In 1843, when Charles Dickens published A Christmas Carol, folks were just starting to get into that thing we call Christmas, with stuff like Christmas trees, gift-giving and Cyber Mondays. (An iPad would cost, like, nothing on Cyber Monday in 1843, because nobody had invented the damn thing yet.)
It was the Dickens novel about a miserable miser named Ebenezer Scrooge, who transforms from evil greed monster to kind philanthropist throughout its five chapters, that would help take the celebration of Christmas to a new levelโand the boldly titled The Man Who Invented Christmas spins an entertaining and clever take on how and why Dickens got the idea for the story that would change the world.
Coming off a couple of flops after the success of Oliver Twist, Charles Dickens (Dan Stevens) is doing clumsy book tours to pay the bills. Desperate for a โhit,โ he gets an idea for a Christmas bookโone in which a greedy man is haunted by ghosts of the past, present and future. The story is meant to be a cautionary yarn about the evils of selfishness, and perhaps less about the joys of Christmas and redemption. As Dickens gets further into his book, and his own psyche, the themes change toward hope, and his classic is born.
Director Bharat Nalluri, working from a screenplay by Susan Coyne (based on the book by Les Standiford), gets the unique opportunity to tell the making of A Christmas Carol while, in some ways, making yet another version of the famed story itself. The film features Dickens conferring with the fictional characters in his story as he creates them, so we get an Ebenezer Scrooge, this time played by the great Christopher Plummer. Itโs no surprise that Plummer is perfect for the role. Essentially playing a voice in Dickensโ head, Plummer gets the chance to offer up his own spin on the great line, โBah, humbug!โ and he looks absolutely smashing in that sleepwear.
While he doesnโt get much screen time (this is, after all, mostly a biographical depiction of Dickens), Plummer instantly joins the League of Great Scrooges. Heโs right up there with Alastair Sim, Mr. Magoo and Henry Winkler. (OK, Winkler played someone named Benedict Slade in An American Christmas Carol, but Slade was a thinly veiled Scrooge. Actually, I liked that movie, but it wouldโve been better had Winkler portrayed Scrooge as his alter ego, Arthur โThe Fonzโ Fonzarelli, rather than going the old-cranky-guy route. Ron Howardโs Richie Cunningham couldโve been Jacob Marley. OK, I watched too much damned Happy Days when I was a kid.)
Stevens, having a big year with this and his turn in Beauty and the Beast, portrays Dickens as a bit of an eccentric nut. As Dickens concocts the story in his writing room, he throws tantrums and has imaginary conversations with imaginary people. Stevens finds some humor in this, but he doesnโt stay away from the notion that Charles perhaps needed a long metal vacation.
A touching subplot has Dickens dealing with major daddy issues as his penniless father (Jonathan Pryce) comes to town and causes trouble by trying to sell his sonโs autograph and unleashing a pet raven in the household. Through flashbacks, we see that Charlesโ adoration for his good-natured but scheming father led to a long stretch of sadness when his father went to jail, and he went to an orphanage (themes that obviously played out in other Dickens stories). The film suggests that Dickensโ forgiveness toward his father led to the redemptive turn in A Christmas Carol. I donโt know if thatโs based on fact, but I liked it in the movie.
The filmโs production values, which look a little drab, keeps it from being great, but the performances help put it over the top.
The Man Who Invented Christmas is a different kind of holiday movie. Itโs not going to rank up there with Rudolph or Frosty, but for those of you looking for a deeper telling of a great fable, it wonโt disappoint.
The Man Who Invented Christmas is now playing at the Century Theatres at The River (71800 Highway 111, Rancho Mirage; 760-836-1940); and the Palm Desert 10 Cinemas (72840 Highway 111, Palm Desert; 760-340-0033).
