Some years back I spoke my peace about Christmas Creep, and since then it’s just gotten worse. The holiday season pretty much starts in October now, which means that television networks like Hallmark and Freeform have already been airing Christmas movies for awhile. However, as much as I adore this time of year and love watching such films, I’ve always had an issue with the way AMC, TCM, and other such channels do their programming. Other than starting way too early I believe they make three key mistakes.
First of all, their definition of a Christmas movie is decidedly…avant-garde. Frozen?? Harry Potter?? Toy Story?? No…just…no. Just because a film is animated and/or produced by Disney doesn’t make it a Christmas movie. Hallmark obviously produces their own holiday flicks, but for the channels that show old big screen classics there are plenty of legit choices that fit the criteria.
Secondly, when the month of December hits I want wall-to-wall Christmas movies. I understand counter-programming. I get it. Some folks aren’t particularly into Christmas and they want some entertainment too. But for a television station…particularly one that is primarily dedicated to movies…I feel like it’s an all-or-nothing proposition. Are you in or out?? Don’t air a great old Christmas movie then follow-it up with a tepid rom-com or a western. You’re creating a vibe…ambiance… a certain kind of mood. Even amongst the Christmas sub-genre there can be synergy. I am not familiar with all the ins & outs of television programming, but I think the powers-that-be can do better.
And finally, I realize that Christmas movies are a relatively finite category. There are only a handful of really good ones, and they mostly fall into one of three groups: wacky family hijinks, Santa Claus stories, & adaptations of Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol. Having said that, I still believe that any TV channel dedicating itself to holiday programming can do better than showing the same few movies over & over & over again until even the most ardent fans become a little bit tired of them. In the recent past Freeform has aired Elf, National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation, & The Polar Express about two dozen times…each. That’s ridiculous.
Citizens of The Manoverse may recall that a few years ago I came up with a weekend movie marathon for Christmastime. So I began to ponder the idea of expanding that concept. What if I owned a TV channel akin to AMC, TCM, Hallmark, or Freeform?? How would I program an entire month+ of holiday classics?? The first thing I had to do was establish some rules:
- My holiday programming begins the day before Thanksgiving and ends a couple of days after Christmas. It runs on weekdays from 4pm-Midnight(ish), with expanded weekend hours.
- Movies would air unedited. I am not advocating rampant profanity or other adult content, but is that really an issue with most Christmas movies anyway?? It has always driven me nuts when Freeform edits references to Jack Daniels & Wild Turkey in Christmas Vacation. There are more objectionable scenes in random commercials for pete’s sake. I’m also not a fan of cutting the infamous “blackface” scene in Holiday Inn. Societal norms evolve…oftentimes for the better…but I don’t believe in censoring a movie made darn near a century ago just because our collective belief systems are a bit different nowadays. If you are so overly sensitive that a two minute scene in a movie offends you that is your problem.
- And lastly…the big one. After compiling a list of movies & television specials for this exercise I gave myself a limit of five airings. No matter how awesome a film might be I think seeing it five times in the space of a month is quite enough. I grew up in an era when It’s A Wonderful Life was on literally every day…multiple times per day…the whole month of December. I have spent the past two decades enjoying TBS/TNT’s 24 hour A Christmas Story marathon Christmas Eve & Christmas Day. I have no issue with any of that…I am simply taking a different approach.
Wednesday 11/21
4pm Free Birds
6pm Dutch
8pm Home for the Holidays
10pm Scent of a Woman
I am grateful for what I am and have. My thanksgiving is perpetual. – Henry David Thoreau
Thanksgiving Day 11/22
3:30pm WKRP in Cincinnati S1E7 “Turkeys Away”
4pm Holiday Inn
6pm Grumpy Old Men
8pm A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving
8:30pm Planes, Trains, and Automobiles
10:30pm The Nightmare Before Christmas
We eased into our merry month of holiday goodness with some Thanksgiving gems. Free Birds is a 2013 animated tale about turkeys traveling back in time to prevent their brethren from ever becoming the holiday’s main course. Dutch is an early 90’s dramedy starring Ed O’Neill (Married with Children’s Al Bundy) as a guy who offers to pick his girlfriend’s son up at his private school in Georgia and drive him back to Chicago for Thanksgiving. Home for the Holidays is a mid-90’s ensemble dramedy about a family getting together for Thanksgiving, notably starring Robert Downey Jr., Holly Hunter, Claire Danes, Dylan McDermott, Charles Durning, & Ann Bancroft. Scent
of A Woman paints outside the lines a little bit, but does take place at Thanksgiving. Ditto for Grumpy Old Men, which has scenes set at both Thanksgiving and Christmas. Planes, Trains, & Automobiles is a beloved Thanksgiving tradition in my house, as is Turkeys Away, probably one of the greatest sitcom episodes of all time. I’m never quite sure where The Nightmare Before Christmas fits in, but I suppose it’s worth a couple of viewings.
Friday 11/23
4pm Planes, Trains, and Automobiles
6pm Trading Places
8pm Holiday Inn
10pm Miracle on 34th St. (1947)
Christmas is not just a time for festivity and merry making. It is more than that. It is a time for the contemplation of eternal things. The Christmas spirit is a spirit of giving and forgiving. – J. C. Penney
Saturday 11/24
Noon The Year Without a Santa Claus
1pm Blackadder’s Christmas Carol
2pm Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer
3pm The Lemon Drop Kid
5pm Miracle on 34th Street (1994)
7pm Scrooge (1951)
9pm Christmas with the Kranks
Trading Places stars Dan Aykroyd as a wealthy businessman & Eddie Murphy as a fast talking con artist who are both manipulated by two rich old geezers into switching societal roles as part of a bet they view as a sociological experiment. It was Murphy’s follow-up to 48 Hrs. and preceded Beverly Hills Cop. Is it a Christmas movie?? Ehhh…close enough for me. Holiday Inn has scenes set at Thanksgiving, Christmas, New Year’s, and every other major holiday on the calendar, and it introduced the world to White Christmas, which has gone on to become the best-selling Christmas song of all time. The Lemon Drop Kid is a criminally underappreciated Bob Hope offering from 1951 in which he stars as a loquacious hustler who crosses the wrong gangster and must come up with the $10k he screwed him out of by Christmas Eve. When his department store Santa con doesn’t work out The Kid launches a scheme to raise money for a fake retirement home. Hilarity ensues. It is pretty much impossible to find The Lemon Drop Kid on television or elsewhere, but I would absolutely change that because it is a fun movie that deserves some attention, plus it introduced the world to the classic carol Silver Bells. Blackadder’s Christmas Carol is a holiday episode of the British television
show Blackadder, starring Rowan Atkinson. In this special episode Blackadder is the kindest & most generous man in England, but everyone takes advantage of him, his business isn’t doing well, and he’s miserable & lonely. On Christmas Eve a single spirit essentially shows him what life would be like if he were mean & uncaring like some of his ancestors, and he becomes convinced that everything would be awesome. It is a clever interpretation that turns Dickens’ A Christmas Carol upside down. Speaking of A Christmas Carol, the 1951 version starring Alistair Sim is generally regarded as the best by many, and so it’s a big part of our special month.
Sunday 11/25
Noon The Star Wars Holiday Special
12:30pm A Charlie Brown Christmas
1pm All I Want for Christmas
3pm Christmas Every Day
5pm Four Christmases
7pm Fred Claus
9pm Frosty the Snowman
9:30pm Scrooge (1951)
The Star Wars Holiday Special aired only once…on November 17, 1978, which was about a year after the first film but a couple of years before The Empire Strikes Back. It received such negative reviews that it has never been on TV again and is a rare find, but since Star Wars is a much bigger deal now than it was then I think it’s time to bring the Christmas special out of the moth balls. It can’t be any worse than the prequels & sequels, right?? Vince Vaughn is a guy that many people either love or hate, and I happen to like the guy. Not all of his movies are winners, but both Fred Claus and Four Christmases are worth an airing or two during the holiday season. All I Want for Christmas and Christmas Every Day are made-for-TV movies that originally aired on ABC Family (now Freeform) back in the
early to mid-90’s. They’re cute & entertaining enough that I’ve retained a certain level of fondness for them over the years, and I believe others might enjoy them as well. Christmas with the Kranks is based on John Grisham’s 2001 novel Skipping Christmas and stars Tim Allen & Jamie Lee Curtis as a couple whose plan to ditch the annual holiday hullabaloo in favor of a tropical cruise doesn’t quite work out. It isn’t the greatest Christmas movie, and at first I kind of hated it…but it has begun to grown on me.
Monday 11/26
4pm National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation
6pm Scrooge (1951)
8pm Trapped in Paradise
10pm Santa Claus: The Movie
Christmas can be celebrated in the school room with pine trees, tinsel, & reindeers, but there must be no mention of the man whose birthday is being celebrated. One wonders how a teacher would answer if a student asked why it was called Christmas. – Ronald Reagan
Tuesday 11/27
4pm Deck the Halls
6pm The Santa Clause
8pm The Santa Clause 2: The Mrs. Clause
10pm The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause
Trapped in Paradise stars Nicolas Cage, Dana Carvey, & Jon Lovitz as three dimwitted brothers who rob a bank in a small Pennsylvania town on Christmas Eve then are unable to leave. They are befriended by the super friendly & naive citizens who don’t realize that they’re the bank robbers. Deck the Halls stars Danny DeVito as a guy determined to make the Christmas lights display at his house so dazzling that it can be seen from space, and Matthew Broderick as the tightly wound neighbor hellbent on stopping him. Neither are considered good movies by critics or the viewing public, but I don’t mind watching them once or twice this time of year. For some strange reason only 2/3 of Tim Allen’s Santa Clause trilogy…the original & the third one…currently get a lot of play on television. I seem to recall
reading somewhere that feminazis & other social justice warriors have an issue with the second film, but I rather enjoy it. I mean…it’s a trilogy, right?? I readily admit that the first Santa Clause is far & away the best, but I also think it’s pretty obvious that The Mrs. Clause is much more entertaining than The Escape Clause. Not even Martin Short & Alan Arkin could save that one. Still though, all three need to be a part of our celebration.
Wednesday 11/28
4pm Scrooge (1970)
6pm Frosty the Snowman
6:30pm Disney’s A Christmas Carol
8:30pm A Charlie Brown Christmas
9pm Mr. Krueger’s Christmas
9:30pm The Lemon Drop Kid
Once again, we come to the holiday season, a deeply religious time that each of us observes, in his own way, by going to the mall of his choice. – Dave Barry
Thursday 11/29
4pm Santa Claus is Comin’ to Town
5pm The Star Wars Holiday Special
6:30pm The Lemon Drop Kid
8:30pm A Christmas Carol (1938)
10:30pm A Christmas Carol (1984)
I wrote about my favorite adaptations of A Christmas Carol four years ago, so I won’t go into full rehash mode here, but a little clarification couldn’t hurt. The 1938 version is a sanitized, family friendly movie starring Reginald Owen as Ebenezer Scrooge. The 1984 version was a made-for-TV movie starring George C. Scott as Scrooge that didn’t start airing annually again until 2007 per an agreement with Scott’s estate. The 1970 version is a musical starring Albert Finney as Scrooge. Patrick Stewart starred as Scrooge in a made-for-TV movie originally aired on TNT in 1999. Disney’s screen capture animated version was released in 2009 and stars Jim Carrey as Scrooge as well as other roles.
Friday 11/30
4pm Mixed Nuts
6pm Lethal Weapon
8pm Die Hard
10pm Bad Santa
Wow…talk about a weird Friday night!! Mixed Nuts has an all-star cast, including Steve Martin, Madeline Kahn, Garry Shandling, Juliette Lewis, Adam Sandler, Robert Klein, Rita Wilson, Rob Reiner, Parker Posey, Jon Stewart, & Liev Schreiber. That’s quite an eclectic lineup. It is an alleged comedy about a suicide hotline that has been evicted from its office space on Christmas Eve. There are a lot of subplots & hijinks, but I’ll spare you the details. Mixed Nuts has been mentioned as the worst Christmas film of all time, but I’ve seen worse and believe the impressive lineup of performers alone merits a viewing or two, even though all of that talent adds up to shockingly little
entertainment. Bad Santa is a bit too vulgar for my tastes, but it has a 78% rating on Rotten Tomatoes and is considered by some to be a modern classic. Few seem to engage in the same good-natured debate about whether or not Lethal Weapon is a Christmas movie in comparison to the annual arguments for & against the worthiness of Die Hard to be considered thusly, but for our purposes both are included as an action packed & mildly violent break from the typical sentimentality of the holiday season.
Saturday 12/1
Noon Mickey’s Christmas Carol
12:30pm The Star Wars Holiday Special
2pm Disney’s A Christmas Carol
4pm It’s a Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie
6pm The Muppet Christmas Carol
8pm Miracle on 34th Street (1994)
10pm Scrooge (1970)
Christmas is not a time nor a season, but a state of mind. To cherish peace and goodwill, to be plenteous in mercy, is to have the real spirit of Christmas. – Calvin Coolidge
Sunday 12/2
Noon The Muppet Christmas Carol
2pm Jingle All the Way
4pm Scrooge (1970)
5pm The Lemon Drop Kid
7pm National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation
9pm The Ref
I fondly remember watching Mickey’s Christmas Carol when I was a kid. It’s only a half hour long, and let’s face it…Ebenezer Scrooge is a role tailor made for Scrooge McDuck. It’s A Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie is a Muppet homage to It’s A Wonderful Life in which Kermit is on the verge of losing his theater and a guardian angel shows him what life for his friends would be like if he’d never been born. There are a lot of human performers, including Whoopi Goldberg, David Arquette, Joan Cusack, & William H. Macy. I assume that movie was made based on the success a decade earlier of The Muppet Christmas Carol, starring Michael Caine as Scrooge. I am generally not a fan of remakes, and nothing can touch the greatness of the original Miracle on 34th Street, but the 1994 version is decent enough.
My love for The Ref goes all the way back to its initial foray onto home video in the 90’s. Denis Leary stars as a burglar forced to hold a bickering couple and their dysfunctional family hostage on Christmas Eve. You won’t see it on television all that much, but I always seize every opportunity to spread the word & encourage folks to seek it out during the holiday season.
Monday 12/3
4pm Mr. Magoo’s Christmas Carol
4:30pm The Polar Express
6:30pm Santa Claus is Comin’ to Town
7:30pm How the Grinch Stole Christmas!
8pm Frosty the Snowman
8:30pm Mickey’s Christmas Carol
9pm The Muppet Christmas Carol
Peace on earth will come to stay, when we live Christmas every day. – Helen Steiner Rice
Tuesday 12/4
4pm Mr. Krueger’s Christmas
4:30pm Rise of the Guardians
6:30pm A Charlie Brown Christmas
7pm The Santa Clause
9pm Scrooged
Mr. Krueger’s Christmas is a half hour special produced by the Mormon Church that initially aired on NBC in 1980. Unfortunately you’ll have a difficult time running across it these days, but if it were up to me it’d become an annual tradition. Jimmy Stewart stars as an elderly janitor living in the bottom floor of the building that he takes care of, and he is a very lonely man desperate for human interaction. The story depicts Willie Krueger having Walter Mitty-esque dreams on Christmas Eve, including singing with the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and being part of the manger scene on the night of Christ’s birth. It is a well-written & very poignant story with a fantastic message. Rise of the Guardians is an animated tale about Santa Claus, The Easter Bunny, The Tooth Fairy, & The Sandman
recruiting Jack Frost to help them wage battle against The Boogeyman. I saw it when it hit theaters a few years ago and my biggest takeaway was wondering why Alec Baldwin decided to give Santa a German accent. It hasn’t really made much of a holiday pop culture impact, but that could change.
Wednesday 12/5
4pm Miracle on 34th Street (1994)
6pm A Christmas Carol (1984)
8pm The Santa Clause 2: The Mrs. Clause
10pm The Ref
Christmas is a season not only of rejoicing but of reflection. – Sir Winston Churchill
Thursday 12/6
4pm White Christmas
6pm The Lemon Drop Kid
8pm The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause
10pm Scrooged
We are better throughout the year for having, in spirit, become a child again at Christmastime. – Laura Ingalls Wilder
Friday 12/7
4pm Arthur Christmas
6pm Trapped in Paradise
8pm The Ref
10pm Silent Night, Deadly Night
I’m not a horror movie fan by any stretch, but 1984’s Silent Night, Deadly Night is cheesy fun for fans of the genre. It tells the story of a boy who witnesses his parents being murdered by The Jolly Old Elf, then grows up to become a psychotic Santa himself. There were four sequels produced. We’re not including them here, but you’re welcome to check them out if that’s the sort of thing that you’re into. Arthur Christmas is an animated tale about Santa’s inept son Arthur and his Christmas Eve mission to deliver one present that was inadvertently left behind at The North Pole. It has a really unique vision of what The North Pole & Santa’s toy enterprise might look like, and depicts the role of Santa Claus as a generational title passed down from father to son.
Saturday 12/8
Noon The Life and Adventures of Santa Claus
1pm It’s a Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie
3pm White Christmas
5pm Santa Claus: The Movie
7pm The Bishop’s Wife
9pm Jingle All the Way
Jingle All the Way is another not-so-great movie that has grown on me just a bit. It stars Arnold Schwarzenegger as a negligent Dad trying
to track down the hottest Christmas gift of the year for his son, and Sinbad (whatever happened to him??) as the wacky mailman who keeps getting in the way. The Life and Adventures of Santa Claus is an 80’s Rankin-Bass production of a children’s book written by L. Frank Baum (author of The Wizard of Oz). It is essentially another Santa origin story. The Bishop’s Wife stars Cary Grant as guardian angel sent to provide some guidance to a clergyman & his flock, but things get weird when the angel is smitten with the minister’s wife. A remake called The Preacher’s Wife starring Denzel Washington & Whitney Houston was made in the mid-90’s, but no one knows why.
Sunday 12/9
Noon Holiday Inn
2pm White Christmas
4pm Elf
6pm It’s a Wonderful Life
8pm A Christmas Story
10pm Scrooged
Christmas is the season for kindling the fire of hospitality. – Washington Irving
Monday 12/10
4pm Miracle on 34th Street (1947)
6pm It’s a Wonderful Life
8pm National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation
10pm Home Alone
I don’t think Christmas is necessarily about things. It’s about being good to one another. – Carrie Fisher
Tuesday 12/11
4pm Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer
5pm The Ref
7pm Elf
9pm It’s a Wonderful Life
My idea of Christmas, whether old-fashioned or modern, is very simple: loving others. – Bob Hope
Wednesday 12/12
4pm The Polar Express
6pm Miracle on 34th Street (1947)
8pm A Christmas Story
10pm Home Alone
The Supreme Court has ruled that they cannot have a nativity scene in Washington, D.C. This wasn’t for any religious reasons. They couldn’t find three wise men and a virgin. – Jay Leno
Thursday 12/13
4pm Miracle on 34th Street (1947)
6pm A Christmas Story
8pm It’s a Wonderful Life
10pm Elf
The main reason Santa is so jolly is because he knows where all the bad girls live. – George Carlin
Friday 12/14
4pm The Family Stone
6pm Trading Places
8pm Die Hard
10pm Lethal Weapon
Christmas waves a magic wand over the world, and behold, everything is softer and more beautiful. – Norman Vincent Peale
Saturday 12/15
Noon A Christmas Carol (1938)
2pm Frosty the Snowman
2:30pm All I Want for Christmas
4:30pm Christmas Every Day
6:30pm A Charlie Brown Christmas
7pm The Family Stone
9pm Die Hard
I bought my brother some gift wrap for Christmas. I took it to the gift wrap department and told them to wrap it, but in a different print so he would know when to stop unwrapping. – Steven Wright
Sunday 12/16
Noon A Christmas Carol (1999)
2pm Blackadder’s Christmas Carol
3pm A Christmas Carol (1938)
5pm A Christmas Carol (1984)
7pm Mickey’s Christmas Carol
7:30pm Mr. Magoo’s Christmas Carol
8pm Scrooge (1951)
10pm Scrooge (1970)
Ever wonder what people got Jesus for Christmas? It’s like, “Oh great, socks. You know I’m dying for your sins right? Yeah, but thanks for the socks! They’ll go great with my sandals. What am I, German?” – Jim Gaffigan
Monday 12/17
4pm A Christmas Carol (1999)
6pm Trapped in Paradise
8pm Fred Claus
10pm Four Christmases
The very purpose of Christ’s coming into the world was that he might offer up his life as a sacrifice for the sins of men. He came to die. This is the heart of Christmas. – Rev. Billy Graham
Tuesday 12/18
4pm Christmas Every Day
6pm A Christmas Carol (1999)
8pm Frosty the Snowman
8:30pm How the Grinch Stole Christmas!
9pm Mr. Krueger’s Christmas
9:30pm Scrooge (1951)
A lovely thing about Christmas is that it’s compulsory, like a thunderstorm, and we all go through it together. – Garrison Keillor
Wednesday 12/19
4pm The Polar Express
6pm Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer
7pm Blackadder’s Christmas Carol
8pm A Christmas Carol (1999)
10pm The Family Stone
The only real blind person at Christmastime is he who has not Christmas in his heart. – Helen Keller
Thursday 12/20
4pm White Christmas
6pm The Polar Express
8pm National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation
10pm The Ref
The Magi, as you know, were wise men…wonderfully wise men who brought gifts to the Babe in the manger. They invented the art of giving Christmas presents. – O. Henry
Friday 12/21
4pm The Muppet Christmas Carol
6pm Trading Places
8pm Scrooged
10pm Santa Claus: The Movie
Christmas is a day of meaning and traditions, a special day spent in the warm circle of family and friends. – Margaret Thatcher
Saturday 12/22
Noon Fred Claus
2pm Santa Claus: The Movie
4pm All I Want for Christmas
6pm Disney’s A Christmas Carol
8pm Home Alone
10pm Home Alone 2: Lost in New York
Happy, happy Christmas, that can win us back to the delusions of our childish days; that can recall to the old man the pleasures of his youth; that can transport the sailor and the traveller, thousands of miles away, back to his own fire-side and his quiet home! – Charles Dickens
Sunday 12/23
Noon Santa Claus is Comin’ to Town
1pm The Year Without a Santa Claus
2pm Home Alone
4pm Home Alone 2: Lost in New York
6pm The Santa Clause
8pm The Santa Clause 2: The Mrs. Clause
10pm The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause
T’was the night before Christmas, when all through the house, not a creature was stirring, not even a mouse. – Clement Clarke Moore
Christmas Eve
Noon Elf
2pm The Santa Clause
4pm Scrooged
5pm National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation
7pm A Christmas Story
9pm It’s a Wonderful Life
I heard the bells on Christmas Day
Their old familiar carols play
And wild & sweet the words repeat
Of peace on earth, good-will to men!
― Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Christmas Day
11am How the Grinch Stole Christmas!
11:30am A Charlie Brown Christmas
Noon Mr. Krueger’s Christmas
12:30pm Miracle on 34th Street (1947)
2:30pm A Christmas Carol (1938)
4:30pm The Polar Express
6:30pm White Christmas
8:30pm Disney’s A Christmas Carol
One of the most glorious messes in the world is the mess created in the living room on Christmas Day. Don’t clean it up too quickly. –
Andy Rooney
Wednesday 12/26
Noon Home Alone
2pm Home Alone 2: Lost in New York
4pm A Christmas Carol (1984)
6pm Elf
8pm A Christmas Story
Perhaps it is because I don’t have children or work in retail and therefore don’t suffer some of the burnout & fatigue that others do as the holiday
season draws to its conclusion, but I usually feel a general sense of melancholy when the clock strikes midnight on Christmas night. All the sudden all of the hoopla is over. Radio & TV stations resume regular programming. Some folks take down their decorations immediately. Well that’s not how we roll here ladies & gentlemen. We’re going to wean ourselves off of the holiday high we’ve been on for the past month and have one more day of Santa Claus, Ebenezer Scrooge, & general Christmas merriment.
Thursday, 12/27
Noon Rudolph and Frosty’s Christmas in July
1:30pm Rudolph’s Shiny New Year
2:30pm New Year’s Eve
4:30pm When Harry Met Sally
6:30pm Holiday Inn
8:30pm Sleepless in Seattle
Christmas may be over but technically it’s still the holiday season. In the old days people used to celebrate The Twelve Days of Christmas (you may have heard a song about it). Those don’t even begin until what we know as Christmas Day and conclude on January 5. Don’t worry…I’m not going to take things that far. However, even in modern times most of us reserve a bit of the ol’ festive mojo for one more round of frivolity, and so we will conclude our holiday celebration with a day of entertainment revolving around New Year’s Eve/Day or atleast having scenes centered on it. I am certain that most are familiar with the offerings suggested here, but I will dive into 2011’s New Year’s Eve just a bit. It’s one of those rom-coms with a large ensemble cast and interweaving stories, all taking place on…well, I’m sure you can figure it out. It’s not a great film, as evidenced by an atrocious 7% Rotten Tomatoes score. Newsday called it “a perfect example of why the adjective Hollywood is so often used as a pejorative”. The New York Post said that it is “a soul-sucking monument to Hollywood greed
and saccharine holiday culture”. Our old pal Ebert wondered “How is it possible to assemble more than two dozen stars in a movie and find nothing interesting for any of them to do?”. But it is that all-star cast (including Halle Berry, Jessica Biel, Robert DeNiro, Josh Duhamel, Sarah Jessica Parker, Ashton Kutcher, Hilary Swank, Zac Efron, Katherine Heigl, Michelle Pfeiffer, & Jon Bon Jovi) that is the draw, and I feel alright throwing it in amongst a few other movies that are certified classics, kind of like how a single horn player who isn’t really that talented can just kind of blend in & disappear amongst a large orchestra.
This concept could certainly be modified annually. Most of the movies & specials we’ve chose wouldn’t change all that much from year to year, but there would be nothing wrong with the occasional addition or subtraction. I’d put this lineup against any station out there and am confident that it would be considered by most to be superior to any alternatives. Having said that, I’d love to hear from The Manoverse. What has been included here that you don’t enjoy all that much?? Did I miss something that should be given some love?? As opposed to my viewpoint, do you like watching some holiday classics almost daily each December?? Which adaptation of A Christmas Carol do you prefer?? What is your stance on Die Hard as a Christmas movie?? Leave me some comments and let’s have some back & forth.