Ebenezer, um homem de negócios ganancioso e mal-humorado, não tem tempo para sentimentalismos e considera o natal uma perda de tempo. Entretanto, neste natal, será visitado por três espírito... Ler tudoEbenezer, um homem de negócios ganancioso e mal-humorado, não tem tempo para sentimentalismos e considera o natal uma perda de tempo. Entretanto, neste natal, será visitado por três espíritos que lhe mostrarão os erros de sua vida.Ebenezer, um homem de negócios ganancioso e mal-humorado, não tem tempo para sentimentalismos e considera o natal uma perda de tempo. Entretanto, neste natal, será visitado por três espíritos que lhe mostrarão os erros de sua vida.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Prêmios
- 1 vitória no total
- Spirit of Christmas Present
- (as Francis de Wolff)
Avaliações em destaque
I also want to say I adore Charles Dickens's book. It is a Christmas literary classic, along with The Nutcracker and The Polar Express. It just has an amazing story, totally original characters and is just a delight to read full stop. Scrooge(1951), is not the most true to the book, but I do think it does do a masterly job at capturing the book's spirit, and for that reason is the definitive adaptation. The basic ingredients are all there and are expertly refined. Scrooge is just a great Christmas classic, simply put, and it is for me the quintessential Christmas movie.
The cinematography is faultless. Shot in stunning black and white, it is smooth, crisp, efficient and never jerky. The black and white looks simply amazing after all these years, and the production values are perfect. The music is outstanding; beautiful arrangements of well known tunes throughout to remind us of the festive season and the additional music is memorable and extremely touching, though the music when Scrooge realises it's him who's dead is really chilling. The story about a Christmas miser who is haunted by his partner and three spirits into changing his ways is one of the best loved Christmas stories ever, and it is not hard to see why. As a story, it is impeccably crafted, and the storytelling of Dickens is masterly. All the elements of the book are there in this film, apart from some aforementioned changes.
The acting is spot on. Alistair Sim was a fine actor, who to this day is undervalued. Here he gives quite possibly the best performance of his entire career, and for me he is the definitive Ebeneezer Scrooge. Don't get me wrong I loved Albert Finney, George C.Scott, Kelsey Grammar, Michael Caine and Patrick Stewart, but Sim was the embodiment of the character and dominated the entire movie on his own. No scene with him in rang false, and his change from miserly to kind at the end was heartbreakingly believable. There were some fine supporting performances too, with Michael Horden splendid as Jacob Marley, Mervyn Johns humble as Bob Cratchitt and George Cole earnest as Young Scrooge. At the end of the day though, it is Sim's movie. A movie that is so good it should be on the top 250. 10/10 Bethany Cox
Brian Desmond Hurst directs a fine cast, headed by the incomparable Alastair Sim (a man who can play both malevolent and humorous) as the about-to-be-redeemed Ebenezer Scrooge. Sim's reactions are priceless and he settles down well in the role. Michael Hordern is a less successful Marley, certainly when he visits as a ghost, but the three Ghosts of Christmas are just as you imagine - Christmas Past is a wise old sage, Christmas Present is a jovial party-giver ...
Strengths of this production include the opening out of events of the past into a linear narrative (George Cole plays young Scrooge for the early segments), and the playing of Mervyn Johns and Hermoine Baddeley as the Cratchits. It is a film which has holly, plum pudding, and carol singers written all over it, from the use of Christmas tunes in the music track, to the roaring fires and snow-strewn streets in which everyone makes merry for the festive day.
on this perfect picture, the definitive Scrooge of all time, which I
have watched, spellbound, every Christmas since I was three
years old and will continue to watch as long as I am breathing. I
endorse the review already placed here by "jackboot"; and I have
also been particularly touched by that small scene between
Scrooge and the maid, with not a word spoken, that "Seashell 1"
mentions. Two points I would like to underline here which I have
not seen mentioned by others: First, this is about the only
"Christmas Carol" movie that remembers to be a GHOST story as
well as a Christmas story. The superb camera work by Pennington-Richards and the powerful score by Richard Addinsell
help to make this movie rather scary in places, as it should be.
Nowhere else have I seen the grim bleakness of the grimier side
of Victorian London so immediately conveyed. The scene where
Marley's ghost is caught out in the snowstorm with a multitude of
other wailing spirits is truly horrifying; and there are many such
moments, such as the one where the Spirit of Christmas Present
suddenly reveals to us the personifications of Ignorance and
Want; they really scared me as a kid, and they should scare us all
as adults now. Secondly, and above all, I think that the reason why
Alastair Sim succeeds so brilliantly here in a role which has
defeated so many is that he was chiefly a COMIC actor. Ebenezer
Scrooge has from the beginning an underlying humor which
makes him human; by allowing it to come out he makes the
transformation plausible, by making you understand that this
humor was dormant in him all along, just waiting to be awakened.
It just isn't Christmas without Sim.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThe word "humbug" provides insight into Ebenezer Scrooge's hatred of Christmas, as it describes deceitful efforts to fool people by pretending to a fake loftiness or false sincerity. Therefore, when Scrooge calls Christmas a humbug, he is claiming that people only pretend to be charitable and kind in an effort to delude him, each other, and themselves. In Scrooge's eyes, he is the one man who is honest enough to admit that no one really cares about anyone else, so (to him) every wish for a Merry Christmas is one more deceitful effort to fool him and take advantage of him. This is a man who has turned to profit because he honestly believes everyone else will someday betray him or abandon him the moment he trusts them.
- Erros de gravaçãoAfter Mrs. Dilber has arrived in Scrooge's rooms on Christmas morning, in two clips when Scrooge is looking at himself in a mirror, a member of the crew is also seen reflected in the lower left corner of the mirror. The first clip begins just before Mrs. Dilber says, "Are you quite yourself, sir?" The second begins just before Scrooge says, "Merry Christmas, Ebenezer! You old humbug!"
- Citações
Spirit of Christmas Present: My time with you is at an end, Ebenezer Scrooge. Will you profit from what I've shown you of the good in most men's hearts?
Ebenezer Scrooge: I don't know, how can I promise!
Spirit of Christmas Present: If it's too hard a lesson for you to learn, then learn this lesson!
[opens his robe, revealing two starving children]
Ebenezer Scrooge: [shocked] Spirit, are these yours?
Spirit of Christmas Present: They are Man's. This boy is Ignorance, this girl is Want. Beware them both, but most of all, beware this boy!
Ebenezer Scrooge: But have they no refuge, no resource?
Spirit of Christmas Present: [quoting Scrooge] Are there no prisons? Are there no workhouses?
- Versões alternativasSome home video releases "trim" just a few seconds off the opening.
- Trilhas sonorasHark! the Herald Angels Sing
(pub. 1856) (uncredited)
Music by Felix Mendelssohn (1840)
Lyrics by Charles Wesley (1730)
Sung by offscreen chorus during opening credits
Reprised by a family in a Spirit of Christmas Present sequence
Principais escolhas
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- Scrooge
- Locações de filme
- 8 Scandrett Street, Londres, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(Scrooges House exterior)
- Empresa de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
Bilheteria
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 24
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 26 min(86 min)
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1