• Network: FX
  • Series Premiere Date: Dec 19, 2019
User Score
5.8

Mixed or average reviews- based on 29 Ratings

User score distribution:
  1. Positive: 15 out of 29
  2. Negative: 9 out of 29

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User Reviews

  1. Dec 22, 2019
    0
    Abomination! A so called “remake” of a beloved Dickens’ tale of redemption and love that has been recast as a dark and filthy three odd hours of psycho-sexual indulgence with very little entertainment.

    From the first image of a boy urinating on a gravestone to reveal, “Jacob Marley” to the later humiliation of Bob Cratchit’s wife submitting to Scrooge’s quid pro quo offer that she
    Abomination! A so called “remake” of a beloved Dickens’ tale of redemption and love that has been recast as a dark and filthy three odd hours of psycho-sexual indulgence with very little entertainment.

    From the first image of a boy urinating on a gravestone to reveal, “Jacob Marley” to the later humiliation of Bob Cratchit’s wife submitting to Scrooge’s quid pro quo offer that she prostitute herself for much needed money for her son’s life and death surgery, this movie is an unfortunate array of artisitic choices that fails with every scene! As is exclaimed so many times in this movie’s dialogue, I can only shout out, “Fu@k”

    Why the BBC and FX allowed their resources to be squandered in this worthless project, I cannot answer, but I can empathize with the humiliation the great cast of actors in this abomination must feel! In the end, by resorting to cheap, lurid and dark tricks of the writer we have been cheated of a glorious Christmas story with an insult to our adoration of Dickens’ theme. It is not Marley who is turning over in his grave, but Charles Dickens!
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  2. Dec 28, 2019
    0
    Terrible take on a cherished Christmas classic! A perverted assault on my childhood memories of what Christmas is really about!
  3. Dec 27, 2019
    9
    A mature, dark, scary, twisted take on this Christmas classic. Very fresh and different, really enjoyed it.
  4. Dec 21, 2019
    9
    This was a very dark, yet interesting take on a Christmas Carol. Enjoyed immensely.
  5. Dec 26, 2019
    7
    This is a great remake of the story. Coming from the same people who brought you Taboo of course it is bleak and grimy. As it should be. It SHOULD be difficult to watch. That is what gives the story its impact.

    Looks like the people complaining are the ones who cant stomach anything with any more depth than what you get from Disney. Its certainly not the best incarnation of it, but
    This is a great remake of the story. Coming from the same people who brought you Taboo of course it is bleak and grimy. As it should be. It SHOULD be difficult to watch. That is what gives the story its impact.

    Looks like the people complaining are the ones who cant stomach anything with any more depth than what you get from Disney.

    Its certainly not the best incarnation of it, but the depth and darkness to it makes for a intriguing take on this Christmas classic.
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  6. Dec 26, 2019
    9
    okay so no doubt i loved the show there is plenty of excitment and adventure the show moves fast and is good if you are looking for something for a family look elsewhere this isnt it however i enjoyed it very well done 2 thumbs up
  7. Jan 7, 2020
    10
    I loved this dark and very well written version of A Christmas Carol The acting was wonderful and very well cast. Best version ever. I watched it several times. It was different and much more interesting than previous versions. Loved it!
  8. Jan 9, 2020
    5
    Making the hero of the story truly awful was one of the worst decisions of this series.
  9. Jan 12, 2021
    7
    A darkly magical realist retelling that isn't for kids

    Written by Steven Knight and directed by Nick Murphy, this latest adaptation of Charles Dickens' 1843 novella eschews the sweetness of previous adaptations and deconstructs the thematic foundations of the novella itself. Fans of the original have taken issue with some of the changes (such as the reformulation of Scrooge from
    A darkly magical realist retelling that isn't for kids

    Written by Steven Knight and directed by Nick Murphy, this latest adaptation of Charles Dickens' 1843 novella eschews the sweetness of previous adaptations and deconstructs the thematic foundations of the novella itself. Fans of the original have taken issue with some of the changes (such as the reformulation of Scrooge from misanthrope to villain, the depiction of child sexual abuse, and the joyless nature of the Cratchit family), and certainly, some of these complaints are justified. On the other hand, the attempt to ground the whimsical nature of the original in something more akin to psychological realism is, for the most part, very well-handled. But the last 30 seconds are VERY ill-advised.

    The first thing that jumped out at me was the aesthetic, particularly Si Bell's cinematography, which avoids primary colours as much as possible, instead casting the world in blacks, greys, browns, and off-whites. Interiors punctuate these shadows with the teal and orange glow of the fireplaces, and overall the show's palette is extremely muted, as it should be. In this sense, the opening scene, featuring an ominous raven and a child urinating on Marley's grave, tells us just how unique the visual template is.

    The most aesthetically impressive sequence comes in the last episode; as Scrooge stands in his office, he looks up and the ceiling has become a layer of ice. Then someone falls through the ice and seems to float in the air – we're actually underneath the ice layer, and the person who has fallen through is drowning. It's a haunting image. There's also a lovely shot in the second episode – as Scrooge relives a moment from his childhood, we see his father (Johnny Harris) threaten to beat him as he cowers on a bed. However, although it is the adult Scrooge we can see, the shadow he casts is that of a child.

    Thematically, the show covers some of the same ground as the novella. For example, Scrooge brilliantly deconstructs the concept of gift-giving and then goes on to pick apart the very notion of Christmas cheer, in a speech that represents some of Knight's tightest writing; "How many Merry Christmases are meant and how many are lies? To pretend on one day of the year that the human beast is not the human beast?" In a subsequent scene, he relives the origins of this philosophy, as his father tells him, "every man, every woman; they're all beasts who care only for themselves."

    Where this adaptation breaks from the novella is in the depiction of Scrooge himself. Usually, a curmudgeonly old misanthrope, here, he has been refashioned as an outright villain. A manipulative asset stripper, he is complicit in the deaths of numerous factory workers and miners, a man who goes out of his way to be nasty to people, and whose treatment of Cratchit is almost fetishistically perverse. And that isn't even to mention his abuse of the power his wealth affords him, using it to compel people to demean themselves for his curiosity.

    Dickens' Scrooge is not an irredeemable character, but the Scrooge of the show is, which necessitates that the joyful catharsis found in Dickens be reformulated. And the absence of such catharsis is precisely the point; this Scrooge understands that redemption won't do anything to erase his past deeds, which is a kind of psychological verisimilitude not usually found in this tale. Depicting Scrooge as worse than usual allows Knight to build organically to a more downbeat, but so too more realistic ending that's far more in tune with our own cultural milieu than the optimism found at the conclusion of Dickens's tale.

    On a much more practical level, the pacing of the show is very poor. The Ghost of Christmas Present only appears to Scrooge at the top of the second hour; he then takes that entire hour and about 20 minutes of the last hour. The Ghost of Christmas Present gets about 20 minutes and the Ghost of Christmas Future no more than 10 or so. This has the effect of making the first hour seem unending and the last hour seem rushed. Another issue I have is the design of the Ghost of Christmas Future. See the awesome Death-like figure on the poster? Don't get too attached to him because he never appears in the show, not once. The Ghost of Christmas Future is a guy wearing a long black coat and a black hat, with his mouth sewn shut…and that's about it.

    And then there's final 30 seconds. I have no idea what they were going for with this ending, but it makes little contextual sense, it's patronising, incredibly preachy, and…just wrong, both thematically and tonally.

    Nevertheless, I enjoyed this adaptation, which is dark both literally and figuratively. It's an altogether more realistic version of the story, one more in tune with our cynical times, and for that, Knight should be commended. But the changes are significant, and a few don't work. In this sense, I'm honestly not surprised it got such a mixed reaction.
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Metascore
49

Mixed or average reviews - based on 12 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 2 out of 12
  2. Negative: 3 out of 12
  1. Reviewed by: Carol Midgley
    Jan 7, 2020
    80
    utty, muscular, textured and with Guy Pearce (imagine! Dishy Mike from Neighbours a Dickensian miser) delivering an intense, complex performance as Scrooge that was restrained enough never to become caricature, but potent enough to make you believe he was a darkened soul who really did despise humanity.
  2. Reviewed by: Ed Cumming
    Jan 3, 2020
    60
    It ought to be too hammy to hang together, and it would probably have worked as a one-off film rather than the full three-hour mini-series, but I found myself watching, mainly due to the central performances.
  3. Reviewed by: Lucy Mangan
    Dec 30, 2019
    100
    [A] rich, clever, funny and courageous adaptation.