|
Carrey
-- who does Scrooge at every age, from boy to young man to old skinflint
-- also plays the ghosts of Christmas Past, Present and Yet to Come, each spirit spectral and creepy in a way that past adaptations rarely managed. His co-stars also play multiple roles. Among them: Gary Oldman as Cratchit, Tiny Tim and the ghost of Jacob Marley, Scrooge's former partner; Robin Wright Penn as both Scrooge's doomed young sister and his lost love; and Bob Hoskins as both the miser's big-hearted old boss Fezziwig and a seedy pawnbroker. A day after seeing Zemeckis' finished film, Hoskins said it took him on a journey back to his own childhood. "You've got probably one of the greatest stories that was ever written translated by one of the greatest imaginations in Hollywood today," said Hoskins, who starred in Zemeckis' 1988 cartoon and live-action combo "Who Framed Roger Rabbit." "When I first learned to read, I was about 7, and I read two books. One was `Treasure Island' and one was `Christmas Carol,' and it frightened the ... life out of me. It really scared me. And ever since, I've seen translations of it on film, cartoons, and it's never had that fear. This did. Last night, it really scared me." "A Christmas Carol" is one of the most told and retold stories, a ritual acted out in such incarnations as Albert Finney's musical "Scrooge," Bill Murray's contemporary comedy "Scrooged" and Patrick Stewart's one-man stage show. Vanessa Williams played the lead as Ebony Scrooge in the TV musical "A Diva's Christmas Carol," while Henry Winkler did a Depression-era TV version with "An American Christmas Carol." Family adaptations have featured the Muppets, the Flintstones, Barbie dolls, Mickey Mouse and Mr. Magoo. "It doesn't matter how it's told or how crudely or if it's on stage or it's animated. Whatever it is, it's still that story. It always works. The story is so great, it always works," said Steve Starkey, who produced "A Christmas Carol" along with Zemeckis and Jack Rapke. But "this is the first time that a movie has lived up to what went on in my poor little child's mind from the time it was first read to me."
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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