Scrooge
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Scrooge

Year:
Duration:
113 min | UK:120 min
Genres:
Drama | Family | Fantasy | Musical | Romance | Thriller
IMDB rate:
7.5
Director:
Ronald Neame
Awards:
Nominated for 4 Oscars. Another 1 win & 6 nominations
Details
Country: UK
Release Date: 1970-11-05
Filming Locations: Black Park Lake, Black Park, Iver Heath, Buckinghamshire, England, UK
Cast
Actor
Character
Albert Finney
Ebenezer Scrooge
Edith Evans
Ghost of Christmas Past
Kenneth More
Ghost of Christmas Present
Laurence Naismith
Mr. Fezziwig
Michael Medwin
Nephew Fred
David Collings
Bob Cratchit
Anton Rodgers
Tom Jenkins
Suzanne Neve
Isabel Fezziwig
Frances Cuka
Ethel Cratchit
Derek Francis
1st Gentleman of Charity
Gordon Jackson
Tom - Friend of Harry's
Roy Kinnear
2nd Gentleman of Charity
Mary Peach
Fred's Wife
Paddy Stone
Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come
Kay Walsh
Mrs. Fezziwig
Geoffrey Bayldon
Pringle - Toyshop Owner
Helena Gloag
2nd Woman Debtor
Reg Lever
Punch and Judy Man
Marianne Stone
Party Guest
Molly Weir
1st Woman Debtor
Richard Beaumont
Tiny Tim
Philip DaCosta
Child (as Philip da Costa)
Raymond Hoskins
Child
Gaynor Hodgson
Child
Nicholas Locise
Goose Boy
Peter Lock
Urchin
Joy Leigh
Child
Sara Gibson
Child
Clive Moss
Urchin
John O'Brien
Child
David Peacock
Child
Michael Reardon
Child
Karen Scargill
Kathy Cratchit
Terry Winter
Child
Stephen Garlick
Child (as Steven Garlick)
Alec Guinness
Jacob Marley's Ghost
Graham Armitage
Party Guest (uncredited)
James Cossins
Party Guest (uncredited)
Chris Kelly
Urchin (uncredited)
John Owens
(uncredited)
Kenneth Waller
Party Guest (uncredited)
Fred Wood
Human billboard (uncredited)
Did you know?
Trivia
This version differs from the book in that, here, Scrooge's fiancée, Isabel, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fezziwig. In the book she is not related to them, and is called "Belle".
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Kay Walsh, who plays Mrs. Fezziwig, played Nancy in David Lean's 1948 version of Dickens's "Oliver Twist". She also collaborated on the screenplay for Lean's 1946 version of Dickens's "Great Expectations". Ronald Neame, who directed the 1970 "Scrooge", produced the 1948 "Oliver Twist".
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Scrooge (played by then 34-year old Albert Finney) is actually younger than his nephew Fred (played by then 46-year old Michael Medwin).
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Goofs
The wires connected to Albert Guinness's harness and chain to give the effect of floating are often visible.
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When young Ebenezer and Isabelle are on the horse-drawn carriage in the countryside (shortly after the Fezziwig ball), there is a white car crawling its way along a country lane in the far background, midway between the centre and right-hand side of the screen.
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After Scrooge wakes up to discover it is Christmas day, he slides down the banister in his home. The banister is very dusty and when he first jumps off, one can see a glimpse of the four inch wide like of dust/dirt down his night shirt. But the very next scene, he walks into the street in his nightshirt, and there is no line of dust/dirt down his front.
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Quotes
Tom - Friend of Harry's: Harry, I've visited you every Christmas for the past five years, and to this day I can never understand this extraordinary ritual of toasting the health of your old uncle Ebenezer. I mean, everyone knows he's the most miserable old skinflint that ever walked God's earth.
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Ebenezer Scrooge: I will start anew/I will make amends/and I will make quite certain/that the story ends/on a note of hope/on a strong amen/and I'll thank the world/and remember when/I was able to begin again!
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Ebenezer Scrooge: What business brings you here?
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Faq
Q
How does the movie end?
A
Scrooge wakes up the next morning ecstatic to find that he is wrapped only in his bedclothes and not in the chains of hell. He promises (in song) to change his ways and begin to live again. He gives money to a young boy and asks him to purchase the prize turkey still hanging in the butcher's window. He then goes on a buying spree in a toy store. Accompanied by a dozen boys carrying all the toys, he dances through the streets, singing about how he likes life. He stops at another store and purchases a Father Christmas outfit, then begins tossing presents to the children in the street. He makes another stop at the Cratchits' house where he delivers the turkey and gives presents to the children. At first, Cratchit doesn't recognize him, but Scrooge eventually reveals himself and promises to find a doctor who can heal Tiny Tim. He then forgives all his debtors, and the villagers thank him (in song). In the final scene, Scrooge returns to his house where he hangs his hat and beard on the door knocker, assures Marley that they've finally brought a Merry Christmas to everyone, and goes inside to get dressed for dinner with his nephew Fred and family.
Q
What was wrong with Tiny Tim?
A
Dickens himself doesn't specify what disease Tiny Tim has. He speaks only of him using a crutch and being expected to die within a year if untreated. Considering that the story is fiction, Dickens might have meant only to portray Tiny Tim as sickly and in need of medical attention, which Cratchit could not afford on his salary. However, viewers have suggested several possibilities. Most commonly mentioned is polio because of the crutch. Tuberculosis was also a very common disease at the time, typically respiratory in adults but it could appear in children as a crippling illness also causing fatigue and weight loss. A third possibility sometimes mentioned is rickets, a disease caused by vitamin D deficiency. Symptoms include soft bones, muscular weakness, osteoporosis, and joint pain. Without vitamin D, the body cannot absorb the calcium needed for building and maintaining strong bones. More recently, it's been suggested that Tim might have suffered from renal tubular acidosis, a disease where the kidneys fail to excrete acids into the urine, causing them to build up in the blood. It can result in growth retardation, bone disease, and progressive renal failure.
Q
How does this version of "A Christmas Carol" differ from the original novel?
A
Like other versions, it overemphasizes Scrooge's moneylending. The Ghost of Christmas Past is characterized differently. The Ghost of Christmas Present does not show Scrooge scenes of poverty, nor do we see "Want" and "Ignorance" beneath his robe. It substitutes a public funeral procession for the scene where Scrooge's stolen possessions are sold where Scrooge's debtor joyously celebrate the death of their merciless creditor. It establishes that Scrooge's love was Fezziwig's daughter, showing scenes from their courtship away from Christmas. It adds on an entire sequence on Scrooge's arrival in hell that Dickens never wrote and which is frequently edited out of TV showings. (The sequence allowed for an extra scene with Alec Guiness. Scrooge shows his new nature in a much more public fashion than in the book, canceling his debts in a Father Christmas costume, leading a parade with an appreciative crowd through the streets, and going to the Cratchit's home on Christmas Day itself, rather than the day after.
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Photos from cast
Keith Marsh
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