Ebenezer Scrooge has been portrayed scores of times in film, radio, and television, either as Ebenezer Scrooge, the character from A Christmas Carol, or a ‘Scrooge-esque’ character in a retelling. To keep things simple for the poll, I’ve chosen six actors from the films most of us know.
I voted “fraud” in protest of a poll that doesn’t include Murray, Quincy Magoo, and Starlight Glimmer. However, I do have to give you props for not including Jim Carrey. The world would be a better place if nothing included Jim Carrey.
As I said, there are about 80 versions of A Christmas Carol in various media, most of which ‘nobody has heard of’. The films chosen are, well, films (as opposed to plays, radio plays, Christmas episodes of TV shows, etc.), and are the better-known/best-known productions.
Yes, he’s great. My kids are watching it right now.
It also might be the best Christmas Carol movie. It both capture the story and has a lot of fun doing so. It may be very silly of me to think it, but I think Dickens would have loved this movie.
I voted for Scott. All of the other versions in the poll are portrayed as being mean for the sake of being mean. We watched the 1935 version last night, and they did show Belle, but for the most part the versions show Scrooge as a bitter old bastard without any real context. George C. Scott plays Scrooge with a certain glee that is missing from the others. The line about boiling people in their own pudding stands out especially. And unlike versions where Scrooge ‘sees the light’ almost immediately, we get to see Scott’s Scrooge evolve. In the 1984 version, Scrooge seems more like a real person.
The 1984 version also has the best Ghost of Christmas Present. Edward Woodward delivers a couple of lines especially well. (‘It’s all Bob Cratchit can afford!’) Overall, I like the 1984 version the best. But some of the characters are even bigger ‘geese’ than the same characters in other versions.
Incidentally, the worst Ghost of Christmas Present is in Hicks’s 1935 version. He doesn’t seem very merry. The creepiest Tiny Tim was in the 1938 version, though the 1984 version has a disturbing look as well.
I can’t vote as I have never seen any of the mentioned versions. I’m probably an anomaly. My first thought was Bill Murray, then Scrooge McDuck, then Rowan Atkinson.