Scrooge - In COLOR! Also Includes the Original Black-and-White Version which has been Beautifully Restored and Enhanced!
|
| List Price: | $9.95 |
| Price: | $7.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details |
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com
33 new or used available from $3.10
Average customer review:(65 customer reviews)
Product Description
This classic film is the original and considered the best adaptation of "A Christmas Carol" ever made. Sir Seymour Hicks gives a riveting performance as Ebenezer Scrooge in Charles Dickens's timeless classic, Scrooge. Scrooge is mean old miser who wants nothing to do with Christmas, bitterly rejecting the company and well wishes of his fellow man. But on this Christmas Eve, Scrooge's former partner, Jacob Marley, an invisible but forceful ghostly presence, visits Scrooge to warn him that his time is running short. Throughout the long, cold night, the Ghosts of Christmas Past, Present and Future appear to Scrooge, taking him on a journey into the very spirit and magic of Christmas itself. Legend Films is proud to bring you this wonderful story of hope and redemption, beautifully restored and in color for the very first time.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #66258 in DVD
- Brand: Legend Films
- Model: LF00426
- Released on: 2008-07-01
- Rating: NR (Not Rated)
- Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
- Number of discs: 1
- Formats: Black & White, Color, Dolby, DVD, Full Screen, NTSC, Original recording remastered
- Original language: English
- Dimensions: .55 pounds
- Running time: 60 minutes
Features
- In this original film adaption of Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol, Sir Seymour Hicks gives a riveting performance as Ebenezer Scrooge. Scrooge is a mean old miser who wants nothing to do with Christmas, harshly rejecting the company and well wishes of his fellow man. But on this Christmas Eve, Scrooge's former partner Jacob Marley, an invisible but forceful ghosltly presence, visits
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
This British production of Dickens's Christmas Carol has been eclipsed by subsequent versions, but it stands on its own as a darkly atmospheric (if sometimes regrettably brisk) telling of the beloved tale. Even with the rough quality of existing prints, this Scrooge has a visual intensity that approaches the bold compositions of German expressionism. And in its central role it has a mostly forgotten star: Sir Seymour Hicks, one of the era's celebrated English stage actors. With his gnarled face and flyaway hair, Hicks looks every inch the mean old misanthrope, and his cruelty has a realistic quality missing in some of the more stylized interpreters of the role. Hicks had played Scrooge many times on stage (and before in silent film), and he gets the tenor of every "Humbug!" just right. As a bandy-legged Bob Cratchit, Donald Calthorp is a perfect Victorian illustration come to grinning life. --Robert Horton
Review
Nothing could be more appropriate to the season than Twickenham's film version of Charles Dickens's ""A Christmas Carol,"" which has come to the Loew's circuit under the nom du cinéma of ""Scrooge."" A faithful, tender and mellow edition of his timeless Yuletide fable, ""Scrooge"" merits inclusion on the holiday shopper's list even if it has to be sandwiched between such items as ""Aunt Katebath salts"" and ""Uncle Georgenecktie.""
Sir Seymour's portrayal of Scrooge is, of course, the high light of the photoplay. As the flinty-hearted old money-lender who believes Christmas is a humbug until the visitations of the four ghosts on Christmas Eve, Sir Seymour is altogether admirable; neither caricature nor daguerreotype, he conveys precisely Dickens's portrait of the crotchety old rascal who reforms in time to guarantee a bright future for Tiny Tim and all the other Cratchits.
Granting it is less than perfect technicallyit suffers from under-lighting and occasional recording lapses""Scrooge"" still deserves one's affectionate regard. It is superbly played, its lines are plucked straight from the source book, and, thanks to understanding adaptation and direction, it carries on at a pace which preserves the Dickensian flavor without denial of modern insistence upon more rapid story development.
The danger of adapting so widely read an author as Dickens to the screen always has been that the mortals chosen to fill the rôles will prove so much less human than the characters he created out of pen, paper and genius. Happily, there is no such disappointment here. To the Dickens screen panel already animated by Edna May Oliver's Betsey Trotwood, W. C. Fields's Micawber and Jessie Ralph's Peggotty now must be added Sir Seymour Hicks's Scrooge and Donald Calthorp's Bob Cratchit.
Mr. Calthorp's Bob Cratchit could not be bettered. The dignity, the patience, the kindliness of the man, whether at home or in the chilly office of Scrooge & Marley, is imprisoned beautifully in his performance. Particularly memorable is the ghost-visioned scene after Tiny Tim's death.
For these individual reasons and for its collective entertainment value ""Scrooge"" should be a welcome addition to the holiday entertainment season. Currently at Loew's Orpheum on Eighty-sixth Street, the picture will be shown from Tuesday through Thursday at Loew's 116th Street Victoria, Yonkers, Avenue B, Apollo, Mount Vernon, New Rochelle and State (White Plains) Theatres, and will continue then down through the Loew circuit. It will be screened also for four days starting next Saturday at the Plaza Theatre. --The New York Times
About the Actor
Hicks first performed the role of Ebenezer Scrooge on the London stage in 1901, at the age of thirty. He received very mixed reviews and was criticized for not being able to portray old age convincingly enough, something he eventually mastered. According to one source, he had played the role onstage more than 2,000 times by the time he first appeared as Scrooge on the screen (in 1913).






