Carol for Another Christmas
- Téléfilm
- 1964
- 1h 24min
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueDaniel Grudge, a wealthy industrialist and fierce isolationist long embittered by the loss of his son in World War II, is visited by three ghosts on Christmas Eve who lead him to reconsider ... Tout lireDaniel Grudge, a wealthy industrialist and fierce isolationist long embittered by the loss of his son in World War II, is visited by three ghosts on Christmas Eve who lead him to reconsider his attitude toward his fellow man.Daniel Grudge, a wealthy industrialist and fierce isolationist long embittered by the loss of his son in World War II, is visited by three ghosts on Christmas Eve who lead him to reconsider his attitude toward his fellow man.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Nommé pour 2 Primetime Emmys
- 2 nominations au total
- Number 32
- (non crédité)
- Marley Grudge
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
The underlying message that author Charles Dickens was attempting to communicate was for us as humanity to act in the spirit of kindness and forgiveness. In this film version of a single man's influence by the spirits of Christmas Eve, past, present, in the time or world wars provides us the viewer that we all have a responsibility to take care of one another and not look at the world in isolation from what troubles the world is experiencing as a whole.
Since the film was released in 1964, there are some scenes which would not be acceptable to today's society in terms of equality and country centric economic superiority, but the message is well received if only we open our eyes, hearts and mind.
I give the film a decent enough 7 out of 10 IMDb rating.
This is a tale of the Cold War. In 1964 the Cuban Missile Crisis was still fresh. My neighbor in west Texas dug out his back yard to install a bomb shelter. Duck and cover drills were practiced by school children so they would be prepared for a nuclear blast. Rod Serling (writer of the Twilight Zone series) wonders what the Christmas Carol would have been like if Scrooge lived in this world.
Even though I was quite young at the time this show played there are scenes that I can remember clearly. The Scrooge character has been shown the devastation of the world of the future. He suffers great fear and wants to escape. He tries to climb a stylized wire fence But there is nowhere to go. The only things around are sparse, sterile ruins of a destroyed civilization. I wish I remembered how he resolved his conflict.
Sterling Hayden portrays a wealthy man who served in the Navy during World War II and is now a lonely bitter man upset over his son's death in a war he described as needless, presumably in Korea. Hayden is now an isolationist.
The three ghosts think their job is to make Hayden's character more of an internationalist and more willing to accept U.S. involvement in organizations like the United Nations. Coming right before the U.S. racheted up its involvement in Vietnam, it is easy to understand why this film didn't get shown again.
The visit from the Ghost of Christmas Future (Robert Shaw) is the most frightening part of the film. He shows Hayden a post nuclear apoclaypse world run by a weird character called the Imperial Me (Peter Sellers). Sellers is quite effective.
It's an interesting film, but you have to take it in its context. If you are a big Rod Serling fan, it is worth seeing. If you are not, you might find the themes in the film delivered in a rather heavy-handed manner.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesPeter Fonda, playing Marley, was edited out of the film shortly before it aired, yet he is still visible in a portrait on a wall in Grudge's study. He also can be glimpsed in a reflection in the glass of a door and silently sitting at the dining room table.
- GaffesLt. Gibson (Eva Marie Saint) states that 100,000 were killed the day Hiroshima was attacked and that it was "almost as many" killed as suffered by the Confederate States in the Civil War. Actually, the Confederacy lost many more killed --- an estimated 260,000.
- Citations
Imperial Me: Now then, they don't come out in so many words and say that they want to take us over. They're too clever for that. But, that's what they want. They want to take over us. Individual Me. And if we let them seep in here from down yonder and cross river - if we let these do-gooders, these bleeding hearts, propagate their insidious doctrine of involvement among us - then my dear friends, my beloved Me's - we's in trouble. Deep, deep trouble. Because - because we have now reached a pure state of civilization. The world of the ultimate Me is finally within our grasp. Its a world were only the strong will exist. Where only the path will love. Where finally the word "we" will be stamped out and will become "I" - forever! Because we are each the wise. We're each the strong. And we are each the individual Me's!
- Versions alternativesA version shown on Turner Classic Movies eliminates any mention of composer Henry Mancini and replaces the opening 'Carol for Another Christmas' theme with a reprise of the choral music played over the closing credits. [The TCM version aired 4/16/24 included Mancini's music credit immediately after the actors' opening credits.]
- ConnexionsFeatured in The Unknown Peter Sellers (2000)
- Bandes originalesDon't Sit Under the Apple Tree
Words and music by Lew Brown (uncredited), Charles Tobias (uncredited) and Sam H. Stept (uncredited)
Recreated by The Andrews Sisters
Meilleurs choix
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Joseph L. Mankiewicz' Carol for Another Christmas
- Lieux de tournage
- Roosevelt Field, Garden City, Long Island, New York, États-Unis(Studio, now a shopping mall)
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée
- 1h 24min(84 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.33 : 1