Haleth November 24, 2019 Share November 24, 2019 Scrooge paying Mrs Cratchit for sex? Oh hell no. 5 Link to comment
Dr.OO7 November 27, 2019 Share November 27, 2019 Are we only allowed to discuss this version or can we talk about the other fifty million? Link to comment
proserpina65 December 5, 2019 Share December 5, 2019 This looks like some terrible parody of A Christmas Carol. 3 Link to comment
Kemper December 20, 2019 Share December 20, 2019 (edited) What on earth am I watching? I missed the first hour; but the "Ghosts" just started visiting. I don't mind remakes, I don't mind some darkness. But this is just awful. Or, as Charles Barkley says, "This is turrible" and I would like to know who thought this was a good idea. Is it just me? I don't really want a sappy, Hallmark version of A Christmas Carol. I would like to not see it as a horror show. But no one is forcing me to watch it...it may be someone else's Cup of Tea. Edited December 20, 2019 by Kemper 5 Link to comment
Chaos Theory December 20, 2019 Share December 20, 2019 (edited) I really enjoyed this version. And The Christmas Carol is my favorite Christmas story. I thought they fleshed out why Scrooge was the way he was very well. Most of the other versions gloss over his childhood but this version decided to go hella dark and say exactly why Scrooge was a grade a asshole but then outright said it didn’t give him an excuse. The past and present stories were very well done. I also liked that Scrooge didn’t outright change. He did one good thing but that didn’t automatically make him a better man and the show acknowledged that but it left room open for more good to come of it. Edited December 21, 2019 by Chaos Theory 1 1 Link to comment
Linda956 December 20, 2019 Share December 20, 2019 There are SPOILERS ahead for those who haven't seen it, although I can't recommend it. This was almost completely unrecognizable as A Christmas Carol. No proper 3 spirits (Past, Present ("Come in and Know me Better, man!") and Christmas Yet To Come. We're supposed to believe Mary Crachit has some magic powers and conjurs up the spirits. They come over a period of 3 nights. In the novel, they came all in one night. This version has Scrooge being sexually molested at boarding school and degrading Mary Crachit. No Belle, no Fezziwig, changing his sister's name from Fanny to Lotte, no reunion with his nephew Fred. They made Tiny Tim an obnoxious brat. Virtually 95% of the classic lines from the story are missing. Who decided this was worth making? It was an abomination. 11 Link to comment
trudysmom December 21, 2019 Share December 21, 2019 Just wondering if anyone caught this and what you thought of it. I mostly enjoyed it, but there are parts of it I have trouble with. Link to comment
AuntiePam December 21, 2019 Share December 21, 2019 I haven't finished watching her but I like what they've done. The bones of the story are there and nicely updated to reflect 21st century angst. Link to comment
formerlyfreedom December 21, 2019 Share December 21, 2019 There is already a topic for this here. Link to comment
Suzn December 23, 2019 Share December 23, 2019 Tedious. Interminable. Dull. Boring. But ever so daring and original that Scrooge says "fuck"! Not. This was a wasted effort and adding so-called realism and grit does not improve a classic. 7 Link to comment
Dr.OO7 December 23, 2019 Share December 23, 2019 I hated this. Granted, I didn't see all of it, but I saw most and what I saw was godawful. It was, as written above, barely recognizable as "A Christmas Carol". 4 Link to comment
MissAlmond December 23, 2019 Share December 23, 2019 (edited) Did anyone watch the FX A Christmas Carol? If so, I have questions that need answers. So if you watched, please tell me what the deal was with Mrs. Cratchit? Spoiler Had she already paid for Tiny Tim's operation so Scrooge never did? Did that mean Tim could walk already which caused him to drown later? The ending also seemed to imply Mrs. Cratchit was the one who called on the spirts? Did she? And why? I doubt I'll watch this again, the lighting was way too dark, making it difficult to see, and frankly was depressing. But I do want to know what the heck was going on. I must say, it was the most different interpretation of A Christmas Carol I've ever seen. Edited December 23, 2019 by MissAlmond 1 Link to comment
Cotypubby December 23, 2019 Share December 23, 2019 I really liked this version. So much better than the cheesiness this story is usually filled with. I liked that this was dark and not for kids. Link to comment
sempervivum December 23, 2019 Share December 23, 2019 They should have changed the title to- well, something that wasn't 'A Christmas Carol'. I'm really repeating what 'Suzn' above said, but this was gimmicky/fashionably woke, and seemed to completely miss the entire point of the (IMO) perfectly written original. If you want 'dark', go back and actually read Dickens! 7 Link to comment
Suzn December 23, 2019 Share December 23, 2019 1 hour ago, sempervivum said: They should have changed the title to- well, something that wasn't 'A Christmas Carol'. I'm really repeating what 'Suzn' above said, but this was gimmicky/fashionably woke, and seemed to completely miss the entire point of the (IMO) perfectly written original. If you want 'dark', go back and actually read Dickens! Yes, exactly. It is not fluffy and overly sweet, but it has depth and heart. 5 Link to comment
Anela December 23, 2019 Share December 23, 2019 (edited) I've never seen A Christmas Carol as overly fluffy and sweet. It's a cruel old man, being visited by ghosts on Christmas Eve. Spooky, with warnings about what can happen if he doesn't change. It isn't sweet until the end, and that's one man waking up happier and with more hope. He changes overnight, but everything else doesn't - it's a start, and a chance for it to change. Edited December 23, 2019 by Anela 9 Link to comment
Suzn December 23, 2019 Share December 23, 2019 1 hour ago, Anela said: I've never seen A Christmas Carol as overly fluffy and sweet. It's a cruel old man, being visited by ghosts on Christmas Eve. Spooky, with warnings about what can happen if he doesn't change. It isn't sweet until the end, and that's one man waking up happier and with more hope. He changes overnight, but everything else doesn't - it's a start, and a chance for it to change. My favorite version, 1951 with Alistair Sim, is not fluffy and sweet. Scrooge earns his happy ending and his change is a relief. 11 Link to comment
Anela December 24, 2019 Share December 24, 2019 1 hour ago, Suzn said: My favorite version, 1951 with Alistair Sim, is not fluffy and sweet. Scrooge earns his happy ending and his change is a relief. My favourites are the 1935 version, Patrick Stewart's, or the Muppet Christmas Carol. 🙂 4 Link to comment
Anela December 24, 2019 Share December 24, 2019 Oh, and I didn't watch this FX/BBC version, because I didn't like the trailer. I didn't think I'd be missing anything this time. I need to cheer up a bit, not be more horrified. 2 Link to comment
Happy Belly December 24, 2019 Share December 24, 2019 i just donated 3 hours of my life to the worst Christmas Carol I’ve ever seen. This thing sucked big weenies. 1 5 Link to comment
AuntiePam December 26, 2019 Share December 26, 2019 I quite liked it, but I think it needed more time. We spent time with Marley that would have been better spent with the three Ghosts. (I don't understand why the writers told Scrooge that he'd be visited on successive nights. By the time the third Ghost was finished, Christmas would have been over.) I missed the "decrease the surplus population" line, and I really wanted to see Guy Pierce toss a kid some coin to go get the big goose, and I wanted to see the old women fighting over the bed hangings. I'm okay with the reveal of childhood sexual abuse to show how Scrooge got the way he was. I'm no psychologist, but I can see an abuse survivor looking at wealth as a form of security. "If I'm rich, no one can hurt me again." It would have helped to see more of Scrooge's early life. What happened after his sister took him home, his time with Fezziwig, his engagement to Elizabeth, etc. We just didn't get enough background. Or maybe we did -- I forgot about Erasmus the Rat. Let's assume this Scrooge's father was cruel to the end, unlike the other TV fathers. Rewatched the Reginald Owen version today, and it was lacking too. There was nothing to show how he became so grasping. We're told that he became obsessed with money, but we were given no reason. Nothing on the broken engagement. And he was ready to change before the first Ghost was finished with him. The Alastair Sim version (my favorite) at least shows Scrooge losing the love of his life. If I remember right, she leaves him because he's obsessed with money. That could make an already stubborn man even more stubborn. His transformation is the best, IMHO -- his face totally changes when he smiles. I haven't seen the modern versions -- maybe one of them has a more complete story. It's been years since I read the novella. Link to comment
GreekGeek December 26, 2019 Share December 26, 2019 I watched the first 40 minutes, and I don't think I'll finish it based on these comments. I really missed Dickens' dialogue, and the pace was too slow. And one of the cliches I hate most is "child [sexual] abuse as an explanation for everything." We don't need it to see how Scrooge became such a horrible person; it was enough that he grew up poor, motherless, and rejected by his father. The one thing I liked was the hope offered for Marley's redemption as well as Scrooge's. 3 Link to comment
DanaK December 27, 2019 Share December 27, 2019 (edited) For those who watched it on FX, how long did it actually last? I have 3 hrs and about 6 minutes recorded and it cut off for me around the time of Scrooge and Jacob Marley in the cemetery. About how much more was left? It didn't seem to get repeated either, so I'm left hoping it gets streamed on Hulu or just not watching it Edit: Looks like it is on Hulu, so never mind Edited December 27, 2019 by DanaK Link to comment
captain1 December 28, 2019 Share December 28, 2019 Thought this was godawful - my favorite version remains the one with Patrick Stewart. 3 Link to comment
JAYJAY1979 December 29, 2019 Share December 29, 2019 This version proves that someone can be so woke that you wonder if they ever nap? 1 Link to comment
rmontro January 14, 2020 Share January 14, 2020 On 12/19/2019 at 11:01 PM, Chaos Theory said: I also liked that Scrooge didn’t outright change. He did one good thing but that didn’t automatically make him a better man and the show acknowledged that but it left room open for more good to come of it. I haven't seen this yet but I saw a few scenes and got the gist. I have it on DVR. Looks like they tried to make it into a more shocking version, or more modern edgy. I thought the story was fine as it was, it's one of the best things ever written, I think. Your comment above is interesting though. The story is good as a redemption story, but it's really hard to wake up in the morning and be a completely different person. It's probably more realistic to take a few steps in the right direction and hope to build momentum. 2 Link to comment
rmontro December 26, 2021 Share December 26, 2021 Finally got around to watching this. I have to say I didn't care for it. I think they had an idea that could have worked, but it just didn't. It's long, joyless, and the end is wishy washy. There were a few interesting ideas, like showing more from Marley's perspective, but I didn't think it was worth the journey. As I said before, this is a story that doesn't need updating. Link to comment
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