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Watch "A Christmas Carol" Full Movie Online

Information

Year: 1984
Rating: 7.7(3393)
Listed in: Comedy, Drama, Family, Fantasy
Directed by: Clive Donner
Actors: George C. Scott Frank Finlay Edward Woodward Michael Carter David Warner Angela Pleasence
  "A new powerful presentation of the most loved ghost story of all time!"

Cast

 Directed by
Clive Donner  
 Actors
George C. Scott as Ebenezer Scrooge
Frank Finlay as Marley's Ghost
Edward Woodward as Ghost of Christmas Present
Michael Carter as Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come
David Warner as Bob Cratchit
Anthony Walters as Tiny Tim
Roger Rees as Fred Holywell/Narrator
Nigel Davenport as Silas Scrooge
Mark Strickson as Young Scrooge
Timothy Bateson as Mr. Fezziwig
Michael Gough as Mr. Poole
John Quarmby as Mr. Harking
Peter Woodthorpe as Old Joe
Brian Pettifer as Ben
Peter Settelen as Belle's husband
Joseph Blatchley as George
Gavin Asher as Alfred
Daniel Chatto as William
Tim Munro as Mr. Topper
Alan Bodenham as Poulterer
Spencer Banks as Dick Wilkins
Kieron Hughes as Peter Cratchit
Orlando Wells as Little Boy Cratchit
Ian Giles as Boy who gets turkey
Danny Davies as Forbush
Derek Francis as Pemberton
John Sharp as Tipton
 Actresses
Angela Pleasence as Ghost of Christmas Past
Susannah York as Mrs. Cratchit
Caroline Langrishe as Janet Holywell
Lucy Gutteridge as Belle
Joanne Whalley as Fan
Liz Smith as Mrs. Dilber
Catherine Hall as Meg
Pat Rose as Mrs. Fezziwig
Rebecca Burrill as Anne
Cathryn Harrison as Kate
Louise Gasser as Martha
Sasha Wells as Belinda Cratchit
Nancy Dodds as Alice Cratchit

Movie info

Languages: English, Portuguese
 
Plot: Ebenezer Scrooge is a miser who cares only about making money. He has no friends, has disowned his only living relative - his nephew Fred - and generally treats everyone he meets with an air of contempt. He particularly loathes Christmas, which he a sees as an excuse for picking a man's pocket once a year, and only reluctantly give his clerk Bob Cratchit the day off. On Christmas Eve however, he is visited by the ghost his long dead partner, Jacob Marley, who begs him to change his ways. Refusing to do so, he's told that three ghosts - the Ghosts of Christmas Past, Present and that which is Yet To Come - will visit him that night. In doing so they shoe him what he has lost and what he will leave behind after he is gone unless he mends his ways.

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Goofs

  Revealing mistakes: Near the beginning of the movie, some children are sliding on some "ice" which ripples under their feet - it's actually some sort of plastic sheeting.
Crew: The Ghost of Christmas Future takes Scrooge to the cemetery near the end of the movie. At the beginning of this scene, when Scrooge asks why they are here, you can see a rope at the bottom of the screen that pulls the Ghost across the graveyard to simulate it floating across on air.
DATE: All the brass players in the bands are playing piston-valve instruments - about fifty years before they became available.
DATE: The brass cornet and tuba in the beginning were not period pieces by a century or so.
DATE: The spinet piano during Christmas Present was not available until the 1930's.
Revealing mistakes: The string holding up the Spirit of Christmas Past's bell is briefly visible when she removes her hand from above it in the first scene with Scrooge. The bell shakes and wobbles perceptibly (as the string is slightly moved) throughout the scene.
GEOG: The dome of St Paul's Cathedral is visible just a few streets away from the Cratchits' house. Near the end of the film, however, Scrooge tells the poulterer to deliver a goose to the Cratchits' house in Camden Town (as named in the book) - over four miles away from St Paul's.
Continuity: In the outdoor scene where Ebenezer and Belle break their engagement, they rise from the bench and walk a ways to their right. After Belle leaves, and Ebenezer is shown standing alone, he is back up the path on the other side of the bench.

Quotes

  Ebenezer Scrooge: These are garments, Mr. Cratchit. Garments were
invented by the human race as a protection against the cold. Once
purchased, they may be used indefinitely for the purpose for which
they are intended. Coal burns. Coal is momentary and coal is
costly. There will be no more coal burned in this office today, is
that quite clear, Mr. Cratchit?
Bob Cratchit: Yes, Sir.
Ebenezer Scrooge: Now please get back to work before I am forced to
conclude that your services here are no longer required.
Tiny Tim: God bless us, everyone.
Ebenezer Scrooge: [looking at the Cratchit's feast] It's such a small
bird.
Ghost of Christmas Present: [leaning in Scrooge's face] It's all Bob
Cratchit can afford.
Ebenezer Scrooge: [after Marley's Ghost enters] What do you want with
me?
Marley's Ghost: Much.
Young Scrooge: [Fan enters the boarding school where young Ebenezer
sleeps on a desk] Fan? [they hug]
Fan: Dear, dear brother! I've come to take you home, brother. Home
for good and all! Father is so much kinder now than he used to be.
One night, he spoke with me so gently that I worked up the courage
to ask him if you might come home! And he said yes, you should. We
came in a coach to pick you up; it's right outside!
Young Scrooge: You've grown into quite a young woman, Fan.
Fan: And you've grown into quite a young man, never to need see this
lonely place again. Come on, let's not keep Father waiting. [they
dash outside to meet their father. Young Ebenezer starts to hug
Silas, but the elder man holds out his walking-stick, preventing
the boy from doing so]
Silas Scrooge: There, there, boy. Let's have a look at you. Well,
they haven't been overfeeding you. That's evident.
Young Scrooge: I've grown, Fan tells me.
Silas Scrooge: Yes, most boys do. I imagine she's also told you that
you're not moving back here. So it's time you made your way in the
world. I've arrange an apprenticeship for you. You'll move into Mr.
Fezziwig's establishment in three days' time.
Fan: Three days, Father? It's been YEARS since we've had my brother
at home! I was hoping we'd have him for longer.
Silas Scrooge: LONGER? Three days is QUITE long enough for BOTH of
us. You DO agree, Ebenezer, DON'T you?
Young Scrooge: Indeed, Sir. Quite long enough.
Silas Scrooge: That's better. Come along, Fan. [They ride off for
home]
Tiny Tim: [outside Scrooge's office] Merry Christmas, Mister Scrooge.
Ebenezer Scrooge: Don't beg on this corner, boy.
Tiny Tim: I'm not begging, Sir. I'm Tim Cratchit. I'm waiting for my
father.
Ebenezer Scrooge: Tim Cratchit, eh? Well you'll have a long wait,
then, won't you? [he walks off]
Tiny Tim: Merry Christmas, Sir!
Ebenezer Scrooge: Humbug.
Mr. Pemberton: [at the exchange]... Ah, Ebenezer. We were afraid you
wouldn't come.
Mr. Tipton: It's about to close, Sir.
Ebenezer Scrooge: Well, I'm here, aren't I?
Mr. Pemberton: Good. You'll take our bid, then?
Mr. Tipton: I take it you've changed your mind.
Ebenezer Scrooge: Yes, I have changed my mind. The price has gone up.
Mr. Pemberton: Gone up? But that's impossible!
Ebenezer Scrooge: If you want my corn, gentlemen, you'll meet the
price I quoted yesterday... plus five percent interest for the
delay.
Mr. Tipton: That's outrageous, Scrooge. You'll be left with a
warehouse stuffed full of corn!
Ebenezer Scrooge: Well, that's my affair, isn't it?
Mr. Pemberton: If we have to meet your price, our bread will be more
expensive. The poor will suffer.
Ebenezer Scrooge: Then buy someone else's corn. Good day, Sirs.
Mr. Tipton: Scrooge, one moment. We'll buy your corn... at the price
you quoted yesterday.
Ebenezer Scrooge: It's too late for that, gentlemen. And if you wait
until tomorrow, it'll cost you another five percent interest.
Mr. Pemberton: Damn it, Scrooge, that's not fair!
Ebenezer Scrooge: No, but it's business. I'll give you a second to
make up your minds. [Pemberton and Tipton do so]
Mr. Tipton: All right, Scrooge, done and done!
Ebenezer Scrooge: Good. Make sure that a check for the entire amount
is deposited with my clerk. I don't ship until I have the cash in
hand.
Ebenezer Scrooge: ...Where are we now?
Ghost of Christmas Present: The name would mean nothing to you. It's
a place, like too many in this world.
Meg: ...Mary, Peter, they're cooked. [to Ben] Do we have enough wood
for the night?
Peter (their son): They're too hot to eat yet, mother.
Meg: They'll be cooler soon enough.
Mary (their daughter): How did you get these, father?
Ben: [defensive] I didn't steal them, if that's what you're saying!
Meg: She never SAID you stole them, Ben! Don't berate the girl.
Ben: She should have some respect!
Meg: They fell from a cart into the road, Mary.
Ben: Your father's not a thief, Mary... Not yet.
Meg: ...Ben, come back and eat with us, won't you?
Ben: Look at these hands, Meg. They're hard hands; they've done hard
work. I want to work, to have bread for my children... It's not
right that there's no work.
Meg: We four still have each other, Ben. That's the most important
thing.
Ben: I love you, Meg, all of you. Tomorrow, I want you to take the
children and go to the Parish Poorhouse.
Meg: No! Better we all drown in the river, than go to one of THOSE
places and be separated forever!
Ben: Only until I can find work.
Meg: We wouldn't LAST that long...! Come on, Ben, let's have some
dinner.
Ebenezer Scrooge: Why are these people out here? Wearing rags, eating
scraps! Why aren't they in poorhouses, or...?
Ghost of Christmas Present: Have you VISITED any of these poorhouses
you speak of?
Ebenezer Scrooge: No, but I'm taxed for them; isn't that enough?
Ghost of Christmas Present: YOU tell ME.
Fred Holywell: [on his Uncle Ebenezer]... His wealth is quite useless
to him, really. He doesn't do any good with it; he doesn't even
make HIMSELF comfortable with it.
Ebenezer Scrooge: [whom nobody else can see or hear] I haven't
SQUANDERED it, if that's what you mean by "making myself
comfortable!"
Ghost of Christmas Present: You mustn't argue with those in the
right. It's pointless, and even tactless.
Ebenezer Scrooge: Tact is a quality I despise.
Ghost of Christmas Present: *That* I can see.
Ebenezer Scrooge: [to a "simile" player at the Hollywell's party,
who's just been eliminated from the proceedings]... "Quick as a
FLASH," you idiot!
Ghost of Christmas Present: Ebenezer! Shush!
Ebenezer Scrooge: You said they could neither see nor hear us.
Ghost of Christmas Present: Oh, yes... that's right. Well, even I
forget the regulations sometimes; after all, I don't come back very
often.
Ebenezer Scrooge: SHUSH... I'm trying to listen to the game!
Mrs. Dilber: [having cleaned out Scrooge's townhouse, she's now
selling his things on the rough side of town]... Watch,
bed-curtains, blankets... So what's your offer for all these?
Old Joe: One pound-sterling, five crowns and three schillings. Not a
hay-penny more if I was to be boiled for it.
Mrs. Dilber: You're hardened, Joe, and no mistake!
Old Joe: I'm ALWAYS kind to the ladies! That's the way I ruined
myself! [both laugh]
Ebenezer Scrooge: [to Christmas Future] Spirit, what perversity is
this? I've asked to see some emotion connected with that man's
death... and you've shown me only greed, and malice, and apathy!
Let me see some TENDERNESS, some... DEPTH OF FEELING! [finds
himself back at the Cratchit House] There must be some mistake;
your fellow Spirit already brought me here, earlier. [Christmas
Future motions for him to go on in] Very well... You're devilishly
hard to have conversation with.
Ebenezer Scrooge: [after Cratchit claps following Fred's speech to
Scrooge] Another sound from you... and you'll keep your Christmas
by losing your situation.
Ebenezer Scrooge: [Sitting under the bridge after the Ghost of
Christmas Present leaves] What have I done... to be abandoned like
this? What?
Ebenezer Scrooge: [on Tiny Tim] Tell me, Spirit... Will he live?
Ghost of Christmas Present: I see an empty place at this table. I see
a crutch without an owner, carefully preserved. If these shadows
remain unaltered by the future, the child will die.
Ebenezer Scrooge: No. Say he'll be spared.
Ghost of Christmas Present: If these shadows remain unaltered by the
future, none other of my species will find him here. But if he is
to die, then let him die...! "AND DECREASE THE SURPLUS POPULATION!"
Ebenezer Scrooge: You use my own words against me?
Ghost of Christmas Present: Yes! So perhaps, in the future, you will
hold your tongue until you have discovered where the surplus
population is, and WHO it is. It may well be that, in the sight of
Heaven, you are more worthless and less fit to live than MILLIONS
like this poor man's child.
Fred Holywell: Uncle Ebenezer, this is my wife Janet. Janet this is
Uncle Ebenezer.
Janet Holywell: It's a pleasure.
Ebenezer Scrooge: More like a surprise wouldn't you say?
Janet Holywell: Well that too.
Fred Holywell: That's quite true. Quite honestly it is a surprise. At
least yesterday, you made it quite clear, it seemed to me at least,
that you had no intention of accepting my annual invitation.
Ebenezer Scrooge: I made other things clear too didn't I, Fred? That
Christmas was a humbug - a waste of time and money. A false and
commercial festival, devoutly to be ignored.
Fred Holywell: Yes, basically that was it.
Ebenezer Scrooge: Well, I've come for three reasons. First, to beg
your pardon for the things I said about Christmas. That was a
humbug Fred.
Fred Holywell: Was it?
Ebenezer Scrooge: I didn't know it then, but I know it now. Secondly,
I've come to meet your wife.
Fred Holywell: Well here she is.
Ebenezer Scrooge: Yes, and a very beautiful woman she is too.
Janet Holywell: Thank you.
Ebenezer Scrooge: I uh... I was in love once. Would you believe that?
Janet Holywell: Yes.
Ebenezer Scrooge: But I possessed neither the courage nor the
optimism nor perhaps the depth of feeling that you two have.
Thirdly, if the invitation to dine with you today is still in
force, I accept.
Fred Holywell: Of course it's still in force! Hurrah! I was sure that
one day...
Ebenezer Scrooge: You were sure? Well apparently you were right. Yes
I should like to dine with you and your friends.
Janet Holywell: You'll be more than welcome!
Marley's Ghost: I wear the chain I forged in life. I made it link by
link and yard by yard. Is its pattern strange to you or would you
know the length of the strong coils you bear yourself? It was as
full, as heavy, as long as this seven Christmas Eves ago, you have
labored on it since, it is a ponderous chain!

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A Christmas Carol