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A Christmas Carol

Movie (2009)


Miser Ebenezer Scrooge is awakened on Christmas Eve by spirits who reveal to him his own miserable existence, what opportunities he wasted in his youth, his current cruelties, and the dire fate that awaits him if he does not change his ways. Scrooge is faced with his own story of growing bitterness and meanness, and must decide what his own future will hold: death or redemption.

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Released: Nov 3rd, 2009
Budget: $200,000,000.00
Revenue: $325,233,863.00

A Christmas Carol Main Cast

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Jim Carrey
Jim Carrey
plays Scrooge / Ghost of Christmas Past…
Steve Valentine
Steve Valentine
plays Funerary Undertaker / Topper
Daryl Sabara
Daryl Sabara
plays Undertaker's Apprentice / Tat…
Sage Ryan
Sage Ryan
plays Tattered Caroler
Amber Gainey Meade
Amber Gainey Meade
plays Tattered Caroler / Well-Dressed C…
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Movie Trivia/Goofs

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  • Jim Carrey has described the film as "a classical version of A Christmas Carol There are a lot of vocal things, a lot of physical things, I have to do. Not to mention doing the accents properly, the English, Irish accents. I want it to fly in the UK. I want it to be good and I want them to go, 'Yeah, that's for real.' We were very true to the book. It's beautiful. It's an incredible film."
  • Robert Zemeckis' first project with the Walt Disney Company since Who Framed Roger Rabbit.
  • Movie Goof (incorrectly regarded as a mistake): Marley tells Scrooge that one spirit will visit him at 1:00 am for the next three nights, but they all appear to him in the same night. This is repeated verbatim from the book, in which, following all the visits, Scrooge calls them "clever spirits" for doing it all in one night.
  • Movie Goof (incorrectly regarded as a mistake): When the first spirit visits Scrooge, servants' bells are shown mysteriously jingling in his bedroom. Bells tell the servants which room of the mansion is calling for them, and weren't normally placed in the master's bedroom. They were usually installed in the kitchen, the pantry, or the servants' chambers. However, 'Charles Dickens (I)' explained that Scrooge's large house had been subdivided and let out as office space except for a "suite of rooms" that Scrooge kept to himself as living quarters. Dickens states that there was but one single disused bell in Scrooge's chambers - which "communicated for a forgotten purpose" with another chamber higher in the building. Dickens notes other bells in the house also began to ring. Disney chose to put all the bells in the room with Scrooge, which is inaccurate according to the Dickens work and contrary to the way servants' bells were normally placed. Nevertheless, this works on film as an oddity of the Scrooge character.
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