A Charlie Brown Christmas Source |
Now I have always loved this time of year, since I was a wee sma' laddie growing up in the hills of Vermont. A lovely place back then, people had jobs, the town was thriving, and things looked awfully nice in hindsight and in truth.
Okay, pour moi, things were really good. I grew up in a typical 1950s middle class home, Dad had a job, Mom took care of the house and the kids. We were comfortable. Looking back I know my parents worked their butts off. But we kids didn't worry about the world, we just had to be kids.
I had a full set of grandparents, I didn't know when I was young that my maternal grandfather wasn't actually a blood relative, he was my grandmother's second husband. But damn, he was an awesome grandpa. In my world I had a Mom and a Dad, two grandfathers and two grandmothers. (Yes, there were uncles and aunts and cousins but they fell just outside the intimate inner circle. Well, except maybe my Uncle Charlie, one of my Dad's older brothers. He and my Dad shared a special bond which sort of flowed over to Uncle Charlie and my two brothers and I.)
Life was good. Looking back, I realize that it was incredibly good, growing up where I did and when I did.
I have a few favorite TV shows from those days (a couple were later on) which still show up nearly every year. I may watch them, I may not (some of these shows are over fifty years old and I've probably watched them forty times, so I nearly have them memorized) but watching them or simply hearing about them always brings back fond memories.
Here are some of my favorites, in no particular order. (Okay, A Charlie Brown Christmas and Rudolf the Red-Nosed Reindeer are my two absolute favorites. I watch those, I get misty-eyed from fond memories of Christmases past. So the first two pictures are my favorites, perhaps 1 and 1a, it's a close tie.)
Ah Rudolf, one of the first shows I remember watching as a kid, this and A Charlie Brown Christmas. I remember a lot when I watch these, all of those memories are good, if not perfect.
This version of A Christmas Carol is superb. I've seen others, this one inspired me to actually buy the book. (Which I discovered the George C. Scott version of A Christmas Carol followed nearly to the letter.) A great cast for a great story. Well filmed and well acted.
I consider A Christmas Story to almost be a near perfect reconstruction of my Christmases as a kid. Although Dad never won a "major award," the background settings and the way everyone is dressed remind me of being a young kid growing up in New England.
There are a couple of versions of How the Grinch Stole Christmas, this one reminded me of the book when I first saw it. The Nuke and Tuttle took us all out to see a newer version at the movie theater a couple of years ago. I was hesitant at first, remembering the version I grew up with, but this one, simply titled The Grinch, was very good indeed. (This was back in 2018.)
Last, and certainly not least, National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation makes me roar with laughter every time I see it. Yeah, I had to use the photo of Cousin Eddie emptying the septic tank of his motor home, funniest thing ever captured on film. (At least top five.)
Rudolf the Red-Nosed Reindeer Source |
A Christmas Carol Source |
A Christmas Story Source |
How the Grinch Stole Christmas Source |
I truly enjoyed it, which told me that I wasn't as much of a curmudgeon as I thought I was.
National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation Source |
So, I hope your holiday season goes well and you find peace and comfort with loved ones (I include friends in that category).
What are your favorites?
Now in keeping with long standing Chant du Départ tradition, here's the video I put out every year. Yes, the season IS upon us. It IS that time of year. (The video is the thing I was forgetting, which I alluded to earlier.)
Be well.
Shitters full!
ReplyDelete🤣🤣🤣
DeleteJust you posting A Charlie Brown Christmas caused the vocal rendition of "Christmas Time Is Here" to start up in my head Sarge....such is the power of memory from youth eh? All of your selections are 100% on though I'll add just one, it isn't Christmas until Han Gruber falls from Nakatomi Tower......... :)
ReplyDeleteI thought of that one. I saw something amusing the other day about whether or not Die Hard is a Christmas movie, I need to track that down.
DeleteApparently it is.
DeleteOr maybe not. Fat fingered the code.
DeleteTry #2
Deletejuvat
Heh, then there's this - The thing is, Die Hard wasn’t a Christmas movie originally. The script was changed by Constantine in 336 to align it with the Sol Invictus festival. There is a funny thread over on X about this here
DeleteOnly a few additions. It's A Wonderful Life in black and white. Reminds me of men I've known from my family. White Christmas with Bim Crosland, et al. The 1951 version of A Christmas Carol. The Little Drummer Boy cartoon... It brings to mind the old gray carpet, green throw over the divan and the omnipresent smell of dust and ozone in front of the Zenith Console. And mom in the kitchen, making divinity and peanut brittle........
ReplyDeleteI may try Miracle on 34th Street this year. I've heard good things about it.
Oddly enough I'd never seen It's a Wonderful Life in its entirety until last year. Excellent film. I've never seen the 1951 version of A Christmas Carol, need to rectify that.
Delete2 of the "Christmas Carol" movies from that era are good. One w/ Alistir Sim and the other w/ Reginald Owen.
DeleteThanks for the tip!
DeleteThe 'Miracle on 34th Street' with Natalie Wood is fantastic. In either the B&W or colorized version. Avoid the modern retellings.
DeleteSarge, like you I had a pretty idyllic Christmas season (although there was seldom snow). My material grandparents lived in town and the tradition was that every Christmas my sister and I would get up early, get our stockings, and then patiently wait (before 0600 was verboten) to wake up my parents. They would unpack their stockings, then we would call my grandparents (probably not waking them up, knowing what I know now) and get to open one present while we waited for them to come. We would then open presents and have brunch at our house, then dinner later at their house.
ReplyDeleteFor Christmas movies/ specials, A Charlie Brown Christmas and How the Grinch Stole Christmas remain at the top of the heap. We also cycle through the Rankin/Bass productions - Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer, Santa Claus is Coming to Town, A Year Without A Santa Claus. We also watch annually (on Christmas Day, usually) The Muppet Christmas Carol, which I think is my favorite version of it. I also have to admit that over the years, the movie Elf has grown on me
My grandkids love the movie Elf, I finally watched it with them last year. Loved it. For me Will Ferrell is hit or miss, his stuff is either incredibly funny or incredibly insipid. Elf was a good one.
DeleteTo me the saving grace of "Elf" is James CAAAAAANNNN!!!! (say it like Kirk in "The Search for Spock") and Bob Newhart's performances. Ferrell just, to me, isn't funny. He's like Dudley Moore, everyone carries on about how good both are and both are a nope to me.
DeleteMy favorite Christmas movie is White Christmas. Watch that every year. The opening scene gets me every time. Pretty good visual representation of why we were in that war.
ReplyDeletejuvat
Another one I haven't seen recently, must rectify.
DeleteMiracle on 34th Street (The original with Maureen O'Hara and Natalie Wood) is my all time favorite!
ReplyDeleteAn excellent film!
Deletex 2!
DeleteChristmas Story nails it.
ReplyDeleteBut, we really need to focus more on the reason for the season
JB
Which A Charlie Brown Christmas nails in just a few short seconds ...
DeleteI always look forward to someone posting the "As God as my witness" WKRP clip around Thanksgiving, and you posting the Dropkick Murphy video before Christmas- it's becoming a favored tradition!
ReplyDeleteAnd now it's time to listen to some Vince Guaraldi music.
"Fallen Angel" with Gary Sinise is a Bean's Family Favorite. And some other "Hallmark" style movies like "The Spirit of Christmas," "Crown for Christmas" and "November Christmas."
ReplyDeleteAnd "Die Hard" Both 1 and 2. Definitely Christmas movies. I mean, what says Christmas more than "Now I have a machine gun. Ho Ho Ho."
For a different look at Christmas, the foreign film "Rare Exports" is, well, a rather different look. Subtitled but still very good.
"Scrooged" with Bill Murray is up there, too. And I really wanted them to actually make "The Night the Reindeer Died" starring Lee Majors (a commercial in said Scrooged movie.)
Haven't seen "Fat Man" with Mel Gibson yet. Want to. Need to track it down and watch it.
How many of you noticed that the flag on the wall at about 1:58 is a 48 star?
ReplyDeleteGood selection of movies. I'll add the version of Christmas Carol with Sir Patrick as Scrooge. I think it does a slightly better job at depicting Bob and Family. Somewhat scruffy clothes, walls with bad plaster, etc. More in line with his wages and situation. Another Christmas movie that people usually don't think of as a Christmas movie, The Lion In Winter.
Merry Christmas. Christ is born! Glorify Him!