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Scrooge (1951)

 Scrooge (1951)
type
TVTItem
 Scrooge (1951)
label
Scrooge (1951)
 Scrooge (1951)
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Scrooge1951
 Scrooge (1951)
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Scrooge is a 1951 British film adaptation of Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol, written by Noel Langley (The Wizard of Oz) and directed by Brian Desmond Hurst. It's regarded by many as the definitive screen version of the story.Heading the cast are Alastair Sim as Ebenezer Scrooge and Michael Hordern as Jacob Marley, both of whom would reprise their respective roles for the 1971 animated film A Christmas Carol. Mervyn Johns plays Bob Cratchit, while a young Patrick Macnee is seen as the younger, living version of Marley.Clive Donner, who worked as an editor on this film, directed his own made-for-TV version in 1984.
 Scrooge (1951)
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2023-12-06T15:31:19Z
 Scrooge (1951)
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2023-12-06T15:31:19Z
 Scrooge (1951)
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DBTropes
 Scrooge (1951) / int_113480b7
type
Canon Foreigner
 Scrooge (1951) / int_113480b7
comment
Canon Foreigner: The Predatory Business which buys out Fezziwig is personified by Mr. Jorkin, adapted from Mr. Jorkins, a character from David Copperfield. Jorkin serves as an Evil Mentor to Scrooge and Marley both, pairing them up in an ominous scene. He is later caught embezzling from his own banking house; Scrooge and Marley bail him out in return for 51% of the stock share, effectively a hostile takeover.
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_121b3725
type
Age Lift
 Scrooge (1951) / int_121b3725
comment
Age Lift: Fan in the original novel is Ebenezer's younger sister. Here she is the older sibling, with their father blaming Ebenezer for the mother's Death by Childbirth. Also, both are in their late teens/early 20s in the scene where she comes to bring him home from boarding school, whereas in the book they're children at that point.
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_126ce03c
type
I Was Quite a Looker
 Scrooge (1951) / int_126ce03c
comment
I Was Quite a Looker: Scrooge and Marley were quite handsome in their younger days. Oddly enough when we see Alice in the present day, she still looks the same, just with slightly grayer hair. See Timeshifted Actor below.
 Scrooge (1951) / int_126ce03c
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_1d18887f
type
Pay Evil unto Evil
 Scrooge (1951) / int_1d18887f
comment
Pay Evil unto Evil: In the scene at the rag and bone man's shack, Mrs. Dilber explains that helping themselves to Scrooge's things is punishment for the grasping and unfeeling life he led.
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_20f689e9
type
Adaptational Villainy
 Scrooge (1951) / int_20f689e9
comment
Adaptational Villainy: In the novel, while Scrooge is heartless and unpleasant, it's never even suggested that he's corrupt or dishonest in any way (just the opposite: the novel's narrator clearly states that Scrooge's word on a contract was always his bond). In this film version, the young Scrooge is apprenticed to a corrupt and dishonest money lender and broker who embezzles funds, and it's strongly implied that Scrooge and Marley went on to adopt the same business practices.
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_23473ae7
type
Adaptation Expansion
 Scrooge (1951) / int_23473ae7
comment
Adaptation Expansion: This film makes a change very common to adaptations of the story, by including a scene where Belle (here "Alice") and Scrooge fall in love. Adds an extended Start of Darkness sequence depicting how Scrooge was corrupted by an unscrupulous mentor, the Canon Foreigner Mr. Jorkin, luring him from Fezziwig's good influence. This film shows Marley's death seven years earlier. Then there is the touching scene where Scrooge comes to Fred's house to accept his invitation for Christmas dinner at last, fearful that he would be rejected, only to find he needn't have doubted Fred's love. This movie covers Fan's Death by Childbirth, as well as her final moments with her brother. Mrs. Dilber's presence was expanded in the movie as the first witness to the changed Scrooge.
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_24a99217
type
Maternal Death? Blame the Child!
 Scrooge (1951) / int_24a99217
comment
Maternal Death? Blame the Child!: Why Scrooge's father abandoned him at boarding school. This is a change from the book where Fan is expressly stated to be Scrooge's younger sister. Scrooge unfortunately grows up to be too much like his father, and blames his nephew Fred for his sister Fan's death just as his father blamed him for his mother's.
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_269e82c1
type
Death of a Child
 Scrooge (1951) / int_269e82c1
comment
Death of a Child: In the Bad Future, Tiny Tim. Ultimately averted, however; see Throwing Off the Disability below.
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_26ac510e
type
Mythology Gag
 Scrooge (1951) / int_26ac510e
comment
Mythology Gag: The blind man's dog hurriedly pulling him away from Scrooge is something explicitly described in the novella.
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_33d5b7f2
type
Adapted Out
 Scrooge (1951) / int_33d5b7f2
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Adapted Out: The Cratchits have five children instead of six: three girls and two boys instead of three of each.
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_3bad6ba6
type
Two of Your Earth Minutes
 Scrooge (1951) / int_3bad6ba6
comment
Two of Your Earth Minutes: "What does this party cost in your mortal money?", says the Ghost of Christmas Past at Fezziwig's party. The point, of course, is to show how little money counts in the spirit life.
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_4ae690ca
type
Laughing Mad
 Scrooge (1951) / int_4ae690ca
comment
Laughing Mad: When Scrooge wakes up on Christmas morning and can't stop laughing out of joy, his housekeeper thinks, justifiably, that he's gone quite mad.
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_4c051b23
type
DeadLittleSister
 Scrooge (1951) / int_4c051b23
comment
Scrooge's mother died giving birth to him, leading to a troubled relationship between him and his father. This wasn't in the book, and is presumably the reason Fan is now Scrooge's older sister instead of the Dead Little Sister she was originally.
 Scrooge (1951) / int_4c051b23
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_524f03f1
type
Majority-Share Dictator
 Scrooge (1951) / int_524f03f1
comment
Majority-Share Dictator: Scrooge and Marley obtain their wealth by offering to cover the expenses of their owner's embezzlement scandal in return for the right to buy up to 51% of the company's shares. Naturally this gives them absolute power over the day-to-day business of the company.
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_5313c266
type
Bookends
 Scrooge (1951) / int_5313c266
comment
Book Ends: At the beginning of the movie, as Scrooge walks down the street, a blind man's dog actually pulls the man away from him, as if sensing that he's a bad person (this is a Mythology Gag straight out of the book). At the end, this time he approaches the man, gives him a little money, and stoops to pet the dog, who happily accepts.
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_5a40d6a
type
Adaptation Distillation
 Scrooge (1951) / int_5a40d6a
comment
Adaptation Distillation: In this version, the Bad Future starts with the Cratchits mourning Tiny Tim's death, then moves on to the thieves selling Scrooge's belongings, then saves the men talking about Scrooge's death for last. In the book, these happen in the opposite order. This makes our realization that Scrooge is the despised, robbed dead man more gradual, instead of it being fairly obvious from the start.
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_60f92ddd
type
Oireland
 Scrooge (1951) / int_60f92ddd
comment
Oireland: The homeless lady Alice is seen feeding during the Christmas Present sequence has a very broad, almost comical Irish accent - not out of place for a work set in the aftermath of the Irish Potato Famine.
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_61356a74
type
Almost Dead Guy
 Scrooge (1951) / int_61356a74
comment
Almost Dead Guy: Young Scrooge, thinking his sister has died, bitterly storms from the room, and misses her dying request to him. Later, much older Scrooge has Marley delivering a warning with his last breaths, but it's over his head. Scrooge even waits until business is over to bother visiting him; his maid incredulously declares "I'll see if I can get him to hold out, I'm sure!"
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_680f950
type
Gilligan Cut
 Scrooge (1951) / int_680f950
comment
Gilligan Cut: Though not played for comic effect, it is implied that despite the board of directors refusing outright to accept Scrooge & Marley's offer to take over the company that is on the brink of liquidation, due to Mr Jorkin's embezzlement, the directors reluctantly accept the offer. Obviously the board of directors were in a catch 22 situation. Either accept the offer or loss of jobs. And as seen in the next scene with Mrs Dilber warning Bob Cratchit on Marley dying, she enters the offices once Fezziwigs now known as Scrooge and Marley.
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_782fdff
type
Storybook Opening
 Scrooge (1951) / int_782fdff
comment
Storybook Opening: The film opens with an unseen person's hand pulling A Christmas Carol from a bookshelf containing several other Dickens works, then opening it to reveal the credits therein.
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_7ef728b1
type
Tsundere
 Scrooge (1951) / int_7ef728b1
comment
At Fred's party, Flora chides Mr. Tupper for flirting with her - but the motion she makes with her fan is Victorian code for "I am pleased and interested in you".
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_823c6e3e
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Large Ham
 Scrooge (1951) / int_823c6e3e
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Large Ham: Marley is a big one, and Scrooge is one after his reformation.
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_83a903f6
type
Stepford Smiler
 Scrooge (1951) / int_83a903f6
comment
Stepford Smiler: When Bob Cratchit comes home in the Christmas Yet To Come part, he tries to pretend that he's happy about an imagined goodbye from Tiny Tim's spirit. But he quickly collapses into his wife's arms in tears.
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_863fa679
type
What Happened to the Mouse?
 Scrooge (1951) / int_863fa679
comment
What Happened to the Mouse?: In the original novel the Christmas Past sequence shows that Belle married someone else and had a family, which is the last we see of her. This adaptation shows her counterpart Alice in the Christmas Present, helping feed the poor on Christmas Day, but whether she had a family is unaddressed. It's also unknown what happened to Mr Jorkin, although it is safely assumed like Marley, he is deceased and is likely suffering the same punishment as Marley by being fettered in chains for his crimes.
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_9591377d
type
Heel Realization
 Scrooge (1951) / int_9591377d
comment
Heel Realization: When Scrooge describes how much fun it was working for his old boss Fezziwig, he stops, noting that he wishes he could talk to his clerk, Bob Cratchit, and apologize.
 Scrooge (1951) / int_9591377d
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_9f6fb586
type
Leitmotif
 Scrooge (1951) / int_9f6fb586
comment
Leitmotif: During Scrooge's first scene with Alice, the folk song "Barbara Allen" is playing in the background. When Scrooge goes to Fred's party at the end of the movie, Fred and his friends are all singing the same song, and it continues (presumably non-diegetically) when Scrooge finally meets Fred's wife and accepts that they're actually a great match for each other. The implication is that Scrooge has at last reconnected with the part of himself that is able to have fun with other people, and see value in the idea of romantic love. Apt, for a song about a man who dies of unrequited love.
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_a036d3df
type
Sarcastic Confession
 Scrooge (1951) / int_a036d3df
comment
Sarcastic Confession: Mr. Jorkin, when confronted on charges of embezzlement.
 Scrooge (1951) / int_a036d3df
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_a1b141f4
type
My God, What Have I Done?
 Scrooge (1951) / int_a1b141f4
comment
My God, What Have I Done?: When he gets a better look at Fan's death, Scrooge realizes that she asked him to look after Fred. He begins to feel very contrite, as he has gone out of his way to avoid Fred.
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_a2022cc9
type
Killed Mid-Sentence
 Scrooge (1951) / int_a2022cc9
comment
Killed Mid-Sentence: Marley dies while attempting to warn Scrooge of his fate and telling him to save himself.
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_a65288e2
type
Ascended Extra
 Scrooge (1951) / int_a65288e2
comment
Ascended Extra: Mrs Dilber receives more screen time; in the book she's only seen in the future pawning off Scrooge's items.
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_a78f8506
type
Time-Shifted Actor
 Scrooge (1951) / int_a78f8506
comment
Timeshifted Actor: George Cole as Young Ebenezer Scrooge and Patrick Macnee as Young Jacob Marley. Averted with Alice, who is played by a single actress across the entire timeframe, presumably to show how her honest living and loving demeanour have aged her more gracefully.
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_ae3d6438
type
Deadpan Snarker
 Scrooge (1951) / int_ae3d6438
comment
Deadpan Snarker: Pre-reformation Scrooge is full of snark, as is the corrupt businessman Mr. Jorkin.
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_b552b24
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Truer to the Text
 Scrooge (1951) / int_b552b24
comment
Truer to the Text: Even though this movie takes its own set of liberties that other adaptations don't, it still includes quite a bit of dialogue from the book that often tends to be left out. For example, it includes the sequence where Scrooge threatens to swallow a toothpick while talking with Marley, something very few film adaptations do.
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_b5c56995
type
Corrupt the Cutie
 Scrooge (1951) / int_b5c56995
comment
Corrupt the Cutie: The Christmas Past sequence shows this happening to Ebenezer, along with him developing his Jade-Colored Glasses.
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_b97c2cfb
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Maybe Ever After
 Scrooge (1951) / int_b97c2cfb
comment
Maybe Ever After: In contrast to the novel where she has a family of her own, Alice/Belle's romantic situation isn't addressed. She's also shown in the Christmas Present sequence, where she isn't in the novel. Although it isn't explicitly stated, this does leave things open for Scrooge to reconcile with her if she isn't married.
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_b9c673a6
type
Market-Based Title
 Scrooge (1951) / int_b9c673a6
comment
Market-Based Title: Was released simply as A Christmas Carol in some markets, including the US.
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_c3448a6f
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Informed Attribute
 Scrooge (1951) / int_c3448a6f
comment
Informed Attribute: Tiny Tim is supposed to be very ill, but he looks perfectly healthy barring the crutch.
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_caf89e54
type
Taking You with Me
 Scrooge (1951) / int_caf89e54
comment
Taking You with Me: Mr. Jorkin's threat to the rest of the board members. See Sentenced to Down Under above.
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_cbe687ab
type
Corrupt Corporate Executive
 Scrooge (1951) / int_cbe687ab
comment
Corrupt Corporate Executive: Mr. Jorkin; during Scrooge's past at the Amalgamated Mercantile Society, the ledger registers a liability of 3200 pounds, 8 shillings and 10 pence (£3200, 8 / 10 d), with assets of 11 pounds, 8 shillings and 10 pence (£11, 8 / 10d), resulting in a deficit of £3189.
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_d29a6629
type
Death by Childbirth
 Scrooge (1951) / int_d29a6629
comment
Death by Childbirth: Scrooge's mother died giving birth to him, leading to a troubled relationship between him and his father. This wasn't in the book, and is presumably the reason Fan is now Scrooge's older sister instead of the Dead Little Sister she was originally. Scrooge's sister Fan. Which leads to a troubled relationship between him and his nephew Fred. Much like his father's relationship with him.
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_d4bf11d1
type
Dramatic Unmask
 Scrooge (1951) / int_d4bf11d1
comment
Dramatic Unmask: Marley removing the bandage around his head is framed as this, instead of removing it and causing his jaw to drop after his identity has been established.
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Scrooge (1951) / int_d4bf11d1
 Scrooge (1951) / int_dc057cf3
type
Adaptation Name Change
 Scrooge (1951) / int_dc057cf3
comment
Adaptation Name Change: Love interest Belle becomes Alice instead.
 Scrooge (1951) / int_dc057cf3
featureApplicability
1.0
 Scrooge (1951) / int_dc057cf3
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 Scrooge (1951)
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Scrooge (1951) / int_dc057cf3
 Scrooge (1951) / int_de1a775f
type
Sentenced to Down Under
 Scrooge (1951) / int_de1a775f
comment
Sentenced to Down Under: Averted. When Mr. Jorkin is found to have embezzled over £3,000 from the company, and subsequently spent it all, he points out that trying him for his crimes would expose the rest of the board to...undue financial risk:
 Scrooge (1951) / int_de1a775f
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 Scrooge (1951)
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Scrooge (1951) / int_de1a775f
 Scrooge (1951) / int_e003c829
type
History Repeats
 Scrooge (1951) / int_e003c829
comment
Scrooge's sister Fan. Which leads to a troubled relationship between him and his nephew Fred. Much like his father's relationship with him.
 Scrooge (1951) / int_e003c829
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Scrooge (1951) / int_e003c829
 Scrooge (1951) / int_e0040f41
type
Start of Darkness
 Scrooge (1951) / int_e0040f41
comment
Start of Darkness: The Christmas Past sequence explores this in more detail than the book.
 Scrooge (1951) / int_e0040f41
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Scrooge (1951) / int_e0040f41
 Scrooge (1951) / int_e016e53f
type
Throwing Off the Disability
 Scrooge (1951) / int_e016e53f
comment
Throwing Off the Disability: The epilogue shows a fully healthy, crutch-free Tiny Tim running to greet Scrooge in the street.
 Scrooge (1951) / int_e016e53f
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Scrooge (1951) / int_e016e53f
 Scrooge (1951) / int_e4f05faa
type
Jaw Drop
 Scrooge (1951) / int_e4f05faa
comment
Jaw Drop: A notable aversion, since this version of Marley's ghost does not need the bandage around his jaw to keep it shut, removing it within moments of appearing so that Scrooge is able to recognize him and seemingly having no problems talking either way.
 Scrooge (1951) / int_e4f05faa
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Scrooge (1951) / int_e4f05faa
 Scrooge (1951) / int_e5421161
type
Expy
 Scrooge (1951) / int_e5421161
comment
Expy: Mr. Jorkin is more-or-less Mr. Jorkins from David Copperfield transposed into A Christmas Carol.
 Scrooge (1951) / int_e5421161
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Scrooge (1951) / int_e5421161
 Scrooge (1951) / int_eba4e300
type
Honorary Uncle
 Scrooge (1951) / int_eba4e300
comment
Honorary Uncle: In the epilogue, Tiny Tim calls Scrooge "Uncle Scrooge."
 Scrooge (1951) / int_eba4e300
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_f3d5d15f
type
Creepy Child
 Scrooge (1951) / int_f3d5d15f
comment
Creepy Child: Ignorance and Want.
 Scrooge (1951) / int_f3d5d15f
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 Scrooge (1951) / int_fbd285b7
type
Comically Missing the Point
 Scrooge (1951) / int_fbd285b7
comment
Comically Missing the Point: This exchange on Scrooge's staircase after he catches up with Mrs. Dilber and gives her a guinea.
 Scrooge (1951) / int_fbd285b7
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Scrooge (1951) / int_fbd285b7
 Scrooge (1951) / int_ffad4e9f
type
Shown Their Work
 Scrooge (1951) / int_ffad4e9f
comment
Shown Their Work: The tune that Mr Jorkin is whistling when he offers Scrooge a job is "The Lincolnshire Poacher", about a poacher who enjoys unlawfully entering property and trapping game there. After Marley's death scene, Christmas Past calls Scrooge a "squeezing, wrenching, grasping, covetous old sinner" — exactly as Charles Dickens describes him in the novel. At Fred's party, Flora chides Mr. Tupper for flirting with her - but the motion she makes with her fan is Victorian code for "I am pleased and interested in you".
 Scrooge (1951) / int_ffad4e9f
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Scrooge (1951)

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Scrooge (1951)
hasFeature
Almost Dead Guy / int_913544ea
 Scrooge (1951)
hasFeature
Laughing Mad / int_913544ea
 Scrooge (1951)
hasFeature
Lost in Imitation / int_913544ea
 Scrooge (1951)
hasFeature
Majority-Share Dictator / int_913544ea
 Scrooge (1951)
hasFeature
Named by the Adaptation / int_913544ea
 Scrooge (1951)
hasFeature
Parlor Games / int_913544ea
 Scrooge (1951)
hasFeature
Sentenced to Down Under / int_913544ea
 Scrooge (1951)
hasFeature
Start of Darkness / int_913544ea
 Scrooge (1951)
hasFeature
Vindicated by Cable / int_913544ea
 A Christmas Carol
seeAlso
Scrooge (1951)