So I’ve told you my Christmas guilty pleasures. Here are four of my (movie) Christmas
pleasures--sans guilt, avec pleasure.
Why no guilt? Well, it’s kind of
like the guilty pleasure movies are like Harlequin romances: really tacky and probably
not well-written, but somehow really enjoyable. And with no real
value. (I do still remember my favorite,
called The Breadth of Heaven—in fact,
I still own it, dog-eared and much-loved—where the main character
is suddenly whisked away from her boring job as hotel clerk to become the
secretary-companion to the Princess of Tirhania, complete with new wardrobe,
new country and eventual new husband—the Prince of Tirhania, no less. Ahh, I still can picture her russet suit,
with a blue scarf that matched her cobalt blue eyes...) But I digress. The movies I’m including here are (just in my
humble, but always correct, opinion), like literature--some are kind of silly
literature, but literature, nonetheless.
Or at least closer to that than to a Harlequin romance.
How cute is that?? |
Elf: I never liked
Will Ferrell on Saturday Night Live. Couldn’t stand him. And I used to avoid his movies. I didn’t know! I didn’t know that somehow, after his
transition from comedy skits to real movies, out popped this sweet, innocent,
sincere, loveable guy! And never more so
than in Elf, where he plays a human
who’s been raised as an elf and never sees anything amiss, despite the fact
that he’s, oh, about ten times bigger than all his friends and neighbors. I’m happy every time I watch this.
Love Actually – I didn’t actually love this the first time I
saw it. But it’s grown on me so much
that it’s now one of my absolute favorites.
A bunch of separate Christmas stories, each very different and mostly quite funny, that all unexpectedly tie
together in the end. Touching,
heartbreaking, funny, and full of great actors:
Hugh Grant, Emma Thompson, Colin Firth, Bill Nighy, Liam Neeson, Alan
Rickman… Love this! And it includes perhaps my favorite modern
day Christmas song:
White Christmas: My
favorite movie—and I’m not limiting this to Christmas movies. It was made just for me, I’m sure of it. It’s got it all: Bing Crosby, Danny Kay,
Rosie Clooney, Vera-Ellen (the most amazing dancer ever, with the teeny-tiniest
waist ever), the 1940’s, singing duos, beautiful clothes, a snowy lodge in Vermont, lots of song and
dance production numbers, and absolutely hilarious. I’ve seen it every year for years and years
(actually, we had to put this on an every-other-year rotation with The Bishop’s
Wife—we know it too well!), and I laugh out loud every time, and can sing every
song, if I’m so inclined (which I usually am.)
Here’s one of my favorite scenes—nothing to do with Christmas, but a
killer:
The Bishop’s Wife: Here’s
all you need to know: David Niven as a pastor,
Loretta Young as his sweet wife, and Cary Grant as an angel who’s sort of
hankering after Loretta Young (who wouldn’t?)
It’s sweet, a little spicy (just a tiny bit suggestive, in a wistful
sort of way), and very funny. I leave
you with the beautiful final line of the movie:
…loving kindness, warm hearts, and the stretched out hand of
tolerance; all the shining gifts that make peace on earth.
Merry Christmas, one and all!
1 comment:
Hey Steve,
Re: Will Ferrell - check out "Stranger than Fiction" in which he plays a socially awkward tax collector who makes the transition from an anal stuffed shirt to a self-sacrificing man with great capacity for love. It's a comedy, mystery, but mostly divine love story. Delightfully creative angle in which we observe his daily life with the help of a narrator............but who is the narrator? Emma Thompson and Maggie Gyllenhaal support.
Merry Christmas to you! All the best to you and yours,
Rick.
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