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Camino christmas12/2/2023 ![]() That’s about all I had in common with Kevin McAllister. ![]() I petition it be moved to your regular streaming. While it may be centered around a story intimately tied to Christmas, the jokes are on point all year-round. Of the three ghosts, I’m partial to David Johansen, a year after he scored the hit “Hot, Hot, Hot.” He’s surly, he’s a cabbie, and he smokes a stogie-what’s not to like? Fast-forward to the end: Cross has changed his ways, and… Murray breaks the fourth wall to heckle the moviegoing audience. He has no time for family or friends, and has given up everything to be where he is-Karen Allen and his dignity-when he is visited by his old boss, who’s dead and buried, setting off a familiar chain of events. Cross’s style of leadership is fear, and that goes for the kiddies watching at home, too. This time Ebenezer is a post- Ghostbusters, pre– Ghostbusters II Murray playing Frank Cross, the head of IBC Television. If 'bah humbug!' frequently falls from your lips, please do me a favor and treat yourself to this Bill Murray classic. Ovaltine stinks.Ī Christmas Story laughs its way through the inevitable holiday disappointments most of us try to ignore, which is why its weirdly sexy light should shine on forever. The Old Man thinks he's won an award and actually opens up a home-wrecking lamp fatale. Instead, Ralphie is constantly told he'll shoot his eye out, and then he more or less does. It's not packed with angelic hogwash like It's a Wonderful Life or romantic wish fulfillment like Love Actually. A Christmas Story resonates because it's real. Starting in the late '90s, the annual TNT/TBS tradition of airing the 1983 film on a 24-hour holiday loop propelled A Christmas Story from footnote to icon.īut this secondhand success story isn't all familiarity and no filling. Like The Shawshank Redemption before it, A Christmas Story was a quiet little movie that came and went at the box office and should have crashed into the dustbin of history if not for constant replays on basic cable. But White Christmas is fun to watch again no matter how many times you’ve seen it.Ĭall it resurrection by repetition. And this was my family’s movie, and I am a dancer. ![]() Any movie, almost, that you knew as a kid can pleasantly call forth bygone days. Christmas movies live in our hearts as much for the memories in which you and everyone you most loved in your early life is alive and well and maybe sitting around a decorated tree watching a film together or cooking or playing cards. The songs are gorgeous, the dancing fun, the tunes hip and swinging.Īnd it reminds me of something else. (At one point a hilarious drag rendition of the sisters’ act ensues, for reasons it is unnecessary to detail.) Every song and dance in this movie reminds you that they used to know how to do musicals to perfection. ![]() This is the kind of old Hollywood movie where you never question the believability of people breaking into dance at every chance: The Haynes sisters and Wallace and Davis decide to put on a show (!) to help the inn, so of course there is never no reason not to. A smart and delightful Christmas musical, directed by Michael Curtiz, in which Phil Davis (Danny Kaye) and Bob Wallace (Bing Crosby) are two army buddies who fall for a sister act, the Hayneses, as they try to help out their former commanding officer’s failing Vermont inn, a ski resort that has no snow. ![]()
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