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Showing posts with label Christmas Specials. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christmas Specials. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 17, 2024

My Top 25 Christmas Movies/Specials

 
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In my earlier posts, I have going on long winded rants about the first VCR my family ever owned – we got it in the winter of 1985, when I was six-year-old and still believed that He-Man and the Masters of the Universe was the greatest television show of all time. One of the perks of owning a VCR was that my dad had recorded all of the Christmas specials on a single VHS tape. When it was Christmas time, my sister and I would pop that special VHS into the VCR and binge watch all the specials (it also included the Charlie Brown Thanksgiving Special).  This is my top 25 Christmas Movie/Specials of All Time – many of them were on that VHS tape.  I will admit most of them hold a nostalgic place in my heart – they were traditions in my family household growing up. I will also admit I don’t like modern Christmas movies/specials, because they come off as insincere – most of them are soulless cash grabs made by cynical secularists (the same people who would happily make a special celebrating Satan if there was money in it). Note: I do not include Die Hard on this list, because even though it has a Christmas setting, I think of it as more of action movie. Though, I’m sure there are plenty who would disagree with me. 




My Top 25 Christmas Movies/Specials

1.     It’s a Wonderful Life (1946)

2.     A Christmas Story (1983)

3.     A Charlie Brown Christmas (1965)

4.     Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer (1964)

5.     Gremlins (1984)

6.     Miracle on 34th Street (1947)

7.     How the Grinch Stole Christmas (1966)

8.     A Muppet Family Christmas (1987)

9.     A Christmas Carol (1938)

10.  A Garfield Christmas (1987)

11.  National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation (1989)

12.  Christmas Eve on Sesame Street (1978)

13.  Muppet Christmas Carol (1992)

14.  The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993)

15.  White Christmas (1954)

16.  Santa Claus is Coming to Town (1970)

17.  Home Alone (1990)

18.  Frosty the Snowman (1969)

19.  Emmet Otter’s Jug-Band Christmas (1977)

20.  A Claymation Christmas Celebration (1987)

21.  The Christmas Toy (1986)

22.   March of the Wooden Soldiers (1934)

23.   Scrooge (1951)

24.  Doctor Who: The Christmas Invasion (2005)

25.  Batman the Animated Series: Christmas with the Joker (1992)

Tuesday, December 21, 2021

A Garfield Christmas ( 1987)

 


As a kid one of the biggest joys of the Christmas season, other than the presents, was the holiday specials that aired on television through out December.  The vast majority of these specials have fallen through the cracks, but there are a few that have become classics.  A Garfield Christmas first aired on December 21, 1987 and it is one of those specials that my family still watches. The reason Garfield works to well is that humor appeals to both kids and adults; it also doesn’t have the patronizing tone that can be found in many children’s shows.   Garfield, much like Charles M Schulz’s Peanuts, was a fairly popular comic strip that successfully transitioned to television.  Garfield is a cynical cat who lives with his, slightly neurotic, owner Jon and Odie, Jon’s idiotic dog.


The premise to A Garfield is fairly simple: Jon, with Garfield and Odie in tow, visits his family on the farm.  While Jon and Odie are enthusiastic about spending Christmas on the farm, Garfield is filled with absolute dread.  He doesn’t want to leave the comfy confines of his city home to visit a bunch of yokels in the middle of nowhere.  However, much to his surprise, Garfield actually enjoys himself and even gives a “heartfelt” speech at the end of the episode.  


 

Jon’s family is a rather colorful bunch: 

Jon’s father is your stereotypical country bumpkin, whose enthusiasm for the holiday has begun to wear thin.  When it is time to put the Christmas Star on top of the Christmas Tree, he asks “Why do we always have to put the star on last? Why not put the star on first and then put the tree up?”  In his old age, it has become too much of a hassle. When it is time for him to read the traditional Christmas story, he gets annoyed and asks, “Do I have to?” His reaction here is understandable given that both of his sons, Jon and Doc Boy, are now grown men.


 

Jon’s mother is a cheerful woman who is bit overzealous when it comes to the holidays. She has a tendency of making too much food; when Jon asks for a piece of pie, she asks, “Apple, peach, pumpkin, blue berry, cherry, or banana cream?” 


 

Jon’s younger brother, Doc Boy, is immature and fairly sarcastic. When he wakes up on Christmas morning, he is wearing furry bunny themed pajamas.  It’s also telling that one of his presents is a toy air plane; despite him being a grown man. 


 

Jon’s grandmother is a cantankerous old lady who seems to be at odds with everyone. 
When Jon’s mom remakes, “This is going to be the happiest Christmas. I’m so happy I could just burst.”
Grandma replies with, “Put a sock in it, deary!” 
It’s not surprising that Garfield takes an immediate liking to grandma – they are kindred spirits.



A Garfield Christmas moves at really rapid pace.  It swiftly moves from one set piece to another without every missing a beat.  While that may not seem like much of accomplishment given its short running time (23 minutes), there are plenty of other animated specials from that era that feel like an eternity, despite being less than half an hour log.
One of the funniest gags in the show is how the closer it gets to Christmas the more child-like Jon and Doc Boy become. There is a funny bit where Jon and Doc Boy wake up their dad early in the morning (1:30 AM) and ask, “Is it time to open presents?”  When their dad says no, Jon rebuts that it is “technically Christmas morning.”  Their father shouts for them to “GO TO BED” and they grudgingly obey him.

There is also a rather poignant scene where Grandma reminisces to Garfield about her late husband, and how Christmas is when she misses him to the most.  It is interesting to see this type of heartfelt moment in a children’s cartoon. The special takes a short break from all the insanity and allows for Grandma to her own moment. This also sets up the scene later where Garfield finds old love letters written by Grandpa, and then gives them to Grandma as Christmas presents.  It’s one of the rare moments where Grandma, publicly, allows for her cynical mask to slip.

A Garfield Christmas is one of the few 80s Christmas specials that actually holds up. This is in large part due to the fact that it doesn’t scream “1980s” like most specials at the time. Even the music score and songs feel like something from a different era.  The first number “Can’t Wait Til Christmas” feels like something out of a Broadway musical, while the final number “Good Old Fashioned Christmas” has a bluegrass type feel to it.  The most important thing, however, is that there is air of familiarity about the special  - there’s at least one thing that a viewer can relate to.   Most of us had to get into the family car at Christmas and visits are relatives, often with mixed results.  It’s to the credit of Garfield creator, Jim Davis, that he wrote a fairly low key special. He could have easily done something crazy (like have Garfield team up with Santa) instead he went with the more relatable approach.

Credits
Voices:  Lorenzo Music (Garfield), Thom Huge (Jon), Gregg Berger (Odie), Pat Carroll (Grandma), Pat Harrington, Jr. (Dad), David L. Lander (Doc Boy), Julie Payne (Mom)
Writer:  Jim Davis
Director: Phil Roman, George Singer
Running Time: 23 min.

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