Friday, January 01, 2010

"THE CHRISTMAS CAROL": TWO VERSIONS

I got an interesting Christmas present in my stocking this year: The 1935 Seymour Hicks version of Dickens' "Christmas Carol." What a treat! It's not a good film, and Hicks is a terrible Scrooge,  but seeing what this film did wrong made me realize what the 1951 Alister Sims version did right, so I was glad to have gotten it. If you're curious to see what I'm talking about, then read on.


For me the fascinating thing about the Hicks version (called "Scrooge") is that the mistakes it makes are ones I might have made myself if I'd directed it. It's like seeing someone fall down a manhole when they stepped into the very place I was going to step.  But those mistakes aren't evident at the start. The film begins just fine with grand and ominous music which turns into "Hark the Herald Angels Sing." Well, you can't argue with that. So far, so good.

Then we establish old London with a shot of the rooftops at night. No narration. The grand orchestral version of "Hark" is replaced with a cheesier version done by street musicians, and that motivates a pan down to Scrooge's office. A natural sequence of events you say but...uhoh...I'm already feeling antsy. Something's gone amiss. But what? The move seems logical enough.


Inside Scrooge's office we slowly dolly up to his back. The filmmaker wants to tease us with a back shot that doesn't reveal yet...a standard trick...but it's not working! Geez, I'm getting itchy, just thinking about it. Something is terribly wrong!


The camera slowly swings around and shows us Cratchit at his desk, struggling to keep warm. In the minutes that follow he tries to sneak some coal into the stove and Scrooge finally turns and yells at him. Once again we have what seems like a natural sequence of events...so why is it so screamingly wrong!?

I could go on like this, but instead I'll ask a question: the filmmaker obviously believes the relationship between Scrooge and Cratchit is the central conflict in the film. Do you agree?


And another quetion: Seymour Hicks serves up a Scrooge who's an elderly, one-dimensional miser. Is that really what Dickens had in mind? [Jenny Lerew makes an interesting answer in the comments to the previous post.]


I infinitely prefer the 1951 Alister Sims version, which in America is known as "The Christmas Carol." It begins with a page from Dickens' book (above) and this time there's a narrator. He says, "Old Marley was dead as a doornail. This must be distinctly understood, or nothing meaningful can come of the story I'm going to relate."

That's a marvelously playful beginning! The beautiful words inform us that this is a story which will be constructed with bricks of virtuoso dialogue and showmanship. The Hicks film attempted to make a conventional drama out of the story. Big mistake! Christmas Carol is a drama alright, but it's also a performance piece, a platform for unforgetable images and wit, a poetic edifice, a vehicle for word music. it's more than drama. All my favorite stories are like that, including cartoon stories.


Inside the stock exchange (above0 Scrooge walks up to camera as the narrator explains that "The register of Marley's burial was signed by Scrooge, and Scrooge's name was good on the Exchange for anything he chose to put his hand to." That's a beautiful sentence, isn't it? Anyway, he's stopped by two business men who inquire if he's leaving early because it's Christmas Eve. Scrooge responds with wonderful "humbug"-type dialogue and storms out.

I like the idea of beginning the story in a social setting, and especially one as formal and institutional as the stock exchange. The setting makes fills us with wonder that mankind can organize itself to accomplish great things, and yet still be moved to celebrate deeply sentimental holidays like Christmas.

The scene also introduces us to Scrooge, who far from being a rigid old miser, is a witty warrior ready to do battle with the sea of idiots he believes surround him. And I like the fact that Sims is a young man playing an old man. The role demands an actor who can plausibly seem to possess boundless energy if only he'd remove the obstacles that confine it.


Outside (above), Scrooge is acousted by a guy who begs more time to pay his debts. If Scrooge won't give him an extention he and his wife will have to go to debtor's prison.  The back and forth is so skillfully and musically done, and Scrooge's "humbug" dialogue is so funny, that the scene is easily elevated into a set piece. Arguably the scene inside the exchange was a near set piece, too. Dickens loves his set pieces. The film has barely started and we've already had two...but hold your hat! Another one is on the way, the best one in the whole film.


I refer of course to the one where the two public-spirited men hit up Scrooge for a donation for the poor. It's the most memorable thing in the film. Don't ever let anybody tell you that best scenes should be saved for the later part of a story. Set-ups are almost always the most important part of a story, and best scenes are used to greatest advantage there.

There's more to say, but I guess that's all there's room for. Soon I'll put up the Theory Corner Store where I'll sell pamphlets covering subjects like this in more detail than I'm able to do here.  The price will be low enough that you'll be to afford it even if you're living in a cardboard box, and have to read with a flashlight.





BTW: My friend Byron Vaughns is selling off part his comic collection. He tells me he's parting with his vintage HAHA and GIGGLE comics, some for as low as 5 bucks. I haven't seen them, but these titles are highly regarded by animation artists. Check out the list on his site:

http://www.byronvaughns.com/comic_book_sales.html

13 comments:

Steven M. said...

Wow. I never thought there was TWO versions of The Christmas Carol, though if I saw Hicks version I would assume it as a crappy rip-off, which it is.

A very intersting find, Eddie.

(also, Happy New Year!)

buzz said...

I'm guessing the first version failed because we didn't care about Scrooge. Malcolm McDowell, when cast as Caligula, was advised by Peter O'Toole to always play the character as if he were enjoying himself; audiences find this fascinating while if he didn't look like he was having a good time in his villainy he would be repellent. I think you've hit the nail on the head re Sims' version having some fire and life, a miser, yes, but not miserable.

Lester Hunt said...

Wow, nobody does a movie commentary like Eddie. He knows what makes a story crackle and hum.

I was especially intrigued by the statement that the best set pieces should come near the beginning, not at the end. That's the opposite of what I had thought, but now that I think about it, I bet Eddie is right.

I think that is arguably how the music in the most successful operas works. Of the three acts in a Wagner opera, the most uniformly interesting music is always in the first one. By the first act curtain, ol' Richard has got you by the short ones: you'd sit through anything and say it was quires of angels.

Anonymous said...

There's also a 1970 color musical version starring Albert Finney as Scrooge but the 1962 UPA TV special starring a singing Quincy Magoo actually works better.

The Jerk said...

The description you gave of the opening to the Hicks version almost makes me think the director was trying to make Cratchit the protagonist, which would be dead wrong. Scrooge is both protagonist and antagonist, the films central conflict is an internal one, and Cratchit is just one of the secondary players.
It's been a couple years since i watched the Hicks version, being especially partial to Alistair Sims version, which is my favorite as well. I may have to take another look at the Hicks version and ponder why I disliked it.
My vague recollection is that similar to your experience, it was the one-dimensional performance of Scrooge in the first half; We see no internal conflict in the character, just Meanness and Petty Greed. Furthermore the transformation seems more like a man who changes out of fear of hell (and a touch of pity for Tiny Tim) than because the goodness in him has won out over the past pains and layers of selfishness and hurt that have developed over the years.
It's interesting to note that Hicks played Scrooge on stage since he was 20, and on film twice (once was a silent flick). I agree that the performance he gives in this film doesn't do justice to the part, in part due to what seems a 2-d performance, and one that is painted in simplistically broad strokes, so to speak, but given the popularity his stage performances were reputed to have, I wonder if another reason this version falls short is that he is giving a stage-actor's performance in a cinema-actor's medium, and if the same acting might very well work splendidly on stage?

Anonymous said...

GREAT post! I'll be referring back to this one a lot!

This year I watched three Carols: My favourite 1939 version, Sim, and the 80s Scott version. I seemed to enjoy the 39 and 80s ones a lot better than Sim. If my mathematics are correct, the 1939 one hardly used any of Dicken's dialogue, but I liked how "primordial" it seemed with its truncated plot, Bob Cratchit unemployment storyline and how it seemed to influence ever version/parody after it.

I remember being impressed by Scott in the 80s version, as well as by its use of Dicken's dialogue and its creepy/gloomy mood. I thought the film looked really good, too, in terms of cinematography and f/x, which is why I was shocked to see that it was a TV movie!

I think I remember liking the Patrick Stewart version as a kid, but I haven't seen it in years. I guess I'll rewatch the Sim version next year, but more closely this time.

I like yours and Jenny's idea of Scrooge as a witty warrior, though. To me the story is partly an indictment of certain curmudgeonly types who think they're too logical for the foolishness and annoyances of holidays. In order for the indictment to be effective, the curmudgeon figure has to be three dimensional and has to say or do things that make sense to or are appealing about that viewpoint. Humour or a great way Dickens does that. It actually shows us that he's a little smarter than everyone else (too clever by half?) Dickens' genius was making him even seem correct in some ways to people who love Christmas! His whole speech about "if I had my way, every fool who went about with "Merry Christmas" on his lips..." sounds a LOT like a modern day rant some angry guy would make about Christmas. And Scrooge made a lot of good points about Christmas and society (like Mr. Potter) (of course, they're missing the forest for the trees.)

Notice a lot of Christmas specials and movies are about people who hate or are disenchanted with Christmas? Scrooge, Charlie Brown, the Grinch, everyone except Will Ferrel in Elf, George Bailey, even Santa Claus in Miracle on 34th Street and The Year Without a Santa Claus! And that these same specials and movies are part of what the curmudgeons hate about Christmas?

They'll go around saying half-truths like "Charlie Brown Christmas? More like Koka-cola Korporate Kristmas! Santa Claus was created by Coca-Cola to market to children! Christmas is a big commercial racket! I hate that Christmas noise, noise, noies!" I bet they don't know how much like characters in a Christmas special they sound and that if they saw or reread some great piece of Christmas literature like "Carol" or "The Grinch" closely they would let the message in more and enjoy the season for what it is and what it's really about. I'm actually writing a few movies about Christmas, and one of them is about Christmas hate.

I think the best Christmas movies, though, are romantic comedies: Holiday Affair, Miracle on 34th Street, Shop Around The Corner, Christmas in Connecticut, and Remember the Night. Now THAT'S a platform for unbelievable dialogue and set pieces!

Mordecai Ali Van Allen O'Shea said...

Wow, you make some really great observations about how entertainment works! I feel kind of stupid.

I've never seen neither of those movies or even read the book (not something I am proud of), but I have recently seen a nice stage production of a screen play called "Mrs. Bob Cratchit's Wild Christmas Binge". The main characters were Bob Cratchit and the Ghost of Christmas Past, Present and Future (who were all the same character pretending to be different Ghosts, although being recognized each time by Ebenezer). I'd say it was definitely a springboard for numerous theatrical payoffs rather than a narrative. Not a drama in any way.

Craig said...

Happy Noo Yar Eddie, and great post.
I like the corny Reginald Owen version (though I haven't watched any in a couple of years,) and of course, Mister Magoo's was definitive.
I was introduced to A CHRISTMAS CAROL(as were many of my NYC-Tri-State boomer-breathern)with a fantastically inventive interpretation by television kid-show-icon SANDY BECKER. He played all the parts through his expressive hand puppets. Here's a bit of a close-up:
http://flexitoon.blogspot.com/2009/12/sandy-beckers-christmas-carol.html

lastangelman said...

Mr. Sims actually participated in two extra-ordinary versions of A Christmas Carol, and I have to say, I'm partial to the second version. The second version I'm referring to is the Richard Williams Oscar winning animated version, not yet available on DVD, but can be seen on Google Video. The dialogue, performances (of animators and voice actors) is exemplary and true, nothing wasted. Very crackling, an excellent ghost story of redemption with terrific pacing and stunning visuals. BTW, Eddie, would you agree or disagree that Dickens's A Christmas Carol may be the very first story involving traveling through time and space, fifty years before H.G. Welles's The Time Machine?

lastangelman said...

here's a link to some of Ken Harris stills from A Christmas Carol.

talkingtj said...

i really like the mr.magoo version, im serious, its a good example of serious yet entertaining animation, actors always tend to overdue the scrooge part, especially british actors, the story demands a more animated approach, not the way zemeckis and carey just did it, more like mr.magoo, is it me or is the story itself really a plea for socialist and liberal reform.

Anonymous said...

Great post! If I was to make a list of the greatest film performances of all time (male division), I would certainly include Sim's Scrooge, along with Olivier's Richard III & Laughton's Henry VIII, as the greatest examples of beautifully done Ye Olde English Ham (Ham can be a tasty dish).

Jenny Lerew said...

I agree with Anonymous-couldn't say it better. He/She's right about hams though strictly speaking what I call a real ham(as in bad acting) would be some of the subpar John Barrymore or Danny Kaye stuff. When a great, trained actor in full control like the ones he mentions do it, it's on another plane. Hell, Sim in Carol isn't even hamming it up at any point-he underplays Scrooge!

For example, an example of some Olivier ham-on-rye would definitely be "Boys From Brazil. Shameless! Anyway-tasty.