IMDb RATING
4.6/10
2.4K
YOUR RATING
A young boy sets out to find his missing grandmother and prove that Santa Claus is real.A young boy sets out to find his missing grandmother and prove that Santa Claus is real.A young boy sets out to find his missing grandmother and prove that Santa Claus is real.
Elmo Shropshire
- The Narrator
- (voice)
- (as Elmo Shropshire [a.k.a. 'Dr. Elmo'])
- …
Michele Lee
- Cousin Mel
- (voice)
Alex Doduk
- Jake
- (voice)
Jim Staahl
- Santa Claus
- (voice)
Kathleen Barr
- Mrs. Claus
- (voice)
- …
Jim Fisher
- Officer
- (voice)
Cam Clarke
- Austin Bucks
- (voice)
- (as James Flinders)
Philip Maurice Hayes
- Quincy
- (voice)
- (as Phil Hayes)
Pauline Newstone
- The Judge
- (voice)
Drew Reichelt
- Various voices
- (voice)
- (as Drew Rechelt)
Venus Terzo
- Various voices
- (voice)
Gary Chase
- Grandpa
- (singing voice)
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
When this first came out as a song, it was amusing, a light chuckle along the lines of Weird Al's Christmas at Ground Zero. That was over a decade ago. Now someone's decided that we need a 50-minutes explanation of the backstory behind the song.
The storylines not bad...it's the sort of Christmas special that seems naggingly familiar, from the courtroom scene (Miracle on 34th Street) to the tycoon buying a locally run store (Gremlins 2). The animation is crude though, with a cookie-cutter feel to it. The producers apparently felt that we needed more songs by the same artist, all of which are lethargic one-verse ditties devoid of humor.
One thing I'll give credit to: The 'evil tycoon' at least is written by the books. But overall, this novelty of a video makes a better bookstop than anything else.
The storylines not bad...it's the sort of Christmas special that seems naggingly familiar, from the courtroom scene (Miracle on 34th Street) to the tycoon buying a locally run store (Gremlins 2). The animation is crude though, with a cookie-cutter feel to it. The producers apparently felt that we needed more songs by the same artist, all of which are lethargic one-verse ditties devoid of humor.
One thing I'll give credit to: The 'evil tycoon' at least is written by the books. But overall, this novelty of a video makes a better bookstop than anything else.
Trite and tiring, the one-liners almost made me cry. My 4 year old left the room and ended up doing a puzzle. I don't know what age group this was written for, but the writer himself/herself didn't even want credit. As for the song, it's mildly amusing. At least it was a decade ago. There are many Christmas movies to watch. Although I've seen some many more times than this, they are still enjoyable. Whenever this comes on, I try to encourage my child to watch something else. One positive note, that allowed a vote of 2 instead of 1, is that it encourages good moral values. That would have been encouraging, if anyone were watching.
Alright, listen. This special is all over the place. It's awkwardly animated (to say the least), the story is weakly fashioned around a satirical Christmas song (and is more filler than genuine, holly-jolly entertainment), the voice acting is subpar, and, at 51 minutes, it's way too long.
But all those things are what make this ridiculous little movie so endearing. It's something I would watch as a kid and enjoy, if for nothing more than the simple story and jokes. It was a little too long to hold my attention throughout, even then, but it still had something special about it that kept me coming year after year.
Now, it's good for the fun factor of it. You can't put this on expecting to see A Charlie Brown Christmas-level of quality, because that's just not it. When taken for that it is (a quick attempt for Warner Bros. to cash in on the hit Dr. Elmo song), it offers just enough to give a little holiday cheer.
Shoehorning in a bunch of cuts off Dr. Elmo's Christmas record of the same name, it makes for some of the most awkward, inappropriately inserted musical numbers, perhaps, in this history of animated movies. It's worthy of countless razzies and that's why I love it.
I really do not care for animated movies, but this one was pretty good. Normally, I would not even CONSIDER watching an animated movie, but this one interested me (as the title, is that of a song have heard for years). I took a chance and did not regret it. I won't say it's a masterpiece, but it is worthy of respect. It is pretty much the way the song goes. As each detail of the story is demonstrated, a clip of the song is played. Also, there are several new songs introduced that create originality. Grandma has a store, A business man wants to buy it, but she does not want to sell. Cousin Mel plans to steal the store from Grandma, but all things change because "Grandma Got Run Over By A Reindeer"!
This movie makes me not want kids so they would never have to see this four fingered, fruitcake tasting , Ace Attorney courtroom drama abomination of a Christmas movie.
Cousin's hot though.
Cousin's hot though.
Did you know
- TriviaThis special was released in 2000, which was a leap year. Look at the calendar during the scene where it shows the page for February, which has 29 days.
- GoofsIn one scene Grandma is run over from behind. In another she's run over directly facing the oncoming sleigh. In yet another shot of the scene she turns her head to the side as the sleigh hits her.
- Crazy creditsNo reindeer were harmed during the production of this motion picture.
- SoundtracksGrandma Got Run Over by a Reindeer
Music & Lyrics by Randy Brooks
Vocals Performed by Gary Chase
Arranged by Nathan Wang & Gary Chase
By permission of Elmo Publishing/Kris Publishing (SESAC)
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