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Disney's A Christmas Carol 3D
Miserly Ebenezer Scrooge (Jim Carrey) must face uncomfortable truths when three Christmas spirits take him on a journey through his past, present and future.
| Release Date: | |
| Run Time: | 1 hour and 35 minutes |
| Actors: |
Jim Carrey (Voice of Ebenezer Scrooge/Ghost of Christmas Past/Ghost of Christmas Present/Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come) Robin Wright Penn (Voice of Belle/Fan) Gary Oldman (Voice of Bob Cratchit/Marley/Tiny Tim) Colin Firth (Voice of Fred) Bob Hoskins (Voice of Fezziwig/Old Joe) Cary Elwes (Voice of Portly Gentleman 1/Dick Wilkins/Mad Fiddler/Guest 2/Businessman 1/) Fionnula Flanagan (Voice of Mrs. Dilber) Lesley Manville (Voice of Mrs. Cratchit) Fay Masterson (Voice of Caroline/Martha Cratchit) Callum Blue (Voice of Caroline's Husband) Raymond Ochoa (Voice of Caroline's Child) Daryl Sabara (Voice of Peter Cratchit/Undertaker's Apprentice/Caroler/Beggar Boy) Jacquie Barnbrook (Voice of Mrs. Fezziwig) Molly Quinn (Voice of Belinda Cratchit) |
Genre(s): Fantasy
Animated
Holiday
Distributor(s): Walt Disney
Visit the web site for: Disney's A Christmas Carol 3D
FILM REVIEW: DISNEY'S A CHRISTMAS CAROL
By Michael Phillips
Tribune Newspapers Critic
2-1/2 stars
Robert Zemeckis has long been a filmmaker divided against himself, the techno-geek warring with the storyteller. His newest work, "Disney's A Christmas Carol" (Charles Dickens - demoted!), is an extravaganza of colliding intentions. But just when you give up on it, usually in the middle of its latest, extraneous, gyroscoping thrill-ride sequence, Zemeckis reminds you that he's capable of true visual dynamism, enhanced but not wholly dictated by the digital landscape he so clearly adores.
Plus, Jim Carrey is good as Scrooge. There's surprisingly little shtick in his performance. (He plays all the key ghosts as well, and Scrooge at various stages of his younger life.)
I'm all over the place regarding this all-over-the-place project, though I prefer it to Zemeckis' previous motion-capture animated features, "The Polar Express" (2004) and "Beowulf" (2007). Those really gave me the willies. Why did Anthony Hopkins have a digital beard in "Beowulf"? I still wake up screaming over that one. I can't spend all that time in the uncanny valley between doll-like inhumanity and approximations of humanity without starting to sweat.
With "A Christmas Carol," at least, Zemeckis has hold of a story that flies around and flits through time, so the whiz-bang aerial swoops over 1840s London aren't entirely jarring. In many ways Zemeckis' adaptation stays true to its source. The best scenes are the quietest: Early on, as we follow Scrooge through his petty, venal paces, Carrey (digitally outfitted with a chin and a nose of roughly equal length) plays the character's meanness and solitude for keeps. It's a thoughtful and honest performance, which is a strange thing to say about a film so hung up on visual fakery.
The actors do their thing, and then Zemeckis and his fellow lab technicians take over. Gary Oldman provides the raw performance fodder for Bob Cratchit (who, as digitally manipulated, resembles Joe E. Brown) as well as Tiny Tim. Bob Hoskins turns up as Mr. Fezziwig, among others. Zemeckis has made strides since "The Polar Express" in terms of facial expressivity. And yet I remain cold to the motion-capture genre. Or rather, it remains cold to me. I always feel like the eyes aren't right, the foreheads are too Botoxed and the teeth were stolen from George Washington.
Here's what I wish Zemeckis would do: I wish he would explore a variation on motion-capture technology that takes us out of the uncanny valley and into more daring, less realistic imaginings. The most fluid individual passages in "A Christmas Carol" - not the flashy stuff, but the simple, street-level moments - reveal a director who knows how to keep his roving, restless camera eye on the right story details. Half the time he seems to be thinking ahead to the next step in the movie's commercial afterlife, i.e., the inevitable Disneyland and Disney World attractions. The other half of the time, he's doing what he's supposed to be doing as a cinematic storyteller. And even if you don't personally respond to the style, you admire the dogged craftsman behind it.
MPAA rating: PG (for scary sequences and images).
Running time: 1:36.
Cast: Jim Carrey (Ebenezer Scrooge/Ghosts of Christmas Past, Present and Yet to Come); Gary Oldman (Bob Cratchit/Tiny Tim/Young Marley/Marley's Ghost); Colin Firth (Fred); Robin Wright Penn (Belle/Fan); Bob Hoskins (Old Fezziwig/Old Joe); Cary Elwes (Dick Wilkins/Mad Fiddler, et al.).
Credits: Directed by Robert Zemeckis; written by Zemeckis, based on the novella by Charles Dickens; produced by Steve Starkey, Zemeckis and Jack Rapke. A Walt Disney Pictures release.

(L-R) Ghost of Christmas Present and Ebenezer Scrooge (voice of Jim Carrey) in "Disney's A Christmas Carol."

(Right) Ebenezer Scrooge (voice of Jim Carrey) observes Bob Cratchit (Gary Oldman) and family in "Disney's A Christmas Carol."

(L-R) Ebenezer Scrooge (voice of Jim Carrey) and Tiny Tim (voice of Gary Oldman) in "Disney's A Christmas Carol."

(L-R) Belle (voice of Robin Wright Penn), old Ebenezer Scrooge and young Ebenezer Scrooge (voice of Jim Carrey) in "Disney's A Christmas Carol."

(L-R) Producer Jack Rapke and writer-director-producer Robert Zemeckis on the set of "Disney's A Christmas Carol."
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