this is one of my Christmas favorites.
A
Christmas Carol (Renown Pictures, 1951):
Considered as the most definitive and faithful of the Dickens
adaptations, it also boasts the great Alastair Sim as Scrooge. Sim
plays Scrooge as Dickens envisioned him: a cruelly smug man who has
no remorse, no regrets, and feels zero guilt for his selfishness.
It’s when he is forced to see the consequences of his life’s
choices does he realize that the only way out is to wholly embrace
goodness. The scene with the ghost of his partner, Jacob Marley, is
particularly chilling, especially Marley’s indignation when Scrooge
calls him a good man of business. Marley screams “mankind was my
business!” and describes how the chain he “forged in life, link
by link” is choking and weighing him down in the afterlife,
following it by telling Scrooge his chain was just as long when
Marley passed and it has grown even longer. It’s the movie’s most
unforgettable scene and paves the way for Scrooge’s redemption, a
redemption he is led into kicking and screaming at times. It is
exactly the starkness of this version that places it heads and tails
above all other adaptations.
It’s
a Wonderful Life (Liberty, 1946): Frank Capra’s
take on Charles Dickens aims not at the redemption of Scrooge, for
greedy misers can never really be redeemed, but the redemption of Bob
Crachit. Jimmy Stewart is George Bailey, a man who had big dreams of
what he wanted to do with his life, but whom circumstances forced to
make do with the life he had. As a result, when his savings and loan
comes up $8,000 short due to his Uncle Billy’s forgetfulness,
George begins to despair of his life, feeling himself a failure and
pondering suicide. He stops to raise a prayer to God, who, upon
hearing George, sends Clarence, a most unusual angel, to the rescue.
George refuses to have anything to do with Clarence, thinking him a
loon, but when he mutters to Clarence that it would be better if he
were never born, Clarence takes the novel step of showing George what
life in Bedford Falls would be like if he was never born. In short,
it’s a first-rate horror show, as George learns how one person’s
life and sacrifices can affect so many, even if he is unaware of it.
Lionel Barrymore, as the greedy banker Potter, finally gets to play
the Scrooge role, though he’ll never reform. That’s Capra’s
message: Don’t wait for evil men to see the light, but take the
wheel yourselves and steer humanity towards a better destination.
Miracle
on 34th Street (20th Century
Fox, 1947): It would surprise many to know that the studio that made
this renowned Christmas classic, 20th Century Fox,
had so little faith in it they released it in May 1947 instead of
holding it for the holiday season. It mattered little to the throngs
that came out to see it, or the Academy, who awarded Edmund Gwenn the
Supporting Actor statue for playing Kris Kringle, which marks the
only time a actor has won an Oscar for playing Santa Claus. Gwenn is
superb as Kringle, who we first see as a man hired by feisty skeptic
Doris Walker (Maureen O’Hara) to be Santa in the Macy’s
Thanksgiving Day Parade after the original actor hired to be Santa
passed out drunk. Kris soon becomes the Macy’s Santa, eve though
Doris is somewhat nervous working with a man who claims he is Kris
Kringle. A misapprehension she makes turns into a head-on conflict
between Kris and the store’s cruelly incompetent psychologist and
results in Kris being committed to Bellevue. Lawyer Fred Gailey (John
Payne), who loves Doris, takes up his defense. The trial is the
highlight of the film, as Gailey argues Kris’s sanity before a
judge with higher political aspirations who’s afraid to make the
wrong move. When Gailey produces bags and bags of “Dear Santa”
letters forwarded to the courthouse by the Post Office and makes the
claim that Kris must be Santa Claus because the government recognizes
him as such, the judge is spared a difficult decision and frees Kris.
It’s a beautifully constructed film that never comes right out and
tells us Kris is the real Santa or that he’s not the real Santa.
And that’s why it works so well.
The Shop Around the
Corner (MGM, 1940): For sheer charm alone, this
film cannot be beaten. It’s the heartwarming story of two feuding
co-workers, Alfred Kralik (James Stewart) and Klara Novak (Margaret
Sullavan) in a Budapest gift shop who are unaware they are secret
romantic pen pals. Alfred, who is in love with Klara, learns that he
is the secret pen pal when she begins to quote his letters without
knowing their author. He would like to announce he is the object of
her affections but cannot confide it to her; he’s afraid of not
measuring up to the fiancée she has imagined him to be. Eventually
things come to a head on Christmas Eve, when Klara finally confides
to Alfred that she finds him attractive does he come forth as her
secret pen pal. Almost everything about this movie is pitch perfect,
from the direction by Ernst Lubitsch to the camerawork by William
Daniels to the supporting cast, which includes Frank Morgan, Felix
Bressart, Joseph Schildkraut, Sara Haden, and William Tracy. And, of
course, Stewart and Sullavan, who bring a sense of earnestness to an
otherwise frilly story.
A
Christmas Story (MGM,
1983): For me picking this film is a no-brainer because I grew up
with its author, Jean Shepherd. Spending my childhood in the New York
Metropolitan Area, I tuned into Shepherd’s radio show in WOR-AM
every night, and was familiar with the tales A
Christmas Story was
based on long before he published them in the collections In
God We Trust, All Others Pay Cash and Wanda
Hickey’s Night of Golden Memories.
He was a greatly underrated humorist; not until A
Christmas Story
came out was he mentioned in any anthology of American humor. But
there was no one else who understood the pulse of American life
better than Jean Shepherd. The plot of the movie is pure Shep: All
Ralphie Parker (Peter Billingsley) wants for Christmas is a Red Ryder
BB gun with all the accoutrements, just like the ones he saw in his
boys’ magazine. But whenever the subject comes up, all he hears
from adults is “you’ll shoot your eye out.” Ralphie looks for
any loophole to get his prize, and thinks he has it in going to see
Santa at Higbee’s department store. But when he blurts out his
heart’s wish to Santa, all he gets is a quizzical stare accompanied
by the phrase “you’ll shoot your eye out, kid.” But while other
writers must be satisfied to stop with the basic plot, Shepherd makes
razor-sharp observations on the Christmas season, especially as it
pertains to a kid: “Christmas
was on its way. Lovely, glorious, beautiful Christmas, about which
the entire kid year revolved.” No truer words were ever spoken.
What a fantastic and eclectic list. They're my favorites as well, but you could have mentioned a very young Natalie Wood shining as Ms. O'Hara's daughter in "Miracle....."
ReplyDeleteHappy Holidays. : ))
Thanks for the nice words Allen. So glad you liked the list. Yes, Natalie Wood is wonderful in Miracle.
DeleteOutstanding list. Love your guys' particular take on all the films you review. I was remembering that "Shop Around the Corner" was lovingly referenced in Nora Ephron's very competent "You've Got Mail." Happy Holidays!
ReplyDeleteEd certainly has a way with words. We truly appreciate the compliments. It's a very nice hat tip to "Shop Around the Corner" by Ephron. We hope you have a great holiday season as well!
DeleteDETEST A Christmas Story!
ReplyDeleteWhat about Heidi, White Christmas and Holiday Inn? I love those movies as well as the original Polyanna with Hayley Mills.
ReplyDelete