Scrooge

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Scrooge - 1951 | 86 mins | Comedy, Drama | B&W

The Production Team

Director: Brian Desmond Hurst.
Producer: Brian Desmond Hurst.
Script: Noel Langley. (from the Charles Dickens novel A Christmas Carol)
Cinematography: C.M. Pennington-Richards.
Editing: Clive Donner.
Art Direction: Ralph W. Brinton.
Costume Design: Doris Lee and Constance Da Finna.
Make-up Department: Eric Carter and Betty Lee.
Sound Department: W.H. Lindop.
Original Music: Richard Addinsell.
Music Direction: Muir Mathieson.

The Cast

Alastair Sim - Ebenezer Scrooge
Kathleen Harrison - Mrs. Dilber
Mervyn Johns - Bob Cratchit
Hermione Baddeley - Mrs. Cratchit
Michael Hordern - Jacob Marley/ Marley's Ghost
George Cole - Scrooge (younger)
John Charlesworth - Peter Cratchit
Francis De Wolff - Spirit of Christmas Present
Rona Anderson - Alice
Miles Malleson - Old Joe
Ernest Thesiger - Undertaker
Hattie Jacques - Mrs. Fezziwig
Michael Dolan - Spirit of Christmas Past
Glyn Dearman - Tiny Tim
Roddy Hughes - Fezziwig
C. Konarski - Spirit of Christmas Future
Patrick Macnee - Young Jacob Marley
Jack Warner - Mr. Jorkins

Plot Synopsis

Since its publication in 1843, Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol has been adapted many times for the big screen, running the casting gamut from Reginald Owen to Bill Murray to Kermit the Frog. Brian Desmond Hurst's faithful adaptation is festive fare par excellence, and by far the best version committed to celluloid.

Superbly shot in chiaroscuro for full ghoulish effect, it tells the tale of the miserly Scrooge's transformation after visitations from the Spirits of Christmases Past, Present and Yet To Come. Check your cynicism in at the door and you'll find a supporting cast of well-loved characters, including Bob Cratchit (an excellent Mervyn Johns) and Tiny Tim, and with a smattering of carols all adding to the atmosphere of good cheer. The success of this interpretation, however, largely rests on the shoulders (and in the wonderfully doleful eyes) of Alastair Sim, whose wry performance gives us a fully three-dimensional Scrooge: a miserly yet pitiful character who extends beyond the normal caricature. When told that, "At this time of year, it is more than usually desirable that we should make some slight provision for the poor and destitute," Sim's ironic delivery of, "Why?" manages to invest humour into the most simple of one-liners, and sums up all that is great about his performance.

While some of the other performances have dated, Sim's haunted Scrooge stands the test of time, even today eliciting sympathy and - you just can't help yourself - joy at his transformation. Heart-warming in the extreme, this is extremely enjoyable; you'll come out humming Silent Night and that, surely, is what festive fodder is all about.