Daddy's gonna kill Ralphie!

You just blew my mind.

Watch the last ten minutes of My Stepmother is an Alien someday.

Huh. I thought it was set in nineteen-fifty-whatever.

ETA: You’re right. The author claims it was set in 1940.

Daisy was making BB guns as early as 1886.

50? That’s a bit old for the Dad of an 8 or 10 year old in the late 30s. Heck, even 40 would be on the late side of things.

As an aside, there really isn’t supposed to be a specific year attached to the setting of the movie. More of a generic time period (late-30s, early-40s), from what I’ve read.

Considering that Darren McGavin was 61 when the movie was made, I was being generous by estimating the dad to be 50. But yeah, I agree, that would make for an awfully old dad in that day and age.

Wow. I knew he was a bot old for the part, but I didn’t realize he was that old. I chalked it up to the fact that parents are always older in the child’s mind, even if the child is grown. So, the narrator of the story makes his Dad an older guy.

ETA: Upon review, I didn’t do a very good job of saying what I meant to say.

Until I went to the museum I always assumed that it was the early (or even late) 50s. Another piece of evidence for my hypothesis that the longest decade was the years 1946-1962 (even though ACS appears to even predate that era.)

When did shopping “centers” come about, when did they start commercializing Christmas, and when did they have Santa’s for the kids to visit?

Shopping centers came about in the 1920s and 1930s, though the modern enclosed shopping mall is a product of the 50s:

However, the scenes with Santa and the store windows in ACS were all at a department store, not a shopping center / mall.

Little Orphan Annie (the radio show) ran from 1930-1942, but Ovaltine stopped being a sponsor in 1940. So, it’s 1930-1940.

No it isn’t. There are several things in the movie that can be dated to the mid to late 40s, including cars, songs, and other details.

Ok, I wasn’t sure about the shopping “mall” (as in a place where several different buisnesses were clustered together). Mom drops off boys, wanders off to do some window shopping. I guess it could be one of them old (and huge) department stores.

I also see from wiki that the commercialised santa goes back to the 1880’s. :eek:

Edit: Sorry. 1890’s…

Yup, those scenes were filmed at the Higbee’s department store in downtown Cleveland:

http://www.achristmasstoryhouse.com/higbees.shtml

(Scroll down past the picture of the store to read details about the movie scenes.)

Thanks!

Bond!

He might have had a real gun.

My leg lamp is on display in my front window right now, 3 years running. It is our only Christmas decoration.

There really was a “leg” lamp according to Jean Shephard but it would have looked something like this

Band name!