DISNEY'S A CHRISTMAS CAROL (2009)
Reviewed by Jerry Saravia
Charles Dickens' classic novel about the curmudgeon cheapskate known as Scrooge who on Christmas Eve is visited by three ghosts and then decides to change his future has been told on the screen innumerable times. The 1984 TV movie version with George C. Scott is possibly my favorite, right up there with the Alastair Sims version. I did enjoy the modern take with the Muppets that was light-on-its-feet with good humored shenanigans, which of course would be 1992's "Muppet Christmas Carol." The best adaptations have some sense of joy and magic to them, the notion that no matter how dark the bowels of Hell become during Scrooge's Danteseque journey to the past, present and future, everything will turn out okay. Not so with Robert Zemeckis's "Christmas Carol," a bitter, joyless and far too frenetic adaptation that is so remote in feeling it will leave you cold below 0 degrees, that is if you make it past the little cheer it gives by the end.I would doubt anyone is not aware of Dickens' most famous Victorian novel so I will not attend this review with plot particulars. Jim Carrey voices the old miser Scrooge and does an exquisite job, not to mention Gary Oldman as Bob Cratchit, Scrooge's most dedicated employee. The problem is not the performances but the overall tone and photo-realistic animated approach that makes one wish it were live-action and not rubbery animation. There is little room here for nuance - the film is an explosion of unsubtle fireworks, the likes of which we have not seen from Zemeckis since the middle part of his "Back to the Future" trilogy or "Who Framed Roger Rabbit." What worked in those films does not translate well here.
Though Scrooge is meant to go through a heart of darkness journey, it is the semi-comical moments of absurdity that threw me off. In one needlessly extended sequence, Scrooge is reduced to pint-size and tries to outrun a couple of demonic horses while almost getting stomped at Mrs. Dilber's house (Dilber being Scrooge's maid). There is some "Evil Dead" imagery here from "Army of Darkness" that is too cartoony for my tastes. The movie grows repetitious with endless flying sequences through the town of London, swerving in and out of streets, rooftops and lamps, and thus never engages us. Nothing here feels vaguely emotional or tangible - it is all too engineered, too robotic.
Two scenes truly stand out. I love the jolly nature of the Ghost of Christmas Present and his reveal of Ignorance and Want as two sickly children who look like they need an exorcism (the fact that the Ghost withers away like a skeleton was a pungent touch). I also felt more attuned to Cratchit's sad state of affairs with his sick child, Tiny Tim. The moment when Cratchit seems to be staring straight at Scrooge even though it is a moment of the future is very touching and felt true.
I did not hate Zemeckis's take on the oft-told tale but I did not take anything away from it either. It is laborious rather than enthralling, soulless rather than enchanting. Carrey gives a good melancholic kick to Scrooge but the whole film is far more despairing than it should have been. It needed more magic, more realism, and less of a video-game approach.






