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Scrooged directed by Richard Donner (Paramount, 1988) |
Frank's story is bracketed by shots of the version of A Christmas Carol that IBC is supposedly showing (complete with Buddy Hackett as Scrooge and Mary Lou Retton as Tiny Tim!) live on Christmas Eve. The Ghost of Christmas Past is played by David Johansen, but this is definitely not the Ghost that you might be expecting -- a cigar-chomping, pointy-eared New York City taxi driver who delights in walking through a door and then laughing hysterically when Frank tries to follow him and smacks his head. It is Carol Kane who steals the show, however, as the Ghost of Christmas Present. Kane's Ghost is a combination of Glinda the Good and Mike Tyson, a Sugar Plum Fairy with an attitude. While speaking softly and cajolingly to Frank, she smacks him upside the head with a toaster. "Sometimes you need to slap them with the truth," she explains. If the movie has a failing at all, it is Murray himself. He is so nasty and sarcastic as the "evil" Frank Cross that when he makes his inevitable about-face, he is simply not believable. The viewer is left with the feeling that Cross has pulled one over on the Ghosts and is just pretending to have changed. Only one thing saves him and it is the look on his face when his secretary's silent son says Tiny Tim's traditional line at the end of the movie. Despite this criticism, the movie is funny and well-done and worth renting for Kane's performance as the Ghost of Christmas Present alone. [ by Laurie Thayer ] |