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AnimationFamilyFantasy

Scrooge: A Christmas Carol

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On a cold Christmas Eve, selfish miser Ebenezer Scrooge has one night left to face his past — and change the future — before time runs out.

Release Date : 2022-11-18

Language :English

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Timeless FilmsAxis Studios

Production Country : United Kingdom

Alternative Titles :

Cast

Luke Evans

Character Name : Ebenezer Scrooge (voice)

Original Name : Luke Evans

Gender : Male

Olivia Colman

Character Name : Ghost of Christmas Past (voice)

Original Name : Olivia Colman

Gender : Female

Jessie Buckley

Character Name : Isabel Fezziwig (voice)

Original Name : Jessie Buckley

Gender : Female

Johnny Flynn

Character Name : Bob Cratchit (voice)

Original Name : Johnny Flynn

Gender : Male

Fra Fee

Character Name : Harry Huffam (voice)

Original Name : Fra Fee

Gender : Male

Giles Terera

Character Name : Tom Jenkins (voice)

Original Name : Giles Terera

Gender : Male

Trevor Dion Nicholas

Character Name : Ghost of Christmas Present (voice)

Original Name : Trevor Dion Nicholas

Gender : Male

James Cosmo

Character Name : Mr. Fezziwig (voice)

Original Name : James Cosmo

Gender : Male

Jonathan Pryce

Character Name : Jacob Marley (voice)

Original Name : Jonathan Pryce

Gender : Male

Reviews

C

CinemaSerf

@Geronimo1967

2023-06-14

I'm not really sure what Leslie Bricusse was trying to achieve here with this animated poor cousin of his far superior 1970 version of the timeless Charles Dickens story. That's not to say that Luke Evans isn't a fine singer - he has those mellifluous tones that would resonate well in musical theatre. The thing is, though, the the catchiest of the songs (not all of them) have been re-versioned, abridged and updated and the whole thing has a shocking sterility to it. Some creative effort has been put into the quality and style of the animation, and Stephen Donnelly has used his Netflix funds to assemble a decent enough vocal cast, but this is a story that has already been done to death. A remake simply isn't needed unless there is a profoundly different take to be had for the audience. This doesn't really offer that at all, and lacks the grittiness as "Scrooge" comes across without the grubbiness - of personality and attire - as this struggles to catch fire. It is watchable, and there's no denying "Thank You Very Much" and "I Like Life" still get the toes tapping as they remain amongst some new but forgettable songs from LB. Perhaps to encourage a new audience to watch the original - or other far better versions of this novella - this might just work. Otherwise, it's just plonk the kids in front of telly fodder.