British director Brian Desmond Hurstmade dozens of films over his career,but he is bestknown for his 1951 adaptation of Dickens'sA Christmas Carol.
"He was immensely proud of[the film]," saidAllan Esler Smith, one of the director's nephews. "Hetalked about it being shown endlessly, which he was also proud of,because youcan't say that ofvery many films."
Dickens's story, about a wealthy miserwho thinks Christmas is a humbug until three ghosts showhim the error of his ways, waspublished inDecember1843.
It has spawneda number of film adaptations, with actors such asReginald Owen, Albert Finney, George C. Scottand Patrick Stewart taking on the lead role. There are also animated versions with characters likeMickey Mouse and Mr. Magoo, as well as the 20093D animated film starring JimCarrey.
Some versions, like the 1998 comedy Scrooged starring Bill Murray, offer a modern retelling, following the same basic plot but modifying the characters. (For example, Murray plays a miserlytelevision executive rather than a businessman.)
But for many fans, Hurst's black-and-white version, starring BritishactorAlastairSim in the titular role, is the very best.
In a 2007 reviewin Entertainment Weekly,LeahReisman-Seneswrote, "Other Christmas Carols need not apply. The definitive version of the Dickens tale is ... not only the gold standard against which all other holiday films should be measured, but also one of the greatest films ever made, period."
A relatively short film with a running time of 86 minutes, Scrooge, as it was called in the U.K.,was filmed in London and written by Noel Langley, who had gained fame as one of the screenwriters on The Wizard of Oz.
Scrooge was quite popular,commerciallyand critically in Britain. But when it was released in the U.S. — under the title A ChristmasCarol — it received mixed reviews and failed at the box office.
The New York Times praised the film's "phantasmagoric creation of a sombre and chilly atmosphere," but Time magazine called it only "a serviceable new edition of Charles Dickens's evergreen story," and said "Hurst's direction is too often heavy."
It really wasn't until the film was released on television — much like another Christmas classic, It's a Wonderful Life— thatit began to gain popularity.
'It's really great to watch'
Film critics generally hail Sim's performance. He was 51 at the time he took on the part of Scrooge, and was better known for his comedic roles.
Sim "underplays it nicely. He's sort of this reserved, crotchety old man, andsomehow he's more scary in his reserve than he would be if he went over the top," said writer Gina Dalfonzo, who is also editor of the Dickensblog.
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"When Scrooge is transformed and then he just goes berserk, [Sim] goes goofy. It's really great to watch. I think that tends to stick in people's minds."
Sim was always Hurst'sfirst choice to play Scrooge, said Smith,who oversees the Brian Desmond Hurst legacy website.
Hurst saw Sim as a verydisciplinedartist, a fine actor and a delight to work with, said Smith.
"Brian wasn't very kind tovery many actors," Smith said. So that type of praise from Hurst is "probably about as glowing as it gets."
Sim's background in comedy served him well, particularlyin the scenes of Scrooge on the morning of his transformation.
"Webelievehim at every step of this story —when he's beingmean, nasty, when he's being scared to death, and when he sees the lightandbecomes giddy with joyat this new world that had opened up to him," said veteran film critic LeonardMaltin, in anintroduction to the60thAnniversary Blu-ray and DVD of the film.
Maltinsaid he didn't think he'd seen "any other actor portray that aspect of Scrooge so beautifully, or so convincingly."
Shakespearean in its staging
Journalist Colin Fleming, who is writing a book on Hurst'sfilm, said the movie combines different visual styles, including realism, film noirand German expressionism. Fleming says the result isan effective horror movie.
For example, Fleming said the visit by Scrooge's former business partner Jacob Marley, now a tortured and wailing spiritplayed by BritishShakespearean actor Michael Hordern, is "absolutely terrifying." That's because the scene combines acacophony of soundswith ahaunting, atonal musical score that reaches a crescendo as a fearful Scrooge looks outside his window to see Marley surrounded by other tormented spirits.
Fleming said the production team was"smart enough to write the film, shoot the film, act thefilm, score the film" in away "that Shakespeare would do it."
He said the film also benefits from tweaks to the source material, giving characters like Scrooge more of a backstory.
Like Dalfonzo, Fleming believes thekey to the film's success is that Sim portrays Scrooge as someone who is "not so much different than a lot of people we deal with all the time— maybe not much different than who we might be."
A memorable experience on set
Most of the cast of thisholiday favouriteis gone now— but not Teresa Cozens-Hardy.
Fans of the film may remember "Fred's maid," the character who, with a nod and a smile, encouraged the apprehensive miser near the end of the movie to walk through the doors of his nephew's home and continue on his path of redemption.
Cozens-Hardy was20at the time she played the role.She speaks nolines and appears on the screen for less than a minute.Shewas paid about six pounds a day for three days of work; it washer second and last film.
Now 87, Cozens-Hardy has fond memories of the experience, although she also remembers being barked at by the director.
"[Hurst] wasn't very nice. He was quite rude to me,"Cozens-Hardy said in a phone interview with CBC from Chester, England. "'Smile at him!,' he kept shouting at me.He hadn't given me any instruction."
Nonetheless, Cozens-Hardysaid she "enjoyed" working on the film,even though she was "stuck in my dressing roomfor most of the time."
In a surprising twist, no one in thesmall community she now lives in knows the part she played in a Christmas classic — or even seems all that interested in the film.
"Nobody around here cares about it at all," Cozens-Hardy says, laughing. "It's amazing."