A Christmas Carol (1971 film)
8 /10 1 Votes
82% Genre Animation, Family, Short Story by Charles Dickens Country United States | 7.7/10 IMDb Director Richard Williams Music director Tristram Cary Duration Language English | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Release date December 21, 1971 (1971-12-21) Based on A Christmas Carol
by Charles Dickens Writer Charles Dickens (short story) Cast Alastair Sim (Scrooge), Michael Hordern (Jacob Marley), Michael Redgrave , Diana Quick (Ghost of Christmas Past), Felix Felton (Ghost of Christmas Present)Similar movies The Nightmare Before Christmas , A Christmas Tree Miracle , Yes, Virginia , Raggedy Ann & Andy: The Great Santa Claus Caper , The Santa Clause , Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone |
A christmas carol 1971 animated alastair sim full length
A Christmas Carol (1971) is an Academy Award-winning animated adaptation of Charles Dickens's 1843 venerable novella. It was a television film originally broadcast on ABC in the United States, but it was subsequently released theatrically.
Contents
- A christmas carol 1971 animated alastair sim full length
- Cast voices
- Production
- Visual style
- Academy Award
- References

Cast (voices)

Production

A Christmas Carol was directed by Richard Williams and its visual style is also largely due to Ken Harris, credited as "Master Animator". It starred Alastair Sim as the voice of Ebenezer Scrooge — a role Sim had previously performed in the 1951 live-action film Scrooge. Michael Hordern likewise reprised his 1951 performance as Marley's Ghost in the same film. Michael Redgrave narrated the story and veteran animator Chuck Jones served as executive producer. Williams' son Alexander Williams, then aged four, provided the voice for Tiny Tim.
Visual style

This adaptation of A Christmas Carol has a distinctive look, created by multiple pans and zooms and by innovative, unexpected scene transitions. The visual style, which is unusually powerful, is inspired by 19th century engraved illustrations of the original story by John Leech and the pen and ink renderings by illustrator Milo Winter that graced 1930s editions of the book. The intended audience does not include young children, and the film's bleak mood and emphasis on darkness and shadows lead some to consider it the most frightening of the many dramatizations of the Dickens classic.
Academy Award

Originally produced as a 1971 television special, A Christmas Carol was considered so well done that it was subsequently released theatrically (thereby rendering it eligible for Oscar consideration). The film did in fact win the Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film for 1972 and to this day remains the only film adaptation of Dickens' story to receive an Academy Award of any sort. Some industry insiders, in fact, were so unhappy that a short originally shown on television was given the award, that the Academy changed its policy, disqualifying any future works initially shown on television. (This restriction is fairly easily circumvented if planned in advance; ESPN Films, for example, routinely issues some of its documentaries, such as 30 for 30 episodes, for a limited theatrical release before airing them on television. This loophole allowed ESPN's O.J.: Made in America miniseries to qualify, and ultimately win, the Academy's Best Documentary award in 2017.)



References
A Christmas Carol (1971 film) WikipediaA Christmas Carol (1971 film) IMDbA Christmas Carol (1971 film) Rotten TomatoesA Christmas Carol (1971 film) themoviedb.org