Mickey's Christmas Carol
Mickey's Christmas Carol (1983)

Mickey's Christmas Carol

3/5
(10 votos)
8.0IMDb

Detalles

Elenco

Errores

After Scrooge wakes up from the Ghost of Christmas Future, when he tries to find his way out of the bed curtain, there is no curtain behind him, but in the next shot, there is a curtain behind him.

When Scrooge begins to give bags of money to rat and mole, there are six bags of gold in the jacket.

But once he throws them all, eight bags appear.

Then once Scrooge leaves, the next shot has nine bags.

The interior of the house changes, such as the location of the dining room table at the end compared to what it was like during the scene when the Ghost of Christmas Present brought Scrooge over.

For example, the dining room table is near the front door at the end, but earlier it wasn't.

The front door to Bob Cratchet's house has an X on the bottom half.

In the long overhead shots such as Scrooge discovering the Ghost of Christmas Present is gone and his arrival to Cratchet's house at the end, the X is not shown.

Then it's back in the closer shots.

When Scrooge flies out the window of his room with the Ghost of Christmas Past, he loses his slippers.

Later, in his counting house, they're back on his feet.

When the Mole and Rat stop by Scrooge's counting house, there's a shot of the clock where the time reads 9:00.

Then when in the shot of Scrooge saying "You work all your life to get money, then people want you to give it away," the time on the clock reads between 6:55 and 7:00.

When Jiminy Cricket (The Ghost of Christmas Past) jumps onto Scrooge's bedside table, the time on the alarm clock reads 2:00.

In the shot of the curtains moving when Scrooge hears the dinging, then goes back to sleep, the time reads 1:00.

Then in the next shot when The Ghost of Christmas Past dings the bell on the alarm clock again, the time reads 2:00.

When Jacob Marley (Goofy) tells Scrooge that he will be visited by 3 spirits, he holds up 2 fingers instead of 3.

This is more than likely part of Jacob Marley having the same humorous traits as Goofy.

In the final scene at Bob Cratchit's home, the lettering on the "Home Sweet Home" sign changes between shots (particularly the word "Sweet", which alternates between uppercase and lowercase in different typefaces).

Box Office

FechaÁreaBruto
USA USD 21,000,000
FechaÁreaBrutoPantalla
16 December 1983 USA USD 2,111,582 862

Comentarios

The result is a thing of beauty and I have absolutely no idea how this one lost the animated short film category to "Sundae in New York" 30 years ago. It features all the famous characters, from Scrooge over Donald to Micky and Goofy and some of the lesser known ones too like Grandma Duck.

A very bare bones Christmas Carol but what can you expect when It's only 26 minutes. It was a bit weird having a Scottish Scrooge but I loved It.

This is a very nice adaptation from Disney of the classic "A Christmas Carol." It stars Mickey, Donald and Daisy as some of the main Carol characters, playing Bob Cratchit, Nephew Fred and Belle.

I must have watched this film a million times when I was a kid in the 80's. Now I get to enjoy it every year with my own kids.

Although Charles Dickens' classic tale has been adapted for the screen dozens upon dozens of times, "Mickey's Christmas Carol" stands out as one of the best. Its use of everyone's favorite cartoon characters to bring the story to life is charming and the pace is perfect to keep the attention of children of all ages.

Ebeneezer Scrooge (Scrooge McDuck) is a cold hearted miser who loves money and hates the holidays. One night Scrooge is visited by the apparition of his deceased partner Jacob Marley (Goofy).

This is by far my favourite Disney movie/adaptation ever created. I cry every time I see tiny Tim.

Mickey's Christmas Carol is a movie I had as a kid, and revisiting it was like revisiting childhood.Basically, the movie is an adaptation of A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens, a novel that has gotten a lot of various adaptations (from this to The Muppets to even The Flintstones and The Smurfs, if there's a popular cartoon character or franchise aimed at all ages, chances are it has or will get an adaptation).

A family classic, which we've watched every Christmas season since about 2016. It's very upbeat, compared to the "live-action" Disney version, and compactly fit into a 30-minute made for tv special, which I definitely saw at least once as a child.

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