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	<title>BestChristmasDays.com &#187; Christmas Movies</title>
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		<title>12 Things You Probably Didn’t Know About The Movie Home Alone</title>
		<link>http://www.bestchristmasdays.com/2011/01/12-things-you-probably-didn%e2%80%99t-know-about-the-movie-home-alone/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bestchristmasdays.com/2011/01/12-things-you-probably-didn%e2%80%99t-know-about-the-movie-home-alone/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 16 Jan 2011 05:18:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Christmas Movies]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[10 things you didnt know about home alone]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[christmas movie facts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cute]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[home alone]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[home alone movie trivia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[lol]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bestchristmasdays.com/?p=239</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[1. The picture Kevin finds of Buzz&#8217;s girlfriend was actually a picture of a boy made up to look like a girl because the director thought it would be too cruel to make fun of a girl like that. 2. The role of Uncle Frank was written for Kelsey Grammer. 3. There is a legend [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://s-ak.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/terminal01/2010/12/15/15/enhanced-buzz-23703-1292444652-5.jpg" alt="" width="435" height="374" /><span id="more-239"></span></p>
<ul>
<li>1. The picture Kevin finds of Buzz&#8217;s  girlfriend was actually a  picture of a boy made up to look like a girl  because the director  thought it would be too cruel to make fun of a girl  like that.</li>
<li>2. The role of Uncle Frank was written  for Kelsey Grammer.</li>
<p><img src="http://s-ak.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/terminal01/2010/12/15/15/enhanced-buzz-23689-1292444809-11.jpg" alt="" width="421" height="248" /></p>
<li>3. There is a legend that Elvis Presley  (who died in 1977) made a cameo in the movie. Many of those who believe  that Elvis is still alive maintain that, the heavily bearded man  standing in the background of the scene where Mrs. MacCallister is  shouting at the desk clerk (just before she meets John Candy) is Elvis.<img src="http://s-ak.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/terminal01/2010/12/15/15/enhanced-buzz-23715-1292443791-4.jpg" alt="" width="400" height="249" /></li>
<li>4. The issue of Playboy that Kevin finds  in Buzz&#8217;s room is from July 1989 with Erika Eleniak as Miss July.<img src="http://s-ak.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/terminal01/2010/12/15/15/enhanced-buzz-23697-1292444676-3.jpg" alt="" width="438" height="309" /></li>
<li>5. The “evil furnace” in the basement  was done by two guys with fishing line and flashlights.<img src="http://s-ak.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/terminal01/2010/12/15/15/enhanced-buzz-23705-1292444833-6.jpg" alt="" width="426" height="239" /></li>
<li>6. Robert De Niro turned down the role  of Harry.<img src="http://s-ak.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/terminal01/2010/12/15/15/enhanced-buzz-23708-1292445444-4.jpg" alt="" width="460" height="251" /></li>
<li>7. Angels with Filthy Souls is a  fictional gangster film and was made specifically for the film. There is  also a sequel to the film, Angels with Even Filthier Souls, in  the sequel.<img src="http://s-ak.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/terminal01/2010/12/15/15/enhanced-buzz-23704-1292444056-5.jpg" alt="" width="320" height="187" /></li>
<li>8. The Talkboy was originally conceived  as a non-working prop for Home Alone, used by Macaulay Culkin&#8217;s  character. In 1993 it was made into a retail version, brought on by a  massive letter-writing campaign by young fans of the film.</li>
</ul>
<p><img src="http://s-ak.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/terminal01/2010/12/15/15/enhanced-buzz-23712-1292444526-6.jpg" alt="" width="493" height="278" /></p>
<ul>
<li>9. John Candy filmed his part in only 1  day, albeit an extremely long 23-hour day. The story about having once  forgotten his son at a funeral home was entirely improvised. His part is  obviously inspired by the character he played in Planes, Trains &amp;  Automobiles.</li>
</ul>
<p><img src="http://s-ak.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/terminal01/2010/12/15/15/enhanced-buzz-23697-1292444341-2.jpg" alt="" width="430" height="300" /></p>
<ul>
<li>10. In the scene where Harry bites  Kevin&#8217;s finger, Joe Pesci actually bit Macaulay Culkin, leaving a scar  on his finger.</li>
</ul>
<p><img src="http://s-ak.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/terminal01/2010/12/15/15/enhanced-buzz-23713-1292446558-8.jpg" alt="" width="480" height="360" /></p>
<ul>
<li>11. The concept for the movie originated  during the filming of a scene in Uncle Buck when Macaulay Culkin  interrogated a would-be-babysitter through a letterbox.</li>
</ul>
<p><img src="http://s-ak.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/terminal01/2010/12/15/15/enhanced-buzz-23703-1292445182-6.jpg" alt="" width="190" height="182" /></p>
<ul>
<li>12. Daniel Stern agreed to have the  tarantula put on his face for exactly one take. He had to mime screaming  because the noise would have scared the spider, and the scream was  dubbed in later.<img src="http://s-ak.buzzfed.com/static/enhanced/terminal01/2010/12/15/15/enhanced-buzz-23695-1292445962-5.jpg" alt="" width="366" height="212" /></li>
</ul>
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		<title>100 Greatest Christmas Shows</title>
		<link>http://www.bestchristmasdays.com/2007/12/100-greatest-christmas-shows/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bestchristmasdays.com/2007/12/100-greatest-christmas-shows/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 19 Dec 2007 22:00:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Christmas Movies]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bestchristmasdays.com/2007/12/100-greatest-christmas-shows/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[If I were a candle on the advent wreath, I&#8217;d be the second purple one. When you light the first one, you still have people complaining that it&#8217;s too early for holiday cheer, and when you light the pink one after it, you suddenly realize oh crap I need to get my shopping done. Week [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p align="left">If I were a candle on the advent wreath, I&#8217;d be the second purple 	one. When you light the first one, you still have people complaining that it&#8217;s 	too early for holiday cheer, and when you light the pink 	one after it, you suddenly realize oh crap I need to get my shopping done.</p>
<p align="justify">Week 	Two? It&#8217;s fairly relaxing, and you can briefly soak in the actual peace that Christmas 	is supposed to be about without so much distraction. And what better way than by 	turning on your television and letting it shove commercialism down your throat?</p>
<p align="justify">Without question, my favorite part about Christmas is the way 	it takes over all of mass communication. So much, in fact, that I have decided to 	put together this list of some of the most memorable &#8230; and some of most underrated 	holiday specials and  	Christmas-related movies of all time. &#8220;Yeah, but a hundred?&#8221;  	you ask, bewildered.<span id="more-123"></span></p>
<p align="justify">Yes, a hundred. It&#8217;s a big frigging number,  	and as a result, there are quite a few items on this list that aren&#8217;t exactly 	what you would call &#8220;very Christmassy,&#8221;  	and a few others that aren&#8217;t exactly what you would call &#8220;very good.&#8221; But 	t&#8217;is the season for outlandish celebration, so I went the extra mile to come up 	with 100 specials that I think are worth watching at least twice.</p>
<p align="justify">With the exception of about four, I have seen every entry on this 	list, and will defend both its position and its right to be included as one 	of the best, not so much for outstanding achievement in film or television, but 	for satisfactory achievement in holiday spirit and/or in the department of old=lol.</p>
<p align="justify">Also, I&#8217;ll do you the favor of using my time machine to tell your future self, who&#8217;s 	in the middle of typing me an email along the lines of &#8220;You forgot this one! 	What about this one? That one should be ranked higher!&#8221; that I don&#8217;t care. 	Nope. Do not care. MERRY CHRISTMAS YOU SON OF A BITCH</p>
<hr /><span class="entryName"><img src="http://i241.photobucket.com/albums/ff16/mafihotz/100.jpg" class="blackFrame" title="#100" height="150" width="225" /><br />
Sonic Christmas Blast (1996)</span><strong><br />
<a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/B00005O5LM/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">Sonic the Hedgehog&#8217;s egg-shaped nemesis, Dr. Robotnik, has taken 	over for the retired Santa Claus, and reversed the job description by stealing 	all the toys in the world for himself. It doesn&#8217;t take Sonic and Tails long to 	discover that &#8220;retired&#8221; was more like &#8220;currently being held prisoner 	in some ice cave.&#8221; That&#8217;s probably the only big downside about this special. 	It doesn&#8217;t take Sonic long to do anything, that&#8217;s basically the plot of every cartoon 	of the entire series. The main reason this one even made the list as opposed to 	some others that got bumped is because those others didn&#8217;t have the voice-action 	power of Urkel as the main character.</p>
<p align="justify"><strong class="red">Memorable moment:</strong> Upon rescuing 	Santa, Sonic learns that the only way to save Christmas in time is by achieving &#8220;maximum 	velocity.&#8221; To do that, he has to run up a mountain really fast, and then 	do a bunch of XTR33M sports on the way down again. After that, he can finally move fast enough to circle the globe Superman 	1 style and return everyone&#8217;s presents. There&#8217;s also highlight for hardcore hedgehog 	fans in the form of a cameo by Princess Sally, Sonic&#8217;s girlfriend 	from his Saturday morning cartoon series. She doesn&#8217;t even get a word in, but for 	furries who just can&#8217;t get enough of that naked squirrel body, it was enough. Daydream 	all you want, but I swear to Baby Jesus there&#8217;s an internet cause to ensure that 	Sally&#8217;s love remains with our spiny blue hero. Man, I didn&#8217;t know they were having 	such bad relationship problems. Sonic the Hedgehog&#8217;s love life is in peril. Show 	your Support for the True 	Girl for Sonic today!</p>
<hr /><span class="entryName"><img src="http://i241.photobucket.com/albums/ff16/mafihotz/99.jpg" class="blackFrame" title="#100" height="150" width="225" /><br />
Mork&#8217;s First Christmas (1978)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/6303544754/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">When Mindy explains to our Orkan protagonist why everyone&#8217;s suddenly 	in a gift-giving frenzy, Mork sets out to buy presents for all his friends. Unfortunately, 	his complete lack of earth dollars puts a damper on his plans, until someone 	suggests that he make something for his friends instead. Mork toils away with 	his less than perfect creations, only to be met with suppressed giggling, until 	Mindy assures him that the fact that he put his heart into them makes his gifts 	special. You know, like when you&#8217;re in preschool, and you draw a picture of 	your family, and Daddy&#8217;s the same size as the house with about nine stick fingers 	on each hand.</p>
<p align="justify"><strong class="red">Memorable moment:</strong> Mindy trying 	to explain to Mork what the gathering of tiny people around the miniature stable 	on their neighbor&#8217;s lawn is. Also, instead of calling Orson at the end of the 	show, the only episode in which this is left out, Mork is seen examining the 	Christmas tree with the innocence of a four-year-old.</p>
<hr />
<p align="justify"><span class="entryName"><img src="http://i241.photobucket.com/albums/ff16/mafihotz/98.jpg" class="blackFrame" title="#100" height="150" width="225" /><br />
Saved by the Bell: Home for Christmas (1991)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/B0001EFV9K/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">The usually scheming Zack Morris shows his generous side throughout 	this two-part special, in which the gang from Bayside all get jobs at the mall during 	Christmas break. Zack falls for Laura, a girl who works with Kelly at the men&#8217;s 	department store. While trying to find a gift for her, he and Screech end up giving 	it to a homeless man they befriend. Later, when the man becomes hospitalized, the 	gang finds Laura already there visiting &#8230; the homeless man is her father. For a 	girl living out of her car, she sure looks well-groomed and made up. But then, this 	is the southern California coast in the early &#8217;90s. And it&#8217;s also a cheesy high 	school sitcom. In Part 2, Laura puts aside a suit at work for her dad, which she 	is accused of stealing and gets fired. So Zack buys the suit and invites Laura and 	her dad over for Christmas dinner, and gives her dad the suit to help him with job 	interviews.</p>
<p align="justify"><strong class="red">Memorable moment:</strong> Kelly talks her 	boss into sponsoring a production of &#8220;A Christmas Carol.&#8221; During the play, 	extra lines are added to advertise for the men&#8217;s store. Also, this short dialogue:</p>
<blockquote>
<p align="justify">Zack&#8217;s mom: &#8220;So, have you decided what you want for Christmas 		yet?&#8221;<br />
Zack: (upon spotting Laura) &#8220;Oh yeah.&#8221;<br />
Zack&#8217;s mom: &#8220;I don&#8217;t think I have a big enough box for her.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<hr /><span class="entryName"><img src="http://i241.photobucket.com/albums/ff16/mafihotz/97.jpg" class="blackFrame" title="#100" height="150" width="225" /><br />
Silent Night, Deadly Night (1984)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/6300165744/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">Some of you would be surprised at the number of horror flicks 	that use Christmas as a backdrop. Some of you have seen every one of them, and thus 	know why Silent Night, Deadly Night belongs on this list. It may not be the best 	of its kind, but that&#8217;s exactly what makes it so memorable. It also doesn&#8217;t hurt 	that they made 4 frigging sequels, the last of which was in 1992  	and starred Mickey Rooney. Our story begins with a boy named 	Billy, whose bedridden grandfather warns him to stay away from Santa Claus, because 	he punishes naughty children. Sure enough, Billy&#8217;s parents are soon murdered and his 	mother raped by a man in a Santa suit. Billy is then sent to an Catholic orphanage, 	where he spies on two older orphans having sex, followed by the Mother Superior 	punishing them. Billy is told that this is naughty, and that everything naughty 	must be punished. Years later, he finds himself fantasizing about a co-worker at 	his toy store, only to have his daydream interrupted by scenes of violence. He is 	then made to cover for the toy store&#8217;s Santa Claus, thus becoming one with his worst 	fear. All it takes is to witness another co-worker molesting his crush, and YOU 	BETTER WATCH OUT!!11 Do you see what I did there?</p>
<p align="justify"><strong class="red">Memorable moment:</strong> During a random 	sex scene, the girl suddenly stops in the heat of passion, because she realizes 	she left the cat out. So she steps outside, topless, to call it in. Then evil Santa 	Billy chops her head off. One could argue that this is the dumbest execution of 	the &#8220;Don&#8217;t have sex in a horror flick&#8221; rule ever, but I don&#8217;t think that&#8217;s 	why Santa killed her. I think it was because she was being an idiot.</p>
<hr /><img src="http://i241.photobucket.com/albums/ff16/mafihotz/96.jpg" title="#96" class="blackFrame" height="150" width="225" /><br />
<span class="entryName"> 		The Care Bears Nutcracker Suite (1988)</span></p>
<p align="justify">As the Care Bears try to cheer up a girl whose friend just moved 	away, a Nutcracker appears via the mouse hole in her room, and enlists their help 	to save the Sugarplum Fairy from the Rat King and his evil Royal Vizier. The Prince 	of Toyland is missing in action during all of this, and when the Nutcracker starts 	reminding us that he has amnesia and can&#8217;t remember where he came from every five 	minutes or so, that pretty much eliminates any element of surprise we might have 	had at the end OMG PLOT TWIST! Any resemblance between that and the actual Nutcracker 	Ballet stops there, but I wouldn&#8217;t necessarily say that&#8217;s a bad thing. When you&#8217;re 	an 8 year old boy, watching ballet isn&#8217;t very entertaining. Not even ballet with 	swords. So the only version of the Nutcracker I ever really got into was the one 	where the giant angry rats and  	the evil wizard guy fight a bunch of teddy bears and a wooden doll. Say what you 	want about the Care Bears, but they had some pretty awesome bad guys.</p>
<p align="justify"><strong class="red">Memorable moment:</strong> The same memorable 	moment in every Care Bears cartoon ever made &#8230; the part where they launch force 	beams of love and kindness out of their bellies to defeat the bad guys. I can&#8217;t 	even tell you how many times I&#8217;ve put &#8220;magic belly tattoo&#8221; on my Christmas 	list, only to be let down.</p>
<hr /><img src="http://i241.photobucket.com/albums/ff16/mafihotz/95.jpg" title="#95" class="blackFrame" height="150" width="225" /><br />
<span class="entryName"> 		The Stingiest Man In Town (1978)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/6301760379/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">After they started running out of holiday songs to make animated 	specials out of, Rankin/Bass Productions, the undisputed heavyweight champions of 	the Christmas special circuit, put together this cartoon adaptation of a musical 	adaptation of A Christmas Carol. Ol&#8217; Scrooge bears a striking resemblance to his 	voice actor counterpart, Walter Matthau, who can&#8217;t sing very well, but can certainly &#8220;Bah 	Humbug&#8221; with the best of them. That bug on his shoulder is our narrator, played 	by Happy Days patriarch Tom! Tom Bosley! Unfortunately, this special loses points 	for the bug&#8217;s name: B.A.H. Humbug. On the &#8220;See What I Did There?&#8221; ladder, 	that&#8217;s a rung lower than Dr. Light naming his pet robots Rock and Roll. Keen-eyed 	cartoon enthusiasts will recognize the animation style, which quickly followed in 	the footsteps of Rankin/Bass&#8217;s earlier hit, <em>The Hobbit</em>. Sure, everybody looks 	like they&#8217;re coming down with a cold, but the rosy cheeks and noses work nicely 	in this tale of Christmas conversion. Also, despite being poor and living in the 	late 19th Century, Tiny Tim appears to be getting around on prosthetic 	titanium legs. The same stuff they used on the Space Shuttle.</p>
<p align="justify"><span class="red">Memorable moment:</span> When the Ghost 	of Christmas Yet To Come shows Scrooge his headstone, which then morphs into 	a giant laughing devil head that belts out an evil, echoing HAW-HAW! 	This is one of the scariest moments in Christmas show history  &#8230; and that includes 	the next item on our list.</p>
<hr /><img src="http://i241.photobucket.com/albums/ff16/mafihotz/94.jpg" title="#94" class="blackFrame" height="150" width="225" /><br />
<span class="entryName"> 		We Wish You A Turtle Christmas (1994)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/6303213421/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">There are few things that surpass my passion for all things Ninja 	Turtles  &#8230; so why is this straight-to-video holiday special so far back on the 	list? Mostly because I&#8217;ve actually seen it. It&#8217;s nothing short of a terrible 	bootleg, and whoever made it almost seems to WANT to remind you of that. But for 	a Turtle fan, its greatness lies in its cheesiness, and this special comes with 	an extra topping&#8217;s worth. It stars four guys in costumes you&#8217;ll have little trouble 	spotting the zippers on, running around Manhattan  	and taking in the Christmas spirit on their search for a gift for Master Splinter. 	Never mind the fact that they&#8217;re not making any attempt to hide their identity 	while on the surface  &#8230; unless I just happen to be a genius who can see through 	their clever matching scarf disguises.</p>
<p align="justify"><strong class="red">Memorable moment:</strong> Michaelangelo 	becomes so moved with the experience of tree-trimming, that he stops what he&#8217;s doing and belts 	out an opera song. In an actual, Pavoratti-like opera voice.</p>
<hr /><img src="http://i241.photobucket.com/albums/ff16/mafihotz/93.jpg" title="#93" class="blackFrame" height="150" width="225" /><br />
<span class="entryName"> 		Santa Claus Conquers The Martians (1964)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/B00005Y80W/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">It takes a special kind of movie to get the Mystery Science Theater 	3000 treatment , and there&#8217;s none as deserving as this gem. Again, it&#8217;s not bad 	in the I want to poke my eyes out way as much as it&#8217;s bad in the Mork trying to 	make gifts for his friends way. The children of Mars are unhappy, and so the Martian 	governing council decides to steal Earth&#8217;s most famous bringer of joy. They kidnap 	two American children to guide them to Santa&#8217;s base of operations, and after a 	short battle with some elves, Santa is taken as well. The Martian children and many 	of the adults warm up to his jolly nature, and he is put to work operating a push-button 	toymaking machine, the kind of technology only a Martian could create. Throughout 	the whole thing, Santa seems pretty ok with the fact that he&#8217;s been kidnapped by 	aliens and forced to work for them. In fact, he thinks everything is hilarious, and  	even takes being held at disintegration raypoint in something of a stride.</p>
<p align="justify"><strong class="red">Memorable moment:</strong> The aforementioned 	threat of being disintegrated &#8230; by Voldar, an evil Martian who wants nothing more 	than to see Santa killed. His plans are laughably foiled when the Earth kids and Martian 	kids gang up on him by whacking him with tennis rackets, throwing toy soldiers at 	him, covering him with silly string, and making wind-up tanks run over his feet. 	Even Santa cracks up laughing. &#8220;Ho-ho-ho-ha-hahahahaha!&#8221;</p>
<hr /><img src="http://i241.photobucket.com/albums/ff16/mafihotz/92.jpg" title="#92" class="blackFrame" height="150" width="225" /><br />
<span class="entryName"> 		Pinocchio&#8217;s Christmas (1980)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/6302503779/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">In the &#8217;60s, Rankin/Bass made a stop motion toon called the New 	Adventures of Pinocchio. Nobody watched it, but by the end of the &#8217;70s, when they 	were running low on ideas to make Christmas movies about, Pinocchio started looking 	pretty good. This one finds our little wooden hero searching for a job, so that 	he can buy Gepetto a Christmas present. The sly Fox and Cat trick him into joining 	a traveling marionette show, the term everyone in this special insists on using 	instead of the shorter and easier  	&#8220;puppet.&#8221; There he meets and <strike>gets a woody get it lol over</strike> grows 	a liking to an inanimate female <strike>puppet</strike> marionette named Julietta. 	So much, in fact, that Pinocchio saves her from being carved into a different character, and brings 	her to the Forest of Enchantment, hoping that the Blue Fairy can bring her to life. 	She agrees to do so once Pinocchio discovers the true meaning of Christmas. It isn&#8217;t 	long before he&#8217;s tricked again, this time being sold to the Duke of what I&#8217;m assuming 	is Italy, whom Pinocchio eventually convinces that he should spent some more time 	with his children instead of giving them a stupid <strike>puppet</strike> marionette 	to play with in his work-heavy absence. Spending time with family constitutes enough 	of what Christmas is all about to bring Julietta to life, and she joins Pinocchio 	on the journey home. The story&#8217;s all over the place, sure, but I loved it when I 	was younger, and it has since become a bit of a guilty pleasure.</p>
<p align="justify"><strong class="red">Memorable moment:</strong> On his way 	to what he thinks is the North Pole and turns out to be the Duke&#8217;s palace, Pinocchio 	has a dream sequence in which he teaches Santa&#8217;s toys how to dance. He sings a song 	that goes &#8220;Let&#8217;s go dancing!&#8221; and is eerily similar, in a Rankin/Bass 	Christmassy way at least, to &#8220;Dancin&#8217; Machine&#8221; by the Jackson 5.</p>
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<span class="entryName"> 			WWE: Christmas in Baghdad (2003)</span></span></p>
<p align="justify"><strong>Commentary by B:</strong><br />
World Wrestling Entertainment is internationally known and accredited 	for their subtle and positive influence on humanity&#8217;s infrastructure. Characters 	like &#8220;The Iron Sheik&#8221;  	cast a tender shadow over religious and racial relations between America and 	the Middle East in only a way Martin Luther King could&#8217;ve dreamed of, had he spent 	less time preaching the fundamentals of civil rights and spent more time swinging 	around big hammers and camel-clutching white people. But in December of 2003 the 	WWE actually decided to do something nice;  they flew a group of superstars 	over to the war zone (which usually only takes place in the hour following Raw is 	War) and entertained the troops. It was a simple gesture, and it was nice. Everyone 	seemed to have fun and a lot of people who don&#8217;t get to let it all hang out and 	act retarded got to hold up signs reading &#8220;TORRIE WHO&#8217;S YOUR BAGHDADDY.&#8221;  	Then, ironically enough, Vince McMahon flew everybody home and made Rob Van Dam 	dress up like a building who gets indignant and pissed off whenever anybody knocks 	him down.</p>
<p align="justify"><strong class="red">Memorable moment:</strong> Vince McMahon 	decides he wants to berate Santa Claus, because Vince 	gets whims like that.  In 2002 they did a show in an alleyway and Vince found 	it the perfect time to trick the Little Matchstick Girl into an Evolution beatdown. 	So yeah, Vince wants to push around Santa, but it turns out Santa is actually STONE 	COLD STEVE AUSTIN (which explains why I always got empty beer cans and battered 	women under my tree as a child), and Vince gets his head stunnered all over Fallujah 	or Admiral Ackbar or wherever. In another groundbreaking segment, men 	treated women like sexual objects.</p>
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<span class="entryName"> 		Hardrock, Coco and Joe (1952)</span></p>
<p align="justify">This is the story of Hardrock, Coco and Joe, three &#8220;dwarfs&#8221; who 	accompany Santa on his annual trip. Hardrock steers the sleigh, Coco navigates, and Joe 	sorts the presents. And you thought Santa flew solo. The real fun begins when the 	big guy slides down the chimney, and the three little dwarfs screw around on the 	rooftop. I&#8217;ve only seen this once or twice when I was younger, but it apparently 	gets an annual showing in the Chicago area. For the rest of us, it&#8217;s an all but 	forgotten classic.</p>
<p align="justify"><strong class="red">Memorable moment:</strong> While Santa 	is down a chimney at their first stop, Hardrock takes the opportunity to nail Joe 	in the face with a snowball that KNOCKS HIS EYE OUT OF ITS SOCKET.</p>
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<span class="entryName"> 		The Wish That Changed Christmas (1992)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/6302880785/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">Presented by McDonald&#8217;s Family Theater, which basically meant 	that it was preceded by a scene of Ronald McDonald in a scarf hanging out with some 	Fry Guys, this special had several stories to tell. Holly is a doll who wants nothing 	more than to be loved. Ivy is an orphan who who wants nothing more than to be reunited 	with her long lost grandmother, especially when an electrical mishap makes the Christmas 	lights on the tree in a passing town change from reading &#8220;MERRY CHRISTMAS TO 	MILL VALLEY&#8221; to &#8220;MERRY CHRISTMAS TO  I V Y.&#8221; Officer Jones and his 	wife want nothing more than to have children to celebrate Christmas with. Peter 	is a toy store clerk who wants nothing more than to find the key that he lost. Officer 	Jones helps Peter look for the key, which Ivy finds and happily returns. So Officer 	Jones takes Ivy home for Christmas Eve night, until he can get her back to her orphanage. 	Peter gives Holly to Ivy in gratitude for saving his neck. Mrs. Jones is so delighted 	to have a child to celebrate Christmas with, that she can&#8217;t possibly refuse when 	Ivy asks her to be her Grandma. I don&#8217;t know whose wish it was that changed Christmas, 	but holy crap, everything sure did turn out wonderfully.</p>
<p align="justify"><strong class="red">Memorable moment:</strong> Next to Holly 	in the toy store is a cynical Owl who wants nothing more than to see Holly&#8217;s dreams 	crushed. So when Peter decides to give Holly to Ivy, Owl snaps and breaks the &#8220;don&#8217;t 	come to life while humans are around&#8221; rule by going right for Peter&#8217;s face. 	After a bit of a struggle, Peter finally flings Owl off his leg and into a barrel. 	Then<br />
Peter takes a breath, and goes off to deliver the doll. Considering a stuffed 	toy just tried to bite him in the face, he took it rather well.</p>
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<span class="entryName"> 		Holiday Inn (1942)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/6300181553/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">Bing Crosby and Fred Astaire play Jimmy and Ted, a singer and dancer who own a New England lodge with an interesting theme &#8230; the lodge is only open during national holidays. Despite what you might think, business actually proves to be doing well, as the Holiday Inn gets decked out accordingly for each festivity, and the boys prepare a variety show to match. The pair soon find themselves fighting over the lovely Linda, and take the competition to the stage. This was a landmark film in several ways. It&#8217;s the namesake for the actual Holiday Inn chain of hotels. It just happened to be on when the architect was drawing his sketch. It&#8217;s also the origin of the now classic carol &#8220;I&#8217;m Dreaming Of A White Christmas,&#8221; which was written for Bing&#8217;s role in this movie. The singing and dancing get a little boring after a while, but it&#8217;s certainly one of the most memorable movies about hotel owners. At least out of the ones that weren&#8217;t filmed in night vision.</p>
<p align="justify"><strong class="red">Memorable moment:</strong> Fred Astaire 	does a dance routine while drunk. He prepared for the scene accordingly by taking 	drinks of bourbon before each take. He had 8 in him during the final take that was 	used in the film.</p>
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<span class="entryName"> 		Prancer (1989)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/0792836340/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">This one is about 8-year-old Jessica, who rescues an injured deer, 	whose fur markings match those of Santa&#8217;s own Prancer in one of her storybooks. 	She soon starts skipping school and  	doing odd jobs in order to nurse the deer back to health and return it to its 	owner. Fearing that her father, with whom she&#8217;s grown apart since the death of her 	mother, will disapprove, she hides Prancer in her father&#8217;s barn, which is a great 	place to hide something FROM YOUR FATHER. He finds it and sells it to an advertising 	display. Her strong belief that the deer is, indeed, Prancer, eventually moves her 	father into helping her free the deer, which eventually rejoins Santa&#8217;s team in 	a display of terrible special effects. Not phenomenal by any means, Prancer is still 	one of the more touching Christmas movies in the last 15 years that ended up getting 	sentenced to regular showings on ABC Family.</p>
<p align="justify"><strong class="red">Memorable moment:</strong> Jessica writes 	a letter to Santa about his missing reindeer, and  	directs one of his bewildered shopping mall substitutes to deliver it to him 	by yelling PRANCER&#8217;S IN THE SHED NEAR MY HOUSE in his face. Also, the part where Rebecca 	Harrell grew up to be a hottie. Don&#8217;t you just love happy endings?</p>
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<span class="entryName"> 		Nestor, The Long-Eared Christmas Donkey (1977)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/6301760360/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">Rankin/Bass can&#8217;t get full credit for the plot behind this one. 	It&#8217;s based on another song by Gene Autry, who decided that his story about Rudolph 	didn&#8217;t have enough Jesus power, so he changed some names and species, and came 	up with Nestor, a donkey with incredibly long ears that he&#8217;d always trip over. This 	makes him useless for work, and he and his mother are left out in the cold. 	His mother doesn&#8217;t survive, but Nestor is protected by a guardian angel named Tilly, 	who guides him on a mission to meet up with a certain Nazerian couple. Yes, Nestor 	is the donkey who guides Joseph and Mary to Bethlehem. And he finally remembered 	to tuck his ears up, so he doesn&#8217;t trip and kill anybody.</p>
<p align="justify"><strong class="red">Memorable moment:</strong> The part where 	Nestor&#8217;s in the clown make-up and has to jump from the fiery building, but then 	he spreads his ears out and flies over the other donkeys, shooting peanuts at 	them. Wait, no&#8230;</p>
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<span class="entryName"> 		The Santa Clause (1994)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/B000068TWH/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">In this movie, Tim Allen kills Santa Claus and  	has to take his place. Wait, let me explain that better. In this movie, Scott 		Calvin and his son, Charlie, hear such a clatter on his roof, and when they 		goes out to investigate, they catch Santa Claus off guard, causing him to fall 		off the roof. The reindeer whisk them off to the North Pole, where they learn that 		Scott must now take over for the jolly one. Reluctant, Scott returns home, only 		to find himself growing the appropriate beard and extra pounds beyond his control. 		This movie came out at the height of Allen&#8217;s popularity as the star of &#8220;Home 		Improvement,&#8221; and the role of the reluctant Santa Claus was Tim Taylored 		just for him.</p>
<p align="justify"><strong class="red">Memorable moment:</strong> Scott gets 	arrested for breaking and entering, and the following interrogation takes place. 	Towards the end, some trademark Tim Allen half-grunt sneaks its way in.</p>
<blockquote>
<p align="left">&#8220;Look, I know you&#8217;re Scott Calvin. <strong>You</strong> know you&#8217;re Scott 		Calvin. So let&#8217;s make this simple &#8230; when I say &#8216;Name,&#8217; you say, &#8216;Scott 		Calvin&#8217; &#8230;  Name?&#8221;<br />
&#8220;Chris Kringle.&#8221;<br />
&#8220;&#8230; Name?&#8221;<br />
&#8220;Sinter Klauss.&#8221;<br />
&#8220;&#8230; Name?!&#8221;<br />
&#8220;Pere Noel. Buono Natale. Pelz-Nicole. Topo Giggio!&#8221;</p></blockquote>
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<span class="entryName"> 		Ernest Saves Christmas (1988)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/6301522893/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">Here&#8217;s another movie that uses the torch-passing Santa Claus theory 	as opposed to the immortal saint theory. The current Santa is getting up there in 	years, and is searching for a suitable replacement. When cab driver Ernest P. 	Worrel finds out Santa&#8217;s identity, he promises to help him in his quest to find 	former children&#8217;s TV host Joe Curruthers, the man whom Santa feels is most worthy 	of the job. But between Joe&#8217;s reluctance and Santa&#8217;s energy draining after a girl 	steals his magic bag, it&#8217;s up to Ernest to help Santa get around. They meet up with 	the girl and convince her that Santa is the real deal &#8230; now it&#8217;s just up to the 	trio to convince Joe before it&#8217;s time for the annual Christmas Eve run.</p>
<p align="justify"><strong class="red">Memorable moment:</strong> Hey, Vern! 	Ernest delivers a Christmas tree to his behind-the-camera buddy Vern&#8217;s house, and proceeds 	to wreck the place as he bumbles around with the giant tree in tow.</p>
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<span class="entryName"> 		Babes in Toyland (1961)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/B000068QPQ/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">The original &#8220;Babes in Toyland&#8221; starred Laurel and  	Hardy, and there was also an awful mid-90s remake starring Drew Barrymore and 	Keanu Reeves, but as far as I&#8217;m concerned, this is the definitive version of 	the movie. Since Disney seemed to have only used one female lead from 1955 to 	1962, it&#8217;s Annette Funicello in the starring role of Mary, Mary Quite Contrary, 	whose little siblings wander into the Forest of No Return, home of the evil Barnaby. 	Mary and her fiance, Tom, Tom the Piper&#8217;s Son, go after them, and everyone ends 	up in Toyland, where all is not well. It seems that Barnaby has found his way 	there, himself, and is intent on keeping the Toymaker, played by the guy from 	Mary Poppins who&#8217;s trapped on the ceiling, from meeting his quota for Santa Claus. 	Kidnapping Mary would make for a nice bonus as well, but naturally, Tom won&#8217;t 	have it, and he enlists the help of an army of wooden soldiers to chase Barnaby 	out of Toyland for good.</p>
<p align="justify"><strong class="red">Memorable moment:</strong> After Barnaby&#8217;s 	henchmen try to make a quick buck by selling Tom to a band of gypsies, Tom sneaks 	back into play, dressed in convincing old lady drag.</p>
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<span class="entryName"> 		The Ref (1994)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/6303153348/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">Denis Leary is a really bad cat burglar, and  	with the cops on his tail, he takes a couple hostage on Christmas Eve. A cynical, 		bickering couple made up of Judy Davis and Kevin Spacey, who have perfected the 		art of the domestic argument. In between their barking at each other and Leary 		trying to get them to shut up, smartass Junior comes home from military school, and  	the family drop in for Christmas dinner. With a family full of arguing hostages, 	Leary finds himself playing marriage counselor. There are few things more touching 	than having the guy who tied you to a chair with a bungee cord tell you to put your 	differences aside for Christmas and forgive each other.</p>
<p align="justify"><strong class="red">Memorable moment:</strong> Leary, exhausted 	from the family&#8217;s bickering, mutters &#8220;Jesus&#8221;  	under his breath as he takes a bite out of a cookie shaped like a baby in a manger. 	But not as good as this monologue towards the end: &#8220;Do you know what your present 	is? I&#8217;m gonna buy a cannon, load some gun powder in it, shoot you to Jersey &#8230; I&#8217;m 	gonna steal a car, drive to Jersey, pick up your ashes in a big plastic bag, sip 	tea, watch the Charlie Brown Special, and watch your ashes burn in my fireplace!&#8221;</p>
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<span class="entryName"> 		Black Christmas (1974)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/6300271072/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">A pre-Lois Lane Margot Kidder and a post-Juliet Capulet Olivia 	Hussey lead a group of sorority girls trapped in their house during Christmas break 	by a faceless stalker, whose trademark is calling them on the phone and moaning. 	Most of the violence is shown off-screen, and an overused approaching camera shot 	doesn&#8217;t help the suspense very much, but considering this is the same director that 	would later give us Porky&#8217;s, it&#8217;s understandable. This oft-neglected stalker flick 	didn&#8217;t perfect the art of the genre, but it&#8217;s here because it predates several more 	popular imitators, most notably Halloween and Friday The 13th, all of which owe 	a little something to this one.</p>
<p align="justify"><strong class="red">Memorable moment:</strong> The part where 	in Olivia Hussey&#8217;s very next movie after playing a sorority girl planning on getting 	an abortion while trying to avoid getting killed by a madman whom the cops think 	is her creepy boyfriend, she played the Virgin Mary.</p>
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<span class="entryName"> 		G.I. Joe: Cobra CLAWs Are Coming To Town (1985)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/B00028HBNO/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">Hasbro had a new line of G.I. Joe and Cobra action figures out 	for the upcoming holiday season, and what better way to promote them by having 	an episode in which the Cobras shrink down to action figure size in order to infiltrate 	the Joes&#8217; Happy Holiday Wagon? While our Real American Heroes are on the way to 	deliver toys to needy children, the mini-Cobras use the Joes&#8217; stuff to attack a 	nearby city and trick them into thinking that they&#8217;re being held hostage by G.I. 	Joe. Unfortunately for Cobra, their shrink way works in reverse as well, resulting 	in Shipwreck&#8217;s parrot to grow big enough to pick up an airplane and basically 	save Christmas.</p>
<p align="justify"><strong class="red">Memorable moment:</strong> While trapped 	in a cooler and hanging on meat hooks, Shipwreck casually mentions that he could 	have a meaningful relationship with the piece of beef next to him. Cover Girl says 	his brain is frostbitten, to which he replies &#8220;Oh, come on. You&#8217;ve got no imagination!&#8221;  	I can&#8217;t make this up, guys. The <a href="http://www.fenslerfilm.com/?sec=video">Fensler Film</a> redub of this scene has the exact same dialogue, 	only it ends with a clip of Roadblock offering to give the Christmas turkey he just 	cooked a body massage.</p>
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<span class="entryName"> 		Homestar Runner: The Decemberween Toons</span><br />
<strong><a href="http://www.homestarrunner.com/xmas.html">A Holiday Greeting</a> (2000), 			<a href="http://www.homestarrunner.com/xmas2001.html">The Best Decemberween Ever</a> (2001),			<a href="http://www.homestarrunner.com/xmas2002.html">The 			Decemberween Pageant</a> (2002), 			<a href="http://www.homestarrunner.com/dween_menu.html">Decemberween In July</a> (2004),			<a href="http://www.homestarrunner.com/xmas04_pq.html">Snowglobe</a> (2004), 			<a href="http://www.homestarrunner.com/xmas04.html" target="_blank">Homestar Presents: 			Presents</a> (2004)</strong></p>
<p align="justify">In a short five years, <a href="http://www.homestarrunner.com/">HomestarRunner.com</a> has become one of the greatest and  	funniest uses of Flash on the internet, and its fans know to look forward to 	major holidays. In Homestar&#8217;s native &#8220;Free Country USA,&#8221; the Most Wonderful Time 	Of The Year™ is 	known as Decemberween, whose origins somehow involve a fisherman, the popular 	vote, and Kobe Bryant. It&#8217;s this out-of-left-field approach that makes the adventures 	of Homestar  and Strong Bad so memorable, that I had to make 	room for it on the list.</p>
<p align="justify"><strong class="red">Memorable moment:</strong> The very beginning 	of the site&#8217;s very first holiday toon, featuring a parody of the famous CBS rotating &#8220;SPECIAL&#8221; intro, 	which is arguably my favorite thing to ever air on television. Also, the part where 	Strong Bad says &#8220;Holy crap.&#8221; Oh, Strong Bad, you so crazy.</p>
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<span class="entryName"> 		The Lemon Drop Kid (1951)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/6304204906/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">Bob Hope plays the title role, a likeable con artist with a sweet 	tooth for lemon candy. When he double crosses the wrong guy, he promises to pay 	him back by Christmas, resulting in a scramble to get the money in time. He sets 	up a fake Salvation Army station, with him dressed as Santa with a bell. When that 	doesn&#8217;t add up, he convinces some goons to get in on the sidewalk Santa act by creating 	a fake charity to &#8220;collect dough for old dolls.&#8221; When the mob boss he 	double crossed finds out about the Kid&#8217;s plan, he tries to take over the operation 	himself, and the Kid lets him take over in time to rat him out. Then, seeing the 	error of his ways, he donates the earnings to a retirement home. This one often 	gets overlooked in the Christmas movie genre, but in the movies starring Bob Hope 	genre, it&#8217;s one of his better and more light-hearted films.</p>
<p align="justify"><strong class="red">Memorable moment:</strong> While walking 	down the street on an exceptionally cold, windy night, the Lemon Drop Kid steals 	a woolen sweater off the back of a nearby dog.</p>
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<span class="entryName"> 		Christmas on Division Street (1991)</span></p>
<p align="justify">Fred Savage already won our hearts as a Vietnam-era everykid, 	a big-wheel riding kid who fills his squirtgun with pee,  	and a video game wizard&#8217;s older brother who gets to kiss the chick from Rilo Kiley. 	Now, in this TV movie, he shows us the spirit of Christmas. Trevor, who has just 	moved to Philly and isn&#8217;t happy about having to start his life over, meets a homeless 	old man named Cleveland while researching for a history project. Reluctant to make 	friends with the ratty looking stranger, it turns out that Cleveland has a knack 	for the subject, and offers to help him with his project &#8230; which is on the founding 	fathers. A real tough project for a bunch of high school kids IN PHILADELPHIA. Trevor 	learns to appreciate the fact that people on the streets have it tough, especially 	when a storm shuts down the power on Christmas Eve. Despite Trevor&#8217;s attempts to 	keep Cleveland warm, the old man doesn&#8217;t make it through the storm, but the imprint 	he made on Trevor&#8217;s heart is a Christmas gift he will never forget.</p>
<p align="justify"><strong class="red">Memorable moment:</strong> The part where 	Cleveland dies, and then Fred Savage interrupts the story and says to his grandfather 	that he doesn&#8217;t really mean <em>&#8220;dead,&#8221;</em> right? Poor kid. At least he 	was grateful that this wasn&#8217;t a kissing story.</p>
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<span class="entryName"> 		Fat Albert&#8217;s Christmas Special (1977)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/6301454782/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">In another part of Philly, the Cosby Kids are rehearsing for a 	Christmas pageant at their junkyard clubhouse, which Tyrone, the mean old junkyard 	owner, is fixin&#8217; to tear down. That&#8217;s when Marshall and his parents show up. With 	their car broken down, Marshall&#8217;s mom about to have a baby, and his dad without 	health insurance, the gang invite them in the clubhouse for shelter. Tyrone agrees 	to let them stay until the baby is born, in exchange for Fat Albert working for 	him as a sidewalk Santa. &#8220;Ho-ho-ho&#8217;s&#8221;  	in a Fat Albert fashion ensue. After the old hobo, Mudfoot, gives Tyrone a talking 	to about how he&#8217;s been grumpy at the world ever since his wife died, the junkyard 	owner has a change of heart, and  	promises to keep the gang&#8217;s clubhouse up.</p>
<p align="justify"><strong class="red">Memorable moment:</strong> All the classic 	Cosby Kid metaphors are here.</p>
<blockquote>
<p align="justify">Bill: &#8220;Russell, you&#8217;re like school during summer vacation.&#8221;<br />
Russell: &#8220;School during summer vacation?&#8221;<br />
Bill: &#8220;Yeah, no class.&#8221;</p>
<p align="justify">Rudy: &#8220;Your face reminds me of a cat eating lemons.&#8221;<br />
Tyrone: &#8220;A cat eating lemons?&#8221;<br />
Rudy: &#8220;Yeah, a sourpuss.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
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<span class="entryName"> 		Santa Claus: the Movie (1985)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/6304983778/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">Made by much of the same team that made Superman: the Movie seven 	years prior, the lack of Richard Donner at the director&#8217;s helm hurt this one big 	time. Long before he was the Big Lebowski, David Huddleston played Claus, a northern 	European woodcarver with no children of his own, so he makes toys for all the children 	in a nearby village. When he and the Mrs. get trapped in a snowdrift on their way 	home from delivering gifts to the children in a neighboring village, they are rescued 	by elves, who have been waiting for someone just like him to help them bring happiness 	to all the children of the world. He learns the secrets of making reindeer fly, 	dilating time with some kind of wormhole, and other secrets to the job description. 	That&#8217;s the first half of the movie, and it&#8217;s a really good one up to this point. 	Then we steer into a plot about head elf Patch (Dudley Moore), who quits after ruining 	a year&#8217;s worth of Christmas toys. He meets up with B.Z. (John Lithgow), a scheming 	toy company CEO in the big city, who tricks him into revealing Santa&#8217;s secrets, 	so that he, can be the world&#8217;s foremost supplier of toys. Santa ventures into the 	city to save Patch &#8230; and his job, with the help of a homeless boy and a rich girl 	on the verge of disbelief. It&#8217;s a real shame the movie tanked at the box office, 	because it&#8217;s really worth seeing at least the first half of it.</p>
<p align="justify"><strong class="red">Memorable moment:</strong> As thanks for helping 	save his job, Santa carves the homeless boy a toy. Gee, thanks Santa. Also the part 	where Santa asks the Dude why every time a rug is micturated upon in this fair city, 	that he has to compensate the owner, is a personal favorite.</p>
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<span class="entryName">The Little Troll Prince (1985)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/6303598994/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">This is the story of Bu (pre-Budnik Danny Cooksey), 	who despite being the son of the Troll King and Queen (Vincent Price and Cloris 	Leachman), isn&#8217;t very troll-like at all. All the other trolls in the kingdom 	have two heads, large noses, and no manners. So Bu is exiled from the Troll Kingdom 	for being different, and is left to find shelter in the humans&#8217; world. It isn&#8217;t 	until he leaves the Troll Kingdom that we discover that trolls are tiny in size 	compared to us, a fun little Fraggle Rock effect that this toon really should&#8217;ve 	used to its advantage a little better. At any rate, Bu is taken in by a family 	of humans at Christmas, who teach him that God loves him, no matter what he looks 	like.</p>
<p align="justify"><strong class="red">Memorable moment:</strong> When Bu encounters 	two little human girls, the elder of the two exclaims, &#8220;If he&#8217;s a troll, we 	should run as fast as we can!&#8221;  	Yeah, they find Bu in a bowl of fruit, hiding behind an apple. In theory, they 	could step on him, but God forbid he be a troll. They&#8217;d be better off RUNNING 	FOR THEIR LIVES.</p>
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<span class="entryName"> 		12 Tiny Christmas Tales (2001)</span></p>
<p align="justify">This is a twisted animated set of a dozen short but wacky Yuletide 	stories, including a horror rehash of the 12 Days of Christmas, a tale of a lovesick 	snowman, Grandma getting run over by a reindeer, an ugly tie who wants to be someone&#8217;s 	Christmas present, and Blitzen going on a trip to Vegas. Director Bill Plympton 	combines minimalist animation with bizarre, Jhonen Vasquez-esque humor that has 	quickly become a holiday staple on Cartoon Network in the past three years. If you 	get a chance to catch it, it&#8217;s definitely worth watching.</p>
<p align="justify"><strong class="red">Memorable moment:</strong> My favorite 	bit is one about a snowflake that terrorizes a small village. It makes no sense, 	but it&#8217;s wonderfully hilarious.</p>
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<span class="entryName"> 		&#8216;Twas The Night Before Christmas (1978)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/6301760387/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">Rankin/Bass is at it again, this time adding an interesting back 	story to the classic Moore poem. Albert is a mouse who happens to be stirring inside 	the Junctionville clock tower, frantically trying to fix the clock that he broke 	in time for the stroke of midnight on Christmas. That&#8217;s when it&#8217;s supposed to play 	a song of apology, begging Santa not to pass their town by. What&#8217;s with the apology? 	That would be Albert&#8217;s fault, too. After writing a letter to the newspaper about 	how Santa is a myth and blah blah blah, and the jolly one got so pissed off, 	that he put Albert&#8217;s entire town, human and rodent alike, on the naughty list. 	So local clocksmith Joshua Trundle has the idea of converting the clock tower into 	a giant music box alarm clock thing. How does he going pull off making a giant magical 	clock in time for Christmas? Simple. By believing in miracles, of course. They sing 	a song about it and  	everything.</p>
<p align="justify"><strong class="red">Memorable moment:</strong> There&#8217;s the 	part where the mayor of Junctionville holds a town council meeting to figure out 	how to get back on Santa&#8217;s good list, or at least in worst case scenario, what to 	do with the 50 million pounds of coal they get. Enter Citizen Trundle. &#8220;Citizen?!&#8221; the 	mayor barks. &#8220;They&#8217;re not allowed in here! This is public property!&#8221;  	Way to stick it to the man, Rankin/Bass. The most memorable dialogue in the special, 	however, is Albert explaining to his father what happened when he tried to take 	a look inside the clock to see how it worked&#8230;</p>
<blockquote><p>Father Mouse: &#8220;Kerplunk?!&#8221;<br />
Albert: &#8220;Kerplooey!&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>Two nonsense words. And only one shares a name with a platinum record. For shame.</p>
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<span class="entryName">Trapped In Paradise (1994)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/6303419771/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">Fresh from prison, con artists Jon Lovitz and Dana Carvey (who 	inexplicably sounds like he got kicked in the nuts) trick their brother, Nicolas 	Cage, into delivering a Christmas note to a woman named Sarah in Paradise, Pennsylvania, 	from her father in prison. The real plan is to rob a hardly secure bank in the small 	town, but when they don&#8217;t make it out of town before a snowstorm hits, Cage persuades 	his brothers to drop the money off at a nearby church. They try to escape through 	the woods, but Carvey nearly drowns, and is saved by &#8230; the bank owner&#8217;s son. The 	family&#8217;s kindness to the strangers is unparalleled, and they don&#8217;t have it in their 	heart to reveal themselves as the robbers. Meanwhile, Sarah&#8217;s father shows up, holding 	the brothers&#8217; mom hostage, as the bank heist was his idea. When it&#8217;s discovered 	that the money was dropped off at the church, the town defends the three when they&#8217;re 	taken in by the cops. Not particularly hilarious, but thanks to about a thousand 	or so showings on HBO, it&#8217;s quickly grown on me.</p>
<p align="justify"><strong class="red">Memorable moment:</strong> When the boys&#8217; 	mom gets kidnapped, she does everything but keep quiet, mouthing off lines such 	as &#8220;I wish I was a witch. I&#8217;d shove my broomstick right up your ass.&#8221;</p>
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<span class="entryName"> 		The Little Drummer Boy (1968)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/B00005M2FE/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">Rankin/Bass adds a touching back story to the song about the boy 	who plays the drum for Baby Jesus. If you find having a little boy&#8217;s entire family 	killed, himself enslaved, and his dealing with his grief by hating all people 	touching, that is. That&#8217;s our little Aaron. His only friends are a sheep, a donkey and a 	camel. When the camel is sold to a trio of astrologers, Aaron uses the star they&#8217;re 	following as his guide in order to get his friend back. Along the way, the sheep 	gets RUN OVER BY A ROMAN CHARIOT,  	and Aaron continues to follow the star in hopes that the newborn king underneath 	it can help his friend. But what sort of gift can he give in exchange? Oh. Right. 	Drum solo.</p>
<p align="justify"><strong class="red">Memorable moment:</strong> Aaron doesn&#8217;t 	hold back for his drum solo for Jesus. He plays the crap out of his little snare, 	like he&#8217;s the Keith Moon of the Nativity under the heavenly spotlight of David.</p>
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<span class="entryName"> 		A Very Merry Cricket (1973)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/6300154688/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">Harry the Cat and Tucker the Mouse are bummed out about the 	fact that Christmas in New York has become too commercialized,  	and long to bring back the holiday spirit. So they go searching of their old friend 	Chester, the famed musical Cricket in Times Square. Chester is found hanging out 	in Connecticut, and the journey back home in time for Christmas Eve is an adventure 	in itself. By the time they get back to the city, they discover that the power is 	out, and everybody&#8217;s scrambling to get home. Traffic gets backed up, and everybody&#8217;s 	screaming at each other. That&#8217;s when Chester arrives back in Times Square and plays 	a haunting rendition of  	&#8220;Silent Night.&#8221;</p>
<p align="justify"><strong class="red">Memorable moment:</strong> Naturally, 	the &#8220;Silent Night&#8221; scene is the show stopper. When Chester starts playing, 	traffic stops dead, and everybody shuts up. It&#8217;s a powerful scene, and ranks 	among animator Chuck Jones&#8217;s best.</p>
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<span class="entryName"> 		Olive, The Other Reindeer (1999)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/B00004TRD2/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">A production team including Matt Groening, Drew Barrymore and Michael 	Stipe helped turn this hilarious recent special into an instant holiday favorite. 	Olive (Barrymore) is a daydreaming dog, whose pet flea, Fido, is hard of hearing. 	So when he mishears a radio interview with Santa, in which he says that Blitzen 	has broken his leg, and it&#8217;ll take the help of ALL OF THE OTHER REINDEER to get 	Christmas off the ground &#8230; well, you can guess what he thought he heard. So, with 	the help of a hustling mobster penguin named Martini (Joe Pantoliano), Olive is 	convinced that she must travel to the North Pole and save Christmas, all the while 	avoiding a bitter postman (Dan Castellaneta), whose busy holiday schedule has finally 	gotten to him. Along the way, Olive meets other characters with names that sound 	like misheard song lyrics, such as Round John Virgin and Richard Stands.</p>
<p align="justify"><strong class="red">Memorable moment:</strong> Near the beginning, 	Olive helps an animal family find a Christmas tree. A normal sized tree proves to 	be much too big, so Olive returns with a tree-shaped air freshener. Also, the handling 	of Rudolph is classic&#8230;</p>
<blockquote>
<p align="justify">Olive: &#8220;Where&#8217;s Rudolph?&#8221;<br />
Reindeer: &#8220;There&#8217;s no Rudolph! He&#8217;s just an urban legend.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
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<span class="entryName"> 		Bing Crosby&#8217;s 42nd Annual Christmas Special (1977)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/1568553471/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">Bing&#8217;s final holiday special aired two months after his death, and as 	a result, is the most memorable. The highlight is a now legendary duet with David 	Bowie, in which they sing a medley of &#8220;Peace On Earth&#8221; and &#8220;Little 	Drummer Boy.&#8221;  	Bing didn&#8217;t know who the relatively new David Bowie was at the time, but his 	kids convinced him that he&#8217;d make a great addition to the show.</p>
<p align="justify"><strong class="red">Memorable moment:</strong> Before they 	start singing, the two have a humorous dialogue. The best part is when they start 	talking about music.</p>
<blockquote>
<p align="justify">Bowie: &#8220;Do you &#8230; do you like modern music?&#8221;<br />
Crosby: &#8220;Oh, I think it&#8217;s marvelous! Some of it&#8217;s really fine &#8230; but tell me, have you ever listened to any of the older fellows?&#8221;<br />
Bowie: &#8220;Oh yeah, sure. I like &#8230; John Lennon, and the other 						one with &#8230; Harry Nilsson.&#8221;<br />
Crosby: &#8220;Mmm &#8230; you go back that far, eh?&#8221;<br />
Bowie: &#8220;Yeah, I&#8217;m not as young as I look.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p align="justify">Now you know why he didn&#8217;t care when Avril Lavigne screwed up 	his name.</p>
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<span class="entryName"> 		The Star Wars Holiday Special (1978)</span></p>
<p align="justify">Most people my age are just young enough to have missed this one, 	but I happene to have older relatives 	who had this on tape, and let me tell you &#8230; everything you&#8217;ve heard is true. 	It&#8217;s near unwatchable. George Lucas, himself, has stated that he&#8217;d destroy every 	copy if he had enough time and a hammer. But thanks to the  power of 	the Internet, it&#8217;s earned a sort of legendary status.</p>
<p align="justify">The story centers around a certain galaxy far, far away&#8217;s answer 	to a holiday celebrating peace, called Life Day. Chewbacca returns to his home planet 	to be with his family, &amp;  	helps them all prepare for the festivities. The special follows each character 	through their own preparations. Chewie&#8217;s son watches a cartoon about Boba Fett, 	who made his first appearance in this special, as it was prior to the Empire Strikes 	Back. We even see his father watch a veritable go-go dancer in the form of Diahan 	Carroll in a sparkly wig. We even get to check out what the Imperial Troops about 	to invade Chewie&#8217;s planet are up to on their way. One is watching a hologram of 	Jefferson Starship; another is watching a documentary on Tatooine, by Cantina owner 	Bea Arthur. Oh yeah, by the way, Darth Vader is invading Chewie&#8217;s planet. Luckily, 	Han, Luke &amp; the rest arrive for the Life Day festivities just in time to save 	the day&#8230; or at least Chewie&#8217;s household. I don&#8217;t know what happened to the rest 	of the wookiees, because our heroes rushed off to go to Life Day World or wherever.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red1"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> During the 	Ceremony of Life, Princess Leia sings an absolutely horrible rendition of the 	main Star Wars theme, recounting the story of the first movie. Which is now the 	fourth movie. Also, Mark Hamill is wearing a ridiculous amount of make-up to 	hide his injured face. He had just gotten in a car wreck when they filmed the 	Holiday Special, and he looks he&#8217;s been getting fashion pointers from that fat 	chick Drew Carey worked with.</p>
<p><img src="http://i241.photobucket.com/albums/ff16/mafihotz/65.jpg" title="#65" class="blackFrame" height="150" width="225" /><br />
<span class="entryName">Aqua Teen Hunger Force: Cybernetic Ghost Of Christmas Past From The Future (2002)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/B0001MZ7KA/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">Carl, the Aqua Teens&#8217; greasy Italian neighbor, is visited by the 	Cybernetic Ghost of Christmas Past &#8230; from the Future. It&#8217;s a skeleton-shaped robot 	with a Santa hat, who reveals that the water in Carl&#8217;s house has been turning to 	blood. As Frylock tries to get an answer out of the robot as to why this is, the 	robot tells the story of the Santa Claus figure of prehistoric ape-man, who had 	yet to perfect the idea of Christmas, making toys out of animal bones and poop, and resulting 	in a war between Elves from Mars. It&#8217;s finally revealed that Carl&#8217;s house is built 	on an ancient Elfian burial ground, but instead of offering himself sexually to 	the Martian elf god, Carl just does what anyone would do if the water in their house 	turned into blood &#8230; he sells the house to former Misfits frontman Glenn Danzig.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> After Carl 	sells his bloody house to Danzig, Shake tries to do the same thing by inviting Danzig 	into his HAUNTED KITCHEN!!11 In comes Meatwad under a bed sheet, moaning &#8220;Daaaanziiiig, 	you want somethin&#8217; to eeeeeat?&#8221; After he leaves, the Ghost of Christmas Past 	comes out from the closet, and says &#8220;I cannot live with that guy. He is so 	annoying, he is so frightening, and he doesn&#8217;t wear a shirt.&#8221;</p>
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<span class="entryName">Donald&#8217;s Snow Fight (1942)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/6301752627/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">I used to love the short, seven-minute Disney cartoons starring 	the standard characters, when I still had the Disney Channel. This one finds Donald 	sledding and singing &#8220;Jingle Bells&#8221;  	on a snowy hill, when he spots his nephews building a snowman. He slides down 	the hill and destroys their masterpiece. Knowing that their uncle will try the 	same trick again, Huey, Dewey and Louie build their next snowman in front of a 	large rock, and from there it&#8217;s an all out snow war, involving life-size snow 	fortresses, bowling-pin-shaped ducks, and makeshift mortar using flaming coals 	to melt each other&#8217;s strongholds.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> Some of the 	stuff these ducks build is really impressive. Donald&#8217;s nephews may win in the end, 	but their uncle&#8217;s snow pirate ship is a sight to behold.</p>
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<span class="entryName">A Very Brady Christmas (1988)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/6302593093/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">The original Brady family is reunited for the holidays. Except 	Cindy, whose replacement is at least hot enough for nobody to care. Everyone, however, 	is a little reluctant about the reunion. Mike just lost his architect job. So did 	Marcia&#8217;s husband. Greg&#8217;s wife ditches him for her own family. Jan and her husband 	are separating. Peter doesn&#8217;t want his family to know that he&#8217;s dating his boss. 	Bobby dropped out of school in pursuit of a career as a racecar driver. Cindy is 	just sick of being treated like a little girl. Even Alice makes the trip back after 	Sam the Butcher leaves her for a younger woman. The first night back is full of 	awkward silence, but in true Brady fashion, everything gets worked out. Mike gets 	his job back after saving two construction workers from a cave-in that wouldn&#8217;t 	have happened, had Mike not been fired. Marcia&#8217;s husband gets a job offer from the 	Bradys&#8217; neighbor. Greg&#8217;s wife shows up. Bobby&#8217;s secret is revealed and accepted. 	Peter admits his girlfriend&#8217;s superiority, and then proposes to her. Cindy starts 	getting treated like a grown-up, and Sam comes back to Alice &#8230; in a Santa Claus 	suit. As for Jan and her husband &#8230;</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> When Carol 	discovers that those two aren&#8217;t sleeping in the same room, she helps Jan and her 	husband straighten things out, and  	more or less suggests a round of make-up sex. In her own house. While everybody 	else is there. I can&#8217;t wait for Christmas at Mom  	and Dad&#8217;s when I get married.</p>
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<span class="entryName">Opus n&#8217; Bill in: A Wish for Wings That Work (1991)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/6302884764/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">This one stars the characters from the comic strip &#8220;Bloom County.&#8221; 	For Christmas, 	Opus (a penguin) considers himself an &#8220;aerodynamically 	challenged bird,&#8221; and wants more than anything else a pair of working wings. 	So he faxes a letter to Santa that reads: &#8220;As your records will show, Father 	Christmas, I am a bird. Specifically, a penguin. An embarrassing accident at 	birth, for which I do not blame my mother. I prefer to blame Congress.&#8221;  	The local flock of ducks laugh at his attempts to get off the ground, but when 	Santa&#8217;s sleigh crashes into a freezing lake, and the ducks can&#8217;t take the cold 	long enough to save him, that&#8217;s when Opus&#8217; wings show their true worth. The 	ducks are so grateful that he saved Christmas, that they give him a ride in the 	sky on their backs as a granting of his wish.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> Opus has a 	nightmare that he&#8217;s behind the cockpit of the plane in the movie Lost Horizon, which 	is about to crash because HE CAN&#8217;T FLY. It&#8217;s not a particularly hilarious scene, 	as much as the fact that they went that far out of their way to make a joke is impressive.</p>
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<span class="entryName">Winnie The Pooh And Christmas Too (1991)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/6303123244/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">This special was released in the early heyday of Pooh&#8217;s cartoon 	series, and is an exceptionally adorable story. Christopher Robin and his friends 	in the Hundred Acre Wood all write letters to Santa, put them in one big envelope, and let 	the wind blow it north. Unfortunately, the wind happened to be blowing south at 	the time, so it didn&#8217;t get very far. So Pooh, determined to let his friends have 	a Merry Christmas, dresses up as Santa Claus  	and makes gifts for all his friends &#8230; which all break. Pooh finally decides to 	just deliver the letter to Santa himself, but when Christmas arrives while he&#8217;s 	gone, his friends miss him. In the end, Christopher Robin arrives with Pooh on his 	new sled and delivers Santa&#8217;s gifts to everyone. I guess it was just easier to 	leave them all at Christopher Robin&#8217;s house.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> Eeyore hanging 	off the a Christmas Tree like a very heavy ornament and droning, in his depressing, 	nigh-monotone fashion, &#8220;Fa-la-la-la-la, la-la-la-la.&#8221;</p>
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<span class="entryName">The Christmas Raccoons (1980)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/6303953824/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">This environmentally aware special is the very first cartoon 	starring Bert Raccoon and his friends, as well as their evil pink anteater nemesis, 	lumber tycoon Cyril Sneer. In this special, the forest is mysteriously disappearing, 	and it&#8217;s Sneer&#8217;s unmatched greed behind it. He already has enough lumber to live 	off of, but he won&#8217;t rest until every tree is his. Little does he realize that 	he&#8217;s depriving animals of their homes, and  	that includes Ralph, Melissa and Bert Raccoon. At first, they believe that the 	forest ranger&#8217;s family have taken their tree for their own, to decorate, but 	when they try to get their tree back, the ranger&#8217;s dog, Schaeffer, gives them 	a chase. The two parties eventually realize their misunderstandings when they 	discover that it&#8217;s Sneer behind the disappearing forest phenomenon. They knock 	some sense into him by showing him that there aren&#8217;t any more trees in the forest 	for him to cut down, and that lumber tycoons normally plant new trees after themselves. 	The best part about this special is that Sneer never really learns his lesson. 	He just learns that focusing less on actually cutting down trees, and more on 	selling what he has and planting replacements, is more profitable. In gratitude 	for his new business strategy, Sneer delivers a new tree to the Raccoons.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> When the Raccoons 	wake Schaeffer up, the angry dog chases the Raccoons through the house and out 	into the forest, and somehow a random XTR33M ride on an ice sled sailing thing 	becomes involved. The end of the chase follows the unwritten cartoon law of snow 	chases that requires one involved party to stumble and roll down a hill in the 	form of a giant snowball. Schaeffer is that lucky party here,  	and he brings the Raccoons with him as they crash right into Cyril Sneer&#8217;s lumber 	factory.</p>
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<span class="entryName">The Spirit Of Christmas (1995)</span><strong><a href="http://www.killfile.org/soxmas/"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">This irreverent, 5-minute stop-motion cartoon was the template 	for what would eventually become South Park. Matt Stone  	and Trey Parker had made a Christmas toon out of construction paper before, but 	in this commission for a Hollywood exec&#8217;s Christmas card, the four main characters 	actually have distinct personalities. Jesus Christ, himself, shows up in South Park, 	searching of Santa Claus, whom he claims has ruined the meaning of his birthday. 	The two engage in a battle to a death, and force the children to choose between 	them. The boys do the right thing by calling on the help of ice skating champion 	Brian Boitano, who reminds them that Christmas is a time for peace on Earth. So 	Jesus takes Santa out for an orange smoothie, and the boys realize the true meaning 	of Christmas &#8230; presents. And hey, if you&#8217;re Jewish, you get presents for 8 days!</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> The fight 	scene, itself, is the natural defining moment, complete with music taken directly 	from &#8220;Mortal Kombat II,&#8221; Jesus  	and Santa throwing projectiles at each other, and of course, a statue falling 	on Kenny. But Stan&#8217;s line when Jesus states that tomorrow is his birthday is classic &#8230; &#8220;Your 	birthday is on Christmas?! That sucks, dude!&#8221;</p>
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<span class="entryName">South Park: Mr. Hankey, the Christmas Poo (1997)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/0790739208/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">South Park has made Christmas an annual tradition,  	and each year, the life lesson gets hidden deeper and deeper within the twisted 	plot. This year&#8217;s episode involved Stan accidentally helping a group of satanic 	woodland creatures give birth to the anti-Christ in the form of a baby porcupine. 	However, it&#8217;s in the first holiday episode that the spirit of Christmas truly shines. 	When Kyle&#8217;s mother objects to the Nativity scene in the school play, which his son 	is in, people with other beliefs get in on the act. Environmentalists demand that 	the tree be taken out, and people with epilepsy want to get rid of the lights. 	In the midst of all this, Kyle tries to introduce them to a nondenominational holiday 	icon that loves everyone equally &#8230; a piece of anthropomorphic feces named Mr. Hankey, 	the Christmas Poo.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> Cartman&#8217;s 	improvised Christmas carol, entitled &#8220;Kyle&#8217;s Mom Is A Stupid Bitch&#8221;  (in 	D-minor). Which actually starts in C, but like you care. Also, this is the first 	time ever that Kenny makes it through an episode without dying.</p>
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<span class="entryName">Blackadder&#8217;s Christmas Carol (1988)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/6302541735/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">In this hilarious twist on the Christmas Carol story, Ebeneezer 	Blackadder  (Rowan Atkinson) is unlike the rest of his family bloodline, in that 	he is kind-hearted and generous. As any fan of the series knows, the Blackadders 	have always been fast-witted bad guys. Then, on Christmas Eve night, Ebeneezer and  	his servant, Baldrick, are visited by the Spirit of Christmas  (<s>Hagr</s> Robbie 	Coltrane), who takes him through time to witness the mean-spirited behavior of his 	ancestors. A montage of earlier Black Adder shows are used at this point, and the 	show even parodies itself when they head into the future, to check in on Starship 	Commander Blackadder in the Space Age. In the end, Ebeneezer wakes up Christmas 	morning,  	and realizes the true secret of life &#8230; bad guys have all the fun.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> Ebeneezer 	gives Baldrick his Christmas gift. &#8220;It&#8217;s a fist. It&#8217;s for hitting people with.&#8221; [PUNCH] &#8220;And 	the great thing is, you can use it again and again!&#8221; [PUNCH]</p>
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<span class="entryName">All I Want For Christmas (1991)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/B00005O5LM/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">What this movie lacks in originality, it makes up for in child 	star power. A single-digit-aged Thora Birch plays Hallie, who wants her divorced 	parents to get back together for Christmas. Her brother, a barely teen-aged Ethan 	Embry  (credited as Ethan Randall here) plays &#8230; Ethan, who is touched by Hallie&#8217;s 	wish, and convinces their grandmother to help reunite their parents. Hey, it 	worked for Jan Brady. Hallie, on the other hand, takes her petition to a bumbling 	mall Santa, played by Leslie Nielsen in true Nielsen fashion. Of course, since 	it&#8217;s a Christmas movie, the parents do end up rekindling their love and getting 	back together. It&#8217;s nice to see Christmas wishes coming true and all, but the 	ending probably would&#8217;ve been better if Hallie could&#8217;ve just learned that her 	parents still love each other as family, but the marriage thing doesn&#8217;t always 	work out, and that doesn&#8217;t change their love for their children. Oh well. Christmas 	wishes for everybody! I want a pony.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> Most of Thora 	Birch&#8217;s lines. It&#8217;s almost like watching pre-crisis Enid Coleslaw. Particularly 	her explanation on how she knows Nielsen is the real Santa, as opposed to all 	the other mall Santas around: &#8220;Simple &#8230; he&#8217;s at Macy&#8217;s.&#8221;</p>
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<span class="entryName">The Best Christmas Pageant Ever (1983)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/B00005OCR8/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">It&#8217;s rare for a book-to-movie adaptation to be successfully translated, 	one hundred percent. Luckily, the Best Christmas Pageant Ever was a short book. 	A young Fairuza Balk narrates the tale of her classmates, the Herdmans, a group 	of poor kids in an otherwise well-to-do WASP neighborhood, who show up in church 	to be a part of the annual Christmas pageant. Fairuza&#8217;s mother, the director 	 (Hot Lips from M*A*S*H), is delighted with the challenge, and gives the Herdmans 	all the pageant&#8217;s intricate roles, including the no-nonsense Imogene as Mary, 	and little ADD-stricken Gladys as the angel. Needless to say, the other kids&#8217; 	parents get to talking, and have very little to say in the nice department, but 	Fairuza&#8217;s mom reminds them that these kids could use some preaching to, and what 	better way to learn about Christmas than putting on a play about the first one? 	Sure, many of the rehearsals end in disaster, and the play hardly goes on without 	a hitch, but it DOES go on, and the results are laughably cute.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> Easily Gladys&#8217; 	big entry as the angel. With her ratty sneakers sticking out from under her robe, 	she runs in late down the aisle, screaming &#8220;Hey! HEY! Unto you a child is born! 	And it&#8217;s Jesus! So go on, go on!&#8221; It&#8217;s one of the most adorable scenes ever 	written.</p>
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<span class="entryName">A Flintstones&#8217; Christmas Carol (1994)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/6304162200/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">Fred Flintstone is cast as &#8220;Ebonezer Scrooge&#8221;  	in a Bedrock production &#8220;A Christmas Carol,&#8221; by &#8220;Charles Brickens.&#8221; You 	see, because it&#8217;s the Stone Age, everybody&#8217;s surname is taken from a type of rock 	or fossil or dinosaur. For example: Barney RUBBLE is playing the role of Bob CRAGIT, and  	instead of Mike Fireball, I would be Mike Giant Volcanic Rock. At any rate, Fred 	is getting a little too into his role as the stingy star of the show, and as a 	result, forgets all about his family for Christmas. Wilma, of course, won&#8217;t have 	it, and as the play&#8217;s director, she doesn&#8217;t hesitate to put Fred in his place 	when she has to. To make matters worse for him, a 24-hour sickness called the Bedrock 	Bug is going around, resulting in Wilma having to take over some of the other characters, 	including Belle. In between acts, Fred rushes out to pick up the family&#8217;s gifts, 	which he left at the mall, and finally manages to patch things up, partially while 	he&#8217;s in character. Bamm-Bamm, as Tiny Tim, has the honors of the play&#8217;s last line, and delivers 	it in true Dickens fashion.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> At the end, 	when Fred is making his apologies, he highlights among his list of things he&#8217;ll 	do to make it up to his family the fact that he&#8217;ll invite Wilma&#8217;s mother over for 	dinner. I like how &#8220;I&#8217;ll even be nice to my mother-in-law!&#8221; is always 	the way to a woman&#8217;s heart in cartoons like this. Oh yeah, and then Fred gets 	the Bedrock Bug and almost pukes on everybody.</p>
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<span class="entryName">A Flintstone Christmas (1977)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/630416226X/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">It&#8217;s Christmastime in Bedrock. Never mind the part about the Stone 	Age predating Jesus. It also predated household appliances, but that never stopped 	talking animals to shrug it off  	and say, &#8220;Eh, it&#8217;s a living lol!&#8221; Mr. Slate makes Fred dress up as Santa 	Claus for his wife&#8217;s Women&#8217;s Auxiliary Christmas Party, but when the real Santa 	shows up and twists his ankle after falling off of Fred&#8217;s neglected roof, he convinces 	Fred and Barney to take over his job for the night. The two lose some gifts in 	a snowstorm, and are forced to pick up replacements at the North Pole. This pit 	stop makes him late for the Christmas party. Not the whole having to hit every prehistoric, 	pre-Christian house in one night thing. Santa let Fred and Barney borrow his magic 	secret or whatever to pull that off. But I guess they forgot to use it when they 	had to stop at the North Pole. So while he does show up late to the party, he still 	has Santa&#8217;s magic bag, so he manages to deliver gifts to all the needy children 	at the Christmas party.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> At Fred and Barney&#8217;s 	first stop as honorary Santas, Fred can&#8217;t figure out how to get back up the chimney. 	So he just heads for the front door, only to be attacked by the family dog &#8230; er, 	dinosaur.</p>
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<span class="entryName">VeggieTales: The Toy That Saved Christmas (1996)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/B00007CVYW/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">This Christmas parable is about the holiday&#8217;s hot new toy, a doll 	named Buzzsaw Louie. When you push its nose, it tells you what Christmas is all 	about &#8230; getting stuff! This is the doing of greedy toymaker Wally P. Nezzer, 	but one rebellious Buzzsaw Louie toy doesn&#8217;t like his function. So he runs away 	in search for the real meaning of Christmas. Soon, he meets up with a bunch of 	talking vegetables who tell him about Jesus. In case you skimmed over that last 	sentence by mistake, a <strong>magical wooden toy</strong> meets a 	group <strong>talking vegetables</strong> who <strong>tell stories 	about God</strong>. And it&#8217;s AWESOME. I don&#8217;t care what you do or do not believe 	in; you have to hand it to the VeggieTales crew for coming up 	with an original idea and making it funny without having to try too hard, or 	shoving the message down unwilling throats.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> Little Percy 	the Pea complains to his dad that &#8220;Billy has more toys than me!&#8221; His dad 	asks, &#8220;Who&#8217;s 	Billy?&#8221; &#8220;I don&#8217;t know, but he has more toys than me! WAHHHH!&#8221; Also, 	the whole story is actually being told to little Annie the Onion by her Grandpa 	George, and at one point, he 	randomly tries to end the story by going, &#8220;And 	so, the pig and the giant lizard brought the boy back to his family at the bowling 	alley, and they all lived happily ever after. THE END.&#8221;</p>
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<span class="entryName">VeggieTales: The Star Of Christmas (2002)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/B00006JE9A/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">Besides having better animation, this second Christmas movie also 	has a more interesting story. Bob the Tomato and Larry the Cucumber play the parts 	of Cavis Appythart and Millward Phelps, a Gilbert and Sullivan type pair in late 	19th Century London. The two plan to open their musical, &#8220;The Princess and 	the Plumber&#8221;, on Christmas Eve, proclaiming that it will teach London how to 	love. They want their opening night to be such a success, that they even attempt 	to get the children of St. Bart&#8217;s to cancel their Nativity play, set for the same 	evening. The children&#8217;s play even attracts more attention by stating that it will 	feature the Star of Christmas, a religious artifact that hasn&#8217;t been seen by the 	public in decades. Naturally, Cavis and Millward discover that St. Bart&#8217;s Nativity 	play portrays the true meaning of Christmas, and promote their pageant. And by &#8220;naturally,&#8221; I 	mean and &#8220;after being chased down by an angry Irish carrot named Moyer the 	Destroyer for trying to steal the Star of Christmas.&#8221;</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> The explanation 	of the Star&#8217;s history. &#8220;One of the finest existing examples of sixth-century 	metalwork, given by St. Gregory the Great to the monks at Canterbury August 14, 	592. This astonishing gold  	and silver five-point star later decorated the courts of King Edward the Confessor, 	William the Conqueror, and James the Lethargic before coming to rest at the church 	you see behind you in 1638. The star hasn&#8217;t been publicly displayed since February 	12, 1803, due to the perceived security risks from the reigns of King Charles 	the Greedy and Cedric the I&#8217;ll-Eat-Anything-Star-Shaped.&#8221;</p>
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<span class="entryName">Die Hard (1988)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/B00005K9OX/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">Shut up; it counts. Hans Gruber and company take over the Nakatomi 	Plaza on Christmas Eve, during a holiday party. That&#8217;s all the reason I need. 	There&#8217;s also the subplot involving John McClane staying in New York, while his 	wife moves out to L.A., thanks to a promotion. He didn&#8217;t think Holly would make 	it, and would come crawling back to him. And now that he sees she&#8217;s doing just 	fine, he&#8217;s mad that she&#8217;s using her maiden name, and then they forgive each other 	because it&#8217;s Christmas, and also because John just saved everybody&#8217;s lives from 	a bunch of terrorists.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> Do I even 	have to answer this?</p>
<blockquote>
<p align="justify"> <strong>GRUBER:</strong> &#8220;You have me at a loss. You know 		my name, but who are you? Just another American who saw too many movies as 		a child? Another orphan of a bankrupt culture who thinks he&#8217;s John Wayne? 		Rambo? Marshall Dillon?&#8221;<br />
<strong>McCLANE:</strong> &#8220;I was always kind of partial to Roy Rogers actually. 		I really dig those sequined shirts.&#8221;<br />
<strong>GRUBER:</strong> &#8220;Do you really think you have a chance against us, 		Mr. Cowboy?&#8221;<br />
<strong>McCLANE:</strong> &#8220;Yippee-ki-yay, motherfucker.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
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<span class="entryName">Yogi&#8217;s First Christmas (1980)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/6301910753/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">Ranger Smith especially loves winter in Jellystone Park, not only 	because the Jellystone Ski Lodge is open for operation, but also because of the 	lack of Yogi Bear, who is supposed to be hibernating until April. Unfortunately, 	Christmas carols sung by some of his friends visiting the lodge wakes Yogi and Boo-boo 	up from their seasonal slumber. So they decide to check out what&#8217;s up with all the 	white stuff on the ground. Mrs. Throckmorton, the lodge&#8217;s owner, takes a liking 	to Yogi&#8217;s character, and gives him a job as a bellboy. Considering she&#8217;s planning 	on shutting down the lodge after this season due to some &#8220;strange goings-on&#8221;  	last year, it doesn&#8217;t matter that much to her in the beginning. Meanwhile, the 	man responsible for the &#8220;strange goings-on&#8221;  	is Herman the Hermit, a nearby mountain dweller who hates Christmas,  	and will do anything to shut down the lodge. When Mrs. Throckmorton&#8217;s spoiled-rotten 	nephew, Snivley, sneaks away to team up with Herman, everyone goes out to look for 	him. Yogi eventually finds the two, invites Herman to the lodge for Christmas dinner, and warms 	his heart by dressing up like Santa and giving him a present. Mrs. T is so delighted 	to have her nephew back, that she decides to keep Jellystone Lodge open, and make 	Yogi like the assistant manager or something. For a frigging bear, he sure knows 	how to get up in company hierarchy.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> Cindi Bear 	discovers the tradition of mistletoe, and hangs some all over the entire lobby 	in a desperate attempt to try and get Yogi to make out with her.</p>
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<span class="entryName">White Christmas (1954)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/6300215695/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">Sure, this is just another rendition of the old HEY GUYS LET&#8217;S 	PUT ON A SHOW IN THE BARN plot, but of all the jazz-era song and dance holiday 	flicks, and especially of the ones starring Bing Crosby, this is probably the 	most popular. Bing Crosby is back, this time as a WWII vet  (which, remember, ended 	just nine years prior) who has developed a variety act with his buddy, Danny Kaye. 	The two agree to help two sisters  (Rosemary Clooney and Vera-Ellen) get patrons 	to their ski lodge in Vermont, which is short on snow this year. All the while, 	Danny is trying to hook Bing up with the right girl. Meanwhile, the lodge turns 	out to be owned and operated by their old army general, and with his help, they 	put on a Broadway-level show to draw crowds to the lodge. And, as you can probably 	guess, the long-awaited snow arrives by the end of the movie, just in time for Bing 	to sing the title track.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> Most would 	argue the aforementioned title song, and a few others would vote for the awkward 	moment between Danny and Vera-Ellen, where she tries to make the excuse, &#8220;Maybe 	it&#8217;s just the music &#8230;&#8221;  	&#8220;Maybe it ISN&#8217;T only the music,&#8221; Danny replies. My favorite line, however, 	is when Bing is on the phone trying to get an estimate as to how much putting 	on this show is going to cost.</p>
<blockquote>
<p align="justify"><strong>CROSBY:</strong> &#8220;&#8230; Wow.&#8221;<br />
<strong>KAYE:</strong> &#8220;How much is wow?&#8221;<br />
<strong>CROSBY:</strong> &#8220;We&#8217;ve got a big show to do, buster.&#8221;<br />
<strong>KAYE:</strong> &#8220;HOW MUCH IS WOW&#8221;<br />
<strong>CROSBY:</strong> &#8220;Right up there between &#8230; ouch and boing.&#8221;<br />
<strong>KAYE:</strong> &#8221; &#8230; Wow.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
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<span class="entryName">The Smurfs&#8217; Christmas Special (1982)</span></p>
<p align="justify">When two children come knocking on Gargamel&#8217;s door to help their 	fallen grandfather in the woods, he of course shoos them away. Minutes later, a 	dark stranger requests that Gargamel help him find those kids, whose father double-crossed 	him years ago. In exchange, he offers Gargamel a magic scroll with information on 	how to destroy his little blue nemeses. The Smurfs, themselves, meet up with the 	children first, saving them from a wolf and inviting them to their Christmas celebration. 	Gargamel sneaks in and grabs the kids, and as promised, the cloaked stranger delivers 	the scroll. But when the magic doesn&#8217;t work quite as planned, Gargamel follows the 	stranger, who turns on him, throwing him into a sacrificial circle of fire with 	the children. Yeah, a circle of hellfire in a frigging Smurfs cartoon. What our 	heroes do to save their friends  (and Gargamel) is nothing short of amazing.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> That song. 	That terrible, magical song. To counter the mysterious wizard guy&#8217;s evil magic, 	Papa Smurf leads his entire tribe in singing  	&#8220;Goodness makes the badness go away&#8221; over and over. As loud and as obnoxious as 	possible. But it isn&#8217;t until they make Gargamel join in that the wall of fire dies 	down, and the wizard vanishes with it.</p>
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<span class="entryName">Batman Returns (1992)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/B000005PRX/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">For as long as I can remember, Batman has been my favorite comic 	hero. So I snuck him on this list twice, but both are well-deserved. This Tim Burton 	sequel, featuring the Bat&#8217;s struggle with the Penguin and Catwoman, was underappreciated, 	but one thing&#8217;s for sure &#8230; it DID take place at Christmastime. In fact, the Christmas 	in Gotham City adds to the film&#8217;s dark, faux-cheery atmosphere. The Bat and the Cat 	make an exchange about the dangers of mistletoe.  	&#8220;Mistletoe can be deadly if you eat it,&#8221; Batman says. Catwoman counters,  	&#8220;A kiss can be deadly if you mean it.&#8221; The two interchange quotes later in the film. 	The Penguin&#8217;s giant duck-shaped tank launches missiles that look like candy canes. 	Still not enough holiday cheer? Near the beginning of the movie, the city is opening 	the season with its annual tree lighting ceremony, when a giant wrapped gift box 	rolls into Gotham Plaza, and out pops the Red Triangle Circus Gang to blow stuff up. 	Merry Christmas, you heathen! Now people are dead!</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> The part where 	somebody makes a joke related to the fact that Catwoman is dressed up like a cat. 	Oh, man. What a riot.</p>
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<span class="entryName">Christmas Comes To Pac-Land (1982)</span></p>
<p align="justify">Christmas came to Pac-Land when Santa&#8217;s sleigh, as it often likes 	to do when  Hanna-Barbara draws him, crashes in a violent snow storm. The original 	video game icon and his wife open their home to the mysterious stranger, offering 	a cup of Power Pellet cocoa to regain his energy. When Santa explains his job 	to them, Packy and his Pac-pooch, Chomp-chomp, brave the storm in search for 	Santa&#8217;s bag o&#8217; stuff. But after an encounter with the ghosts, he barely makes 	it back. Then, when the time comes for Santa to take back to the skies, Pac-Man 	has to persuade the ghosts to let them pass in the spirit of the holidays. Yeah, 	please give us enough room to make this fat alien&#8217;s sled fly, because he&#8217;s celebrating 	some occasion we&#8217;ve never heard of. Of course, one look in Santa&#8217;s eyes, and 	the ghosts have no choice but to feel bad for him. Once airborne, the jolly one 	repays everyone for their kindness, including the ghosts. It&#8217;s a posthumous Christmas 	in Pac-Land!</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> Pac-Man leads 	Santa&#8217;s reindeer to the Power Pellet Forest to regain their energy. A bit risky, 	considering they&#8217;re a whole other, non-spherical species from parts unknown. Sure 	enough, it works so well, that the reindeer start glowing with power. At least I 	hope it&#8217;s power,  	and not radiation, or else you might want to start leaving Santa&#8217;s cookies on a paper 	plate.</p>
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<span class="entryName">The Life And Adventures Of Santa Claus (1985)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/6301760344/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">Forget everything you think you know about the man in red. L. 	Frank Baum, who&#8217;s most famous for penning the Wizard of Oz, has reinvented the origins 	of Santa Claus from the ground up. Baum tells a very pagan story in which Claus 	was found as a baby by the immortal spirits of the forest. The beginning sequence 	shows a governing council of immortals gathering to discuss the fate of the now 	elderly Santa, who may or may not be making his final trip around the globe, depending 	on whether the council decides to give him the gift of eternal life. The Great Ak, 	the ruler of the world&#8217;s forests and the one who found Claus as a baby, takes his 	case to the council, explaining how he found the human outside the immortal Forest 	of Burzee, left him in the care of a fairy sprite,  	and when old enough, explained to him the pains of the mortal world. Greed and envy 	had overcome it, and Claus was so moved by his kind&#8217;s unhappiness, that he vowed to 	bring joy to as as he could. He started small, by making toys for the children of 	a small village. But as time passed, and after thwarting evil, invisible spirits who 	feed on sorrow, Santa Claus became the international man of mystery he is today. 	So of course, the council of immortals let him join their little club. They have 	pizza night every Friday.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> The other 	guy with the big nose in the picture is called Tingler. He helps raise Claus 	when he&#8217;s a boy, and he&#8217;s quite the interesting character. He has a tendency to 	repeat everything he says in several different languages &#8230; including animal sounds. 	A simple negative answer, with Tingler, turns into &#8220;No! Nein! Nyet! Chirp-chirp! 	ROAR! Whatever the squirrel equivalent for &#8216;no&#8217; is!&#8221; Also, besides the name, the 	similarities between him and <a href="http://www.progressiveboink.com/archive/hyspace/tingle.html">Tingle</a> from 	the Legend of Zelda are uncanny.</p>
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<span class="entryName">John Denver and The Muppets: A Christmas Together (1979)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/B000001VD4/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">This special and its accompanying record has been part of every 	single Christmas I can remember. It features the title&#8217;s namesakes putting on a 	Christmas production of Christmas carols, a scene about a toy soldier at war and missing 	the doll he loves,  	and a Nativity scene. The actual togetherness is debatable. The opening credits, I 	swear to Jesus, say &#8220;John Denver and the Muppets: A Christmas Together &#8230; starring 	John Denver!&#8221; Oh, is that who&#8217;s in this? I forgot. Thanks for reminding me. The 	problem with this special is that you have the Muppets spending more time <em>around </em>John 	Denver than actually with him. More like A Christmas In The Same Room As Each Other. 	Yet the mere fact that it has Muppets in it has an eerie power that keeps drawing 	me back to it every Christmas. Still, it does get slow at times. I have home movies 	of me when I was 4, and it&#8217;s playing in the background while I&#8217;m diverting my attention 	from it as I <s>help my parents decorate the Christmas tree</s> jump all over the 	furniture as my parents decorate the Christmas tree.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> While looking 	over the script, Miss Piggy suggests that &#8220;good will toward men&#8221; be changed to &#8220;good 	will toward men and women.&#8221; John explains that they took the line from out of the 	Bible, and that&#8217;s when Piggy interrupts again and explains that the Bible is 	filled with &#8220;This one begat that one, and that one begat the other one &#8230; with 	all this begetting going on, there&#8217;s surely a great <strong>deal</strong> of good will toward 	women in the Bible.&#8221; I&#8217;m 	not kidding. She actually says that. I can&#8217;t believe I never caught it before.</p>
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<span class="entryName">Rudolph, The Red-Nosed Reindeer (1944)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/B0002M5U4W/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">Predating Rankin/Bass&#8217;s version by two decades, this Max Fleischer 	short was the first to bring Rudolph to life. It more closely followed the actual 	song, without introducing any outside characters. One highlight is the actual reindeer 	games, which consist in part of testing out some of the year&#8217;s toys, like toy trains and baseball 	bats. Also, Rudolph and his mother live in a regular log cabin, his mother often standing 	on her hind legs and  	wearing an apron around the house. Then, one foggy Christmas Eve, Santa bursts 	into the depressed reindeer&#8217;s room and asks for his help. Not nearly as heartwarming 	as the stop-animation one, but this one earns its antlers not only having bringing 	Rudolph to life for the first time, but doing so in beautiful animation for the 	time.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> To hide from 	the &#8220;other reindeer,&#8221; who don&#8217;t do a very good job laughing or calling him names, 	basically dancing around and singing the glowing nose equivalent to &#8220;Michael Michael 	Motorcycle,&#8221; Rudolph hides behind a berry bushel (No!), where his nose blends in 	perfectly.</p>
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<span class="entryName">Will Vinton&#8217;s Claymation Christmas Celebration (1987)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/630315266X/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">Nobody really knew Will Vinton by name, and people still don&#8217;t, 	but when the words &#8220;featuring the California Raisins&#8221;  	followed the title, that was reason enough to tune into this primetime special. 	Hosted by Rex and Herb, a T-rex and a triceratops from Vinton&#8217;s short &#8220;Dinosaur,&#8221; the 	two introduce different clay segments of Christmas carols. During their introductions, 	different groups of cart vendors show up, messing up the words to &#8220;Here We Come 	A Wassailing,&#8221; making it waffling, waddling, wallowing, etc. So while Herb is pigging 	out at each vendor, Rex attempts to figure out what &#8220;wassail&#8221; actually means. The 	shorts, naturally, are the highlight. Two walruses ice skate to &#8220;Angels We Have 	Heard On High,&#8221; which is funny because fat things ice skating=lol, and Vinton shows 	off what he can do with clay and a stop-motion camera with a stained glass fireworks 	display to the tune of &#8220;Joy To The World.&#8221; As for the California Raisins, they miss 	their bus after a show, and then go into a familiar-sounding soul version of &#8220;Rudolph, 	the Red-Nosed Reindeer,&#8221; build a makeshift sleigh out of a couch and a dumpster, and fly 	home.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> The Carol 	of the Bells sequence, performed by the Notre Dame Bell Choir. They&#8217;re actual, anthropomorphic 	bells with mallets to hit themselves on the head with. When one exceptionally stupid 	Middle C bell squishes a bug and throws his mallet away, Maestro Quasimodo hits him 	with a slingshot to end the performance.</p>
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<span class="entryName">Futurama: The Xmas Episodes (1999, 2001)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/B00013RBX0/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">Futurama&#8217;s two Christmas episodes made creative  	and hilarious use of the &#8220;telephone game&#8221; effect of oral tradition, 	in which some information gets lost and others merged with time and distance. 	In <strong>&#8220;Xmas Story,&#8221;</strong> Fry, a twentieth century boy who was 	frozen and woke up to find himself in the year 3000, learns that the holiday he 	once knew as Christmas is now called &#8220;Xmas,&#8221; and it&#8217;s a time of year no 	one looks forward to. Back in the 27th century, a robotic Santa Claus was built 	to determine which kids were naughty and which ones were nice. After a Dr. Wily-esque 	mishap, Santa malfunctioned, and  has since put everyone on the naughty list by 	default. Also, if you&#8217;re naughty, he murders you. When Santa comes down the chimney 	of the Planet Express, he judges everyone on board as naughty &#8230; except for Dr. 	Zoidberg, a Jewish-esque crustaceoid. He gets a pogo stick, which he uses to cut 	the ceiling wires and give Santa an electric shock, causing him to fly out of the 	chimney.</p>
<p align="justify">In the other Xmas episode episode, <strong>&#8220;A Tale of Two 		Santas,&#8221;</strong> the 	Planet Express unintentionally freeze the evil Santa in a block of ice. With the 	evil Santa out of the way, Fry decides to reintroduce the world to the 20th Century 	Santa by giving Bender a shot at the gift-giving gig. The children of the world, 	however, still think Bender is the evil Santa robot, and he&#8217;s eventually arrested 	and put on trial. Sentenced to be executed, Bender&#8217;s friends suddenly enter the 	courtroom, claiming to be the real Santa. The confusion stalls the execution long 	enough for the real evil Santa to thaw himself out, show up,  	and go on a shooting rampage. Xmas is saved, and thankfully, so is Bender.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> The other 	guys already gave honors to the part during the Sparticus homage scene in &#8220;A 	Tale Of Two Santas,&#8221; in which everyone busts into the courtroom dressed as 	Santa, and Zoidberg attempts to help out by proclaiming, &#8220;And 	I&#8217;m his friend, Jesus!&#8221; Surely, that&#8217;s his greatest moment, but there&#8217;s 	a part earlier in the episode that made me laugh almost as hard. The prosecution 	lawyer, a giant blue chicken with a southern accent not unlike Colonel Sanders, 	is questioning a little girl that Bender tried to give a present to. &#8220;Now Pamela, 	I know it&#8217;s scary in that there witness box, but t&#8217;ain&#8217;t no need to fear meBUKAWWWWK! 	&#8230; I&#8217;m sorry, I thought you was corn.&#8221;</p>
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<span class="entryName">Mister Magoo&#8217;s Christmas Carol (1962)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/6301175239/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">This umpteenth retelling of &#8220;A Christmas Carol&#8221;  	finds the Nearsighted Mr. Magoo playing Scrooge in a play. Unfortunately, there 		are next to no jokes about how he has poor eyesight, so he really only LOOKS like 		Magoo. I&#8217;ll call him Magooge. It&#8217;s more verbatim Dickens than most popular-cartoon-character-plays-Scrooge 		specials, but it adds some original songs. One sung by the Cratchet family finds 		Tiny Tim, played by Gerald McBoing-Boing, who went through 		the trouble of learning his lines in English as opposed to &#8230; um, boing noises &#8230; 		asking their father for &#8220;razzleberry dressing.&#8221; I&#8217;ve never heard of a 		razzleberry, but Tiny Tiny won&#8217;t shut up about it. Also, when Link 		to the Christmas Past takes Magooge to visit his childhood self, they sing 		a song in perfect harmony, and the boy Magooge mysteriously knows when to pause 		for his future spirit, and then when to start singing again. It&#8217;s like when you&#8217;re 		in the car and you only sing the harmony parts, only reversed.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> In the glimpse 	of the future, Magooge is too stupid to figure out that he dies. An undertaker shows 	some cufflinks he swiped from some dead guy. They&#8217;ve got his frigging initials on 	them, and  	he&#8217;s still like, &#8220;Aww, poor dead guy. I&#8217;d hate to be him.&#8221;  	I&#8217;m paraphrasing that, of course.</p>
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<span class="entryName">The Pee-wee&#8217;s Playhouse Christmas Special (1988)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/6304196660/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">Somehow, Pee-wee Herman managed to cram about a dozen special 	guest stars into his playhouse for a Christmas party. Pee-wee teachers Little 	Richard how to ice skate. Then Charo shows up and teaches Pee-wee how to say &#8220;Feliz 	Navidad,&#8221;  	before joining k.d. lang and the Del Rubio Triplets in singing carols. 	Frankie Avalon and Annette Funicello make Christmas cards. Whoopi Goldberg and 	Oprah keep trying to wish Pee-wee a Happy New Year, but keep getting screamed 	at, because YEAR is the day&#8217;s secret word. And Grace Jones gets mailed to the 	White House. In the midst of all this, Santa calls Pee-wee on the picture phone 	 and asks him to shorten his Christmas list, so that, you know, some OTHER children 	on the planet could get some stuff. Pee-wee does him one better by helping Santa 	deliver them. Oh, and by the way, this thing somehow got nominated for three 	Emmys.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> Basketball 	legend Magic Johnson (pre-Crisis) shows up and goes on a sleigh 	ride with Pee-wee inside Magic&#8217;s distant cousin &#8230; Magic Screen.</p>
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<span class="entryName">The Polar Express (2004)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/B000A468XY/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">It may be a little too early to put this entry so high on the 	list, but after seeing it, and think it&#8217;s worth the assumption that it will soon 	become as much of a staple to the holidays as Rudolph and Frosty. Based on the 	children&#8217;s book by Chris Van Allsburg, the Polar Express is about a boy on the verge 	of disbelief in Santa Claus. Hoping to at least hear some sleigh bells as he drifts 	off to sleep on Christmas Eve, he instead hears a loud train whistle. To his surprise, 	he finds a giant train parked out front his house. It&#8217;s bound for the North Pole, and filled 	with children in their pajamas who, like him, are just old enough for this Santa 	crap, but still hope to see something magical before the night is through. Tom Hanks 	plays just about every adult male character, including the train&#8217;s conductor, a 	hobo hitching a ride, Scrooge, and Santa Claus, himself. And, thanks in part to 	the magic of computer animation, they all look like Tom Hanks. Isn&#8217;t Christmas magical?</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> The part where 	Robert Zemeckis can&#8217;t make a movie with a train in it without having someone pull 	the whistle cord and saying &#8220;I wanted to do that my whole life!&#8221; The 	boy did it in this one,  	and Doc Brown did it in 1885.</p>
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<span class="entryName">Merry Christmas, Mr. Bean (1992)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/6304197969/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">One of the UK&#8217;s greatest comedy weapons, Rowan Atkinson plays 	Mr. Bean, a clumsy man-child of little words. Bean episodes were very similar 	to the slapstick comedy from the days of silent pictures, and this Christmas special 	is among the most memorable episodes. While out doing some last minute Christmas 	shopping for his girlfriend, Bean finds himself playing with a miniature nativity 	set, much like one would play with action figures. Later, he conducts a Salvation 	Army band, who follow his baton&#8217;s every moment, including the unintentional ones. 	Before the night is through, Bean has stolen the Christmas tree from the town 	square, won a free turkey in &#8220;guess how much this weighs&#8221; contest, and 	 forces Christmas carolers to sing for him longer than intended. Then, it&#8217;s time 	for dinner&#8230;</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> Having an 	awfully hard time basting his Christmas turkey, Bean loses his watch in it. The 	turkey ends up on his head, and stays there for a good four or five minutes. I&#8217;ve 	never heard a studio audience laugh so hard in my entire life, and the scene was 	so funny, that it was actually used again in later episodes of the show.</p>
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<span class="entryName">Peace On Earth (1939)</span><strong><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/asin/B000B5XOZM/ref=nosim/progressive09-20"></a></strong></p>
<p align="justify">This Oscar-nominated feature is creepy tale on the brink of the 	Second World War begins with an old squirrel visiting his grandchildren for Christmas. 	Upon singing  	&#8220;Peace on Earth, goodwill to men,&#8221; the young squirrels ask him what &#8220;men&#8221; are. 	They&#8217;re never heard of such a thing, and rightly so, because in this short, HUMANS 	ARE EXTINCT. The grandfather squirrel tells of a great war that came down to 	the last two people in the world, who shot each other dead. Later, when the forest 	animals would reclaim the planet, they discovered a book that outlined a life 	of peace, and that brings us to our happy Christmas ending. With no people.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> The part where 	no one is reading this right now because we were never born, and squirrels have 	no need to invent things like the Internet.</p>
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<span class="entryName">The Small One (1978)</span></p>
<p align="justify">This was director Don Bluth&#8217;s last project with Disney, before 	moving on to Fox and making such films as the Secret of NIMH, An American Tail, 	and that Dragon&#8217;s Lair video game. Small One is the name of a donkey owned by 	a young Judean boy. When the boy&#8217;s father breaks it to him that Small One is 	a runt that he can&#8217;t keep, the boy is forced to sell it in town. Scared off by 	the town&#8217;s ruthless swindlers and a garment tanner, the boy can&#8217;t find anyone 	to sell Small One to that&#8217;ll love him as much as he does. When all hope is lost, 	and Small One is ready to sacrifice his frigging life to the tanner so that his 	master can get a bite to eat, in comes a man named Joseph, who could use a donkey 	gentle and kind enough to carry his pregnant wife through the desert. I bet you 	didn&#8217;t see that one coming as soon as you saw the word &#8220;donkey.&#8221;</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> The boy&#8217;s 	sales pitch. &#8220;He&#8217;s gentle and kind.&#8221; We&#8217;re reminded of the donkey&#8217;s gentleness 	and kindness about a dozen more times before the special is over.</p>
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<span class="entryName">The Muppet Christmas Carol (1992)</span></p>
<p align="justify">Michael Caine does a wonderful job playing the grave and serious 	Scrooge, especially considering his costars are all made of felt. Gonzo plays Charles 	Dickens, himself, as he tells the tale of Scrooge. The story is a short and hurried 	version of the same, and the original Muppets made for the three spirits are nice 	to see, but it&#8217;s no surprise that the highlights are picking out the Muppet performers, 	who don&#8217;t exactly get into character. Sure, Scrooge refers to him as Bob Cratchit, 	but it&#8217;s no more than Kermit in a funny suit and hat. Scrooge is visited by his 	two bosses, Jacob and Robert Marley, played by Statler and Waldorf,  	and later returns to his past, when he worked for Fozziwig.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> As charity 	workers Bunsen and Beaker are walking out the door, Beaker FLIPS SCROOGE THE BIRD. 	Well, he only has four fingers, and  	the gesture of the fingers isn&#8217;t there, but the position of the arm and Beaker&#8217;s 	mean meep make it obvious that he&#8217;s got two words for Mr. Scrooge &#8230; MEEP MEEP.</p>
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<span class="entryName">The Wonder Years: A Very Cutlip Christmas (1990)</span></p>
<p align="justify">When <a href="http://progressiveboink.com/archive/bbasicarchive.html">B</a> reminded 	me that I forgot this one, I revised my entire list just to fit it on there. 	It&#8217;s that important. So I can&#8217;t really yell at whoever was in charge of 	compiling &#8220;The Christmas Wonder Years&#8221; DVD set for not including this particular 	episode.</p>
<p align="justify">Wait. Yes I can. It was their JOB to pick the BEST episodes of 	the Wonder Years out of all episodes involving Christmas. Screw you guys. Cutlip 	is awesome.</p>
<p align="justify">Since he&#8217;s the one who remembered it, I&#8217;m going  to let B do the 	commentary for this one:</p>
<p align="justify">While at the mall buying clothes with his mother, Kevin makes 	a startling discovery: the mall Santa is actually his gym teacher, Coach Cutlip. 	The discovery and Cutlip&#8217;s awareness of such leads to an easier gym class for 	Kevin, which alienates him from the friends he left stuck doing the President&#8217;s 	Physical Fitness Challenge. In an effort to explain, he lets slip that Cutlip 	works at the mall, but doesn&#8217;t tell them where. This gets them determined to go 	to the mall, find Cutlip, and make a fool out of him.</p>
<p align="justify">When the special treatment 	becomes too much, Kevin confronts the coach in his office and makes it clear 	that he isn&#8217;t going to tell anybody about Cutlip&#8217;s stupid job as Santa. Cutlip, 	in a completely out-of-nowhere but welcome moment of sublime humanity, says that 	he took the job as a mall Santa because he wanted little kids to like him. That&#8217;s 	the saddest thing ever. Cutlip wants the kids to like him, but the only way he 	knows how is through Christmas, and by giving them something to believe in. Kevin 	rightly feels like shit and promises the secret will be kept, until he realizes 	that he&#8217;s already let the secret slip.</p>
<p align="justify"><span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> Later, Kevin 	rushes to the mall to let Cutlip know the guys are coming, but Cutlip (accompanied 	by a Christmas choir) stands up and lets Kevin know that he isn&#8217;t ashamed of 	what he&#8217;s doing, and he&#8217;ll take whatever he gets. The boys arrive and Kevin tries 	to herd them away, until they see Cutlip standing tall in the center of the mall. 	They each take turns noticing him, looking him in the eyes. Kevin is sure that 	they know until he sees them smile, and realizes that when they look they don&#8217;t 	see Coach Cutlip. All they see is Santa.</p>
<p align="justify">I think of this, and of Linus, and I hope 	that my child gets to hold on to that sweetness and simplicity of Christmas for 	as long as she can. Even if she&#8217;s sitting on the lap of a gym teacher.</p>
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<span class="entryName">Batman—the Animated Series: Christmas With The Joker 	(1992)</span></p>
<p align="justify">It&#8217;s Christmas Eve, and a fresh-out-of-the-nuthouse has set up 	an entire holiday-themed series of traps for Batman and Robin, including giant 	toy soldiers with guns, and a live broadcast of the Joker as he parodies his 	favorite classic Christmas specials, starring his family of hostages: members 	of Gotham&#8217;s police force and justice system. Along the way, Batman and Robin 	have to stop a train from derailing, and avoid a giant cannon firing at their heads, 	among other obstacles. That&#8217;s what I loved about Batman&#8217;s enemies. Their plans 	of murder were always so calculated, especially the Joker&#8217;s, who didn&#8217;t mind 	at all bumping off a few dozen people if it meant keeping Batman occupied for 	a while, until his masterpiece murder plan was complete. The Christmas theme 	all fit together like a symphony, and the Joker loved watching every bit of it.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> At the very 	beginning of the episode, the Joker catapolts himself out of Arkham Asylum. Using 	a Christmas tree and singing the Batman variation of &#8220;Jingle Bells&#8221;  	from grade school, with impeccable timing on the part where he got 	away. Love that Joker.</p>
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<span class="entryName">Santa Claus Is Comin&#8217; To Town (1970)</span></p>
<p align="justify">Fred Astaire plays the postman in charge of delivering all our 	letters to Santa in this Rankin/Bass retelling of the Santa Claus story. This 	time around, Santa is left on the doorstep of the Kringles, an elfin family of toymakers. 	You&#8217;ll never guess what they name him. As he grows up, he takes on the job of 	delivering the Kringles&#8217; toys to the children of a nearby town, much to the demise 	of the grumpy Burgermeister, who outlaws toys. After melting the heart of the magical 	Winter Warlock, Santa learns how to freeze time, and how to make reindeer fly using 	magic corn. Corn with fairy dust makes reindeer fly, friends.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> When Santa 	melts the Winter Warlock&#8217;s cold heart &#8230; by giving him a choo-choo train. The dude 	has lived centuries with a subzero organ,  	and it&#8217;s suddenly back in operation thanks to a toy train. The last gift I got 	that could&#8217;ve melted my heart, had it been covered in internal organ ice, was a 	Super Nintendo.</p>
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<span class="entryName">The Simpsons Christmas Special (1989)</span></p>
<p align="justify">The vast majority of us didn&#8217;t know the Simpsons by name when 	this special came out. They were just that funny cartoon family on the Tracy 	Ullman show. But when the commercials started airing, and we saw the rude yellow 	family we all made sure to stay up late for, we knew tuning into this special 	was a personal obligation. So we sat and watched &#8220;Simpsons Roasting on 	an Open Fire,&#8221; the 	story of Homer, who was secretly working as a mall Santa after his power plant 	job canceled its Christmas bonus, and after blowing all their money on a losing 	greyhound at the racetracks, they end up taking the neglected pooch home. Though 	technically not the first episode—the series had a planned release earlier 	that year, but fell behind—it&#8217;s still the first one that aired, and the beginning 	of an era, and for those of us who were there at this beginning, we could already 	start to see it coming. Right from Bart&#8217;s first &#8220;Who the hell are you?&#8221;  	and Homer&#8217;s &#8220;D&#8217;oh!&#8221;</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> Bart sneaks 	off to a tattoo parlor, convinces the inker that he&#8217;s of 21, and gets a tattoo 	of a heart with MOTHER written on it. Well, actually, the tattoo guy doesn&#8217;t finish, 	when Marge comes in and yanks Bart out of there. &#8220;But mom,&#8221; Bart petitions.  	&#8220;I thought you&#8217;d like it!&#8221; &#8220;Who would like a tattoo that says MOTH?&#8221;</p>
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<span class="entryName">Mickey&#8217;s Good Deed (1932)</span></p>
<p align="justify">One of Walt Disney&#8217;s earliest cartoons, this featured a impoverished 	Mickey Mouse, who sells his dog, Pluto, in order to help out a poor family full 	of children. This is noteworthy in that the cartoon was made during the Great 	Depression, and it features a poor Mickey giving up his most prized possession 	in order to help out another poor family. The rich kid Pluto ends up with is 	the loudest, most obnoxious brat I&#8217;ve ever heard, and after Pluto finally makes 	a mess out of the house and gets kicked out again, you couldn&#8217;t be happier when 	he is reunited with Mickey. That and the fact that he somehow got a whole roasted 	turkey tied to the end of his tail.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> After the 	kid&#8217;s dad throws Pluto out of the house, the kid starts screaming &#8220;I WANT DOGGY 	I WANT DOGGY&#8221; again. It&#8217;s really incredible voice acting in that it makes me 	actually want to reach into my TV and rip out the kid&#8217;s throat. Great going, 	dad. We just got him to shut u—hey alright, way to spank that kid sore! After 	five minutes of listening to a cartoon pig child scream at the top of his lungs, 	I&#8217;m actually rooting for his dad&#8217;s shoe.</p>
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<span class="entryName">The Night Before Christmas (1933)</span></p>
<p align="justify">Another Disney short, this time in the form of the Silly Symphony. 	Santa is seen making a stop at an orphanage, because Walt Disney had to include 	dead parents in everything he made. He practically unloads his entire bag of toys 	under the tree,  	and hangs out for a while as he watches everything march out of the bag by itself. 	The wooden soldiers dance, the planes hang garland around the Christmas tree, and Santa 	even plays a number on a little tinker piano. This is enough to wake a long bed 	full of about 10 orphans wake up, but before they know it, Santa&#8217;s up the chimney  	and on his way to the next house to kill about a half hour. Stopping time&#8217;s a 	pretty awesome super power to have.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> Santa&#8217;s laugh. 	It&#8217;s not quite the &#8220;Ho-ho-ho,&#8221; you&#8217;re expecting, but more of a deep belly 	laugh, borderlining on somewhat of a guffaw. It&#8217;s gotten to the point where I associate 	the laugh in this one, 7-minute long Christmas short with Santa Claus more so than 	I do with the one everybody else does. Someone even left the fireplace on, and Santa 	just shrugs it off with a belly laugh. After leaping in pain, of course. He&#8217;s still 	human. Kind of.</p>
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<span class="entryName">Scrooged (1988)</span></p>
<p align="justify">As far as I&#8217;m concerned, Bill Murray is one of the funniest people 	alive, and his role as Scrooge-esque TV exec Frank Cross is among his best work. 	After canceling everyone&#8217;s Christmas bonus, getting typical, crappy gifts for his 	family, and firing a random low-level employee on Christmas Eve, Cross is visited 	by his old boss. Not the ghost of his old boss &#8230; the decaying zombie body of his 	old boss, who warns him that he&#8217;ll share the same fate if he doesn&#8217;t change his 	ways, like the three ghosts he&#8217;s about to meet tell him to, including a cab-driving 	Ghost of Christmas Past who reminds him of the lighthearted man he once was and the 	woman he once loved, and a sadistic Ghost of Christmas Present who reminds him 	of the neglected people in his everyday life. Murray&#8217;s redeeming monologue at the 	end, as he interrupts a live TV production of &#8220;A Christmas Carol,&#8221; is 	a touching piece of Murray&#8217;s classic wit.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> Carol Kane&#8217;s 	role as the Ghost of Christmas Present steals the show, if only for a moment. All 	along their voyage, she casually beats the crap out of Cross. She&#8217;ll do it mid-sentence, 	too. Like right in that last one I just wrote, she would have hit him in the head 	with her wand on the word &#8220;sentence.&#8221;</p>
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<span class="entryName">Christmas Eve on Sesame Street (1978)</span></p>
<p align="justify">For years, and long after I should have stopped, I was a rabid 	Sesame Street fan, so this special is on my absolute must-watch list every year. 	After Oscar gives Big Bird something to think about in the question of how a 	fatty like Santa Claus can fit down the tiny chimneys of New York City, our feathered 	friend goes nuts trying to find the answer, and gets his friends to help him 	find it. Meanwhile, Bert and Ernie pull a Gift of the Magi by each selling their 	most prized possessions in order to buy gifts for the other to use with his most 	prized possession. If you didn&#8217;t quite catch that, Ernie sells Mr. Hooper (who 	is still alive in 1978 hooray!) his Rubber Duckie in exchange for a cigar box 	for Bert&#8217;s paper clip collection &#8230; which Bert later sells to buy a soap dish 	for Ernie to put Rubber Duckie in. Mr. Hooper eventually ends up giving those 	two things back to the boys, in exchange for nothing but to see everyone happy 	at Christmas. As for Big Bird, he camps out on the woods without telling anybody, 	to try and figure out the Santa Claus mystery. He never finds out, but as Gordon 	explains to him, that doesn&#8217;t stop the miracle of Christmas from happening. Also, 	while all of this is going on, we randomly check in on Cookie Monster, who keeps 	trying to make  his Christmas list for Santa, eating a pencil, 	typewriter, and telephone in the process.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> During an 	ice skating scene at the beginning, a bunch of the Muppet characters takes turns 	seeing who can jump over the most oil barrels. The winner, of course, is Fonzie, 	who jumps over however many barrels it takes to equal the length of a shark tank. 	Then Cookie Monster gets the brilliant idea of playing everyone&#8217;s favorite ice skating 	game, Crack the Whip, which ends with Bert and his butter-colored fingers letting 	go of Oscar, sending him flying down several flights of stairs. And we see him pummel 	the entire way down about four or five flights of stairs in his trash can.</p>
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<span class="entryName">Elf (2003)</span></p>
<p align="justify">In recent years, Christmas movies have been a drag. Then last 	year, Will Ferrell came out with this, and while it&#8217;s a 	pretty standard fish out of water story, Ferrell makes it fun to watch in 	his role as Buddy, a man raised by Santa Claus as an elf. When he&#8217;s the only 	one growing up, Santa tells him the truth about his origins, and makes him defeat 	an evil, one-eyed spider queen thing in his belly. I mean tells him his real 	father is a human and lives in New York City. There, he finds that all is not 	cheerful during the holiday season, and his childhood innocence is annoying at 	first, but eventually spreads a little more joy to a city that could use it. 	Buddy has a rough time getting his dad (James Caan) to understand or accept his 	childlike disposition, and has a bit of an easier time getting mall Santa&#8217;s elf 	Zooey Deschanel to at least crack a smile. Buddy represents the naive kid many 	of us wish we could get away with being, and Ferrell does a remarkable job of 	it.</p>
<p align="justify"><strong class="red">Memorable moment:</strong></p>
<blockquote>
<p align="left"> 		<strong class="red">mike fireball 0:</strong> Quick help me pick the best moment in Elf.<br />
<strong class="blue">Destinys2ndKid:</strong> You should just post a bunch of pictures of Zooey Deschanel&#8230;<br />
<strong class="blue">Destinys2ndKid:</strong> And then one of them could come	to life and marry me.</p>
<p align="left"><strong class="blue">Destinys2ndKid:</strong> It&#8217;s a Christmas miracle!</p>
</blockquote>
<blockquote></blockquote>
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<span class="entryName">A Chipmunk Christmas (1981)</span></p>
<p align="justify">Alvin, Simon, and Theodore&#8217;s 1981 Christmas special marked the 	trio&#8217;s return to television since the final new episode of the Alvin Show in 1965. 	In fact, you can thank this special for reviving the animated series and getting 	the &#8217;80s/&#8217;90s cartoon series commissioned. A Chipmunk Christmas was aired along 	with the release of a record of the same name, featuring Santa Claus narrating this 	story of the spirit of giving. And harmonicas &#8230; a golden one of which belongs to 	Alvin, who gives it to a sick friend in hopes that it&#8217;ll make him feel better. But 	in a case of awful timing, Dave books him for a show at Carnegie Hall, and Alvin 	scrambles to get another harmonica in time. He attempts to raise money as a sidewalk 	Santa, letting children sit on his lap and take pictures, among other schemes. 	When Dave notices Alvin&#8217;s sudden desire to raise money, he mistakes it for greed. 	But in the end, Alvin&#8217;s good deed is not gone unnoticed.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> Alvin&#8217;s at 	the mall, a few bucks shy of the harmonica&#8217;s running price, when he bumps into some 	strange old lady who needs a favor. The favor in question is that she needs Alvin 	to let her buy him the frigging harmonica. Alvin can&#8217;t believe what he&#8217;s hearing. 	She actually turns out to be Mrs. Claus, but that doesn&#8217;t matter. The message here 	is that doing good deeds will get total strangers to give you anything you want.</p>
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<span class="entryName">Home Alone 2: Lost In New York (1992)</span></p>
<p align="justify">See below. Change &#8220;house in the Chicago suburbs&#8221; to &#8220;distant 	relatives&#8217; 	abandoned flat in New York City.&#8221;  	Then change &#8220;every house on the block&#8221; to &#8220;the biggest toy store 	in aforementioned city.&#8221; THEN change &#8220;mysterious salt-shoveling guy&#8221; to &#8220;scary 	bird lady in Central Park.&#8221;  	Add a Talkboy™ tape recorder made especially for the film  	and evil hotel lobbyist Tim Curry with an eerily spot-on Grinch face, and you 	basically have the same movie. Yet somehow, this blatant rehash works. It&#8217;s kind 	of like Home Alone: the 2nd Quest. It&#8217;s harder to get through, but you don&#8217;t 	really mind.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> Also, the movie 	within the movie. In the first Home Alone, Kevin watches a black and white mobster 	flick called &#8220;Angels 	With Filthy Souls.&#8221; Don&#8217;t 	bother looking it up on IMDB. It doesn&#8217;t really exist. The footage was filmed 	especially for this movie. In Home Alone 2, Kevin watches the Christmas-themed 	sequel, &#8220;Angels 	With Even Filthier Souls,&#8221; in which Johnny shoots up his dame for smoochin&#8217; 	around with all the guys. The way Kevin uses it to scare off the hotel workers 	is brilliant. Or at least it was to my 12-year-old self. This was the kind of 	thing I wish I could have gotten away with.</p>
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<span class="entryName">Home Alone (1990)</span></p>
<p align="justify">This film made Macaulay Culkin a household name,  	and people on the street will be asking him to do the scream until he&#8217;s like 50. 	In this film, Kevin&#8217;s family go on vacation and  	leave him alone in his <strong>house in the Chicago suburbs</strong>. Meanwhile, Joe Pesci and Daniel 	Stern are cat burglars who plan to hit <strong>every house on the block</strong> while their 	owners are on vacation. Kevin wards them off a few times, but when they figure out 	he&#8217;s by himself in the house, they make their move. Unfortunately for them, Kevin&#8217;s 	waiting for them. When you&#8217;re 10 years old, anything in which a kid gets the best 	of the adults, especially if pain is distributed among them, is the funniest thing 	ever. Some Home Alone wins points for being a Christmas classic for a generation.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> Obviously, 	the final set of house traps that Kevin sets up. It&#8217;s an insane battle plan, in 	which he thinks of absolutely everything. I don&#8217;t even know where to begin describing 	its genius, so I&#8217;ll just assume you know what I&#8217;m talking about.</p>
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<span class="entryName">That One McDonald&#8217;s Commercial (1983)</span><br />
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<span class="entryName">A Garfield Christmas Special (1987)</span></p>
<p align="justify">Garfield and Odie are taken to Jon&#8217;s for the annual Christmas 	family gathering. Garfield, of course, isn&#8217;t looking forward to dealing with relatives, and the 	special is one big parody of family togetherness during the holidays. Jon&#8217;s mom 	makes too much food, and his grandmother is competing for control of the kitchen. 	Jon&#8217;s dad is made to read a story about Binky the Clown,  	and his grown sons insist that he use the appropriate voices. In the midst of 	all this, Garfield finds a stack of letters that Grandma&#8217;s husband wrote to her 	when they were dating, and Odie makes a makeshift backscratcher for Garfield, 	who sums it up best in the end: &#8220;Christmas &#8230; it&#8217;s not the giving, it&#8217;s not 	the getting. It&#8217;s the loving.&#8221;</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> Garfield is 	sent on a mission to put the star on the top of the Christmas tree, and after 	successfully doing so, he falls through,  	and all the decorations topple off with him. This is followed by what might be 	the funniest line in the entire special &#8230; &#8220;Whoever invented Christmas trees 	should be drug out into the street and  	shot.&#8221;</p>
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<span class="entryName">Mickey&#8217;s Christmas Carol (1983)</span></p>
<p align="justify">This wasn&#8217;t Scrooge McDuck&#8217;s first animated appearance, but considering 	the other is a little known short, this one might as well have been. Naturally, 	he&#8217;s cast as himself in yet another version of &#8220;A Christmas Carol.&#8221; Again, 	you know the story,  	and the fun in this special is picking out the familiar faces. Mickey and Minnie 	as the Cratchits. Donald, appropriately, as Scrooge&#8217;s nephew, Fred. Daisy, however, 	shows up as Belle. Even Mole and Badger from the Wind in the Willows show up 	as the charity workers, as well as Mr. Toad as Fezziwig. And the Ghosts of Christmas 	Past, Present and Future are portrayed, respectively and somewhat appropriately, 	by Jiminy Cricket, the Giant from Mickey and the Beanstalk, and the infamous 	Pete.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> Goofy as Jacob 	Marley. Despite being a ghost, he trips over Scrooge&#8217;s cane left on the floor, and manages 	to fall down the entire flight of stairs on the way out. Goofy&#8217;s sports documentaries 	were favorites of mine when they used to air, so this part, while not particularly 	funny, has a soft spot with me.</p>
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<span class="entryName">The Christmas Toy (1986)</span></p>
<p align="justify">This was a Muppet special about a stuffed Tiger named Rugby, who 	thinks he&#8217;s the star of Christmas. Last year, he has fond memories of young Jessie 	opening his box and giving him an enormous hug. What he doesn&#8217;t know is that before 	he showed up, Apple was Jessie&#8217;s favorite toy, and this year, it&#8217;s another toy&#8217;s 	turn. Of course, he doesn&#8217;t find that out until he&#8217;s down the stairs  	and has opened one of the boxes, thus taking a HUGE risk in the  	&#8220;Don&#8217;t let humans see you move or you&#8217;ll die&#8221; rule of toys. A rescue team 	is sent out to bring him back, but Rugby has already opened a box to find Meteora, 	Queen of the Asteroids, already in there. It takes a lot of sucking up to get Meteora 	back in the box, but now that Rugby understands that all of Jessie&#8217;s toys are loved 	equally, he&#8217;s more than happy to pass the torch.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> Mew is the 	family cat&#8217;s chew toy, whom Rugby never ceases to remind that he&#8217;s nothing more 	than just a cat toy. But when Mew is found out of place and he freezes, the song 	Rugby sings to him in apology  	and appreciation is a touching one.</p>
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<span class="entryName">Miracle On 34th Street (1947)</span></p>
<p align="justify">A mall Santa is put on trial to determine his sanity when he starts 	introducing himself as Kris Kringle and claims to be the real Santa Claus. You&#8217;d 	think he&#8217;d be a little busy around this time of year, but hanging around in New 	York it is. Of course, having to be on trial doesn&#8217;t help much. Kris&#8217;s boss, Doris, 	is especially sour at his actions, because she&#8217;s been trying to raise her daughter 	to not believe in Santa. Nevertheless, Doris&#8217;s friend, Fred, agrees to represent 	Kris in court, and promises to prove to the jury that he is, in fact, sane, because 	he actually is Santa Claus. I&#8217;m sure you can figure out how it ends. The film is 	a bit of an examination of faith and trust, with an underlying message of &#8220;I 	don&#8217;t see what&#8217;s so bad about letting people believe in what they want to believe &#8230; 	about Santa Claus or anything else that you think is childish.&#8221;</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> Right at the 	very beginning, when Kris reveals the Santa in the Macy&#8217;s Day Parade to be a 	drunk, Kris is the one going on a fit of rage, raising his walking cane to the 	whacking position. Santa Claus beating a drunk with a cane is enough to make 	the &#8217;90s remake with Matilda look pale in comparison. Which is a stupid choice 	of adjective on my part, since this is the one in black and white.</p>
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<span class="entryName">Gremlins (1984)</span></p>
<p align="justify">Holiday horror flicks don&#8217;t get better than this. Mixing comedy, 	explosions, little animated creatures, and Phoebe Cates, Gremlins has a little 	bit of everything. It&#8217;s a generation&#8217;s classic, and for many of us, an introduction 	into the horror film genre. After breaking the three cardinal rules of taking 	care of the mystical Mogwai, which I&#8217;m sure you can all recite, Zach Galligan&#8217;s 	pet, Gizmo, has given birth to an entire colony of mischievous Gremlins, who 	start terrorizing the town. In an effort to warn the town, Galligan rescues Cates, 	who shares a haunting secret of why this Christmas is no worse than any others. 	Her chilling story of the death of her father, who dressed up like Santa Claus 	and attempted to slide down the chimney, only to have his neck snap and get stuck, 	dead halfway down, has probably saved hundreds of idiot lives. I know it saved 	mine.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> A swarm of 	hundreds of gremlins break into a movie theater and  	get a reel going of Disney&#8217;s &#8220;Snow White and the Seven Dwarves.&#8221;  	Nothing says Christmas spirit like a theater full of evil reptilian monsters 	singing along to &#8220;Heigh-Ho.&#8221; It&#8217;s still one of my favorite movie scenes 	of all time.</p>
<hr /><img src="http://i241.photobucket.com/albums/ff16/mafihotz/14.jpg" alt="#14" class="blackFrame" height="150" width="225" /><br />
<span class="entryName">He-Man/She-Ra: A Christmas Special (1985)</span></p>
<p align="justify">Christmas coming to Eternia might not sound like a big deal to 	someone who didn&#8217;t watch He-Man or She-Ra, but this special, combining the two 	series into a our hour show, was huge for us fans. Just about every single character 	from both cartoons at least got their face on camera in this tale of, essentially, 	how Orko screwed up again. Playing around with Man-At-Arms&#8217;s new dimension-hopping 	shift, and catching Skeletor&#8217;s attention in the process, Orko finds himself on 	Earth, and rescues two children lost in the woods. They spend about an hour trying 	to explain why they&#8217;re dragging a chopped down evergreen tree behind them, but 	think about it. How long do you think it would take to explain Christmas, in 	its entirety, to an alien? He-Man and She-Ra goes on a quest to find a crystal 	element that will bring Orko back to Eternia, getting some help from the small 	but tough Manchines on the way. Said Manchines basically look more like they 	should be fighting Mega Man in badly furnished boss rooms than helping He-Man 	bring his idiot friend back. both Skeletor AND Hordak are summoned by a power 	even higher than the two of them &#8230; the new and mysteriously evil Horde Prime! 	He commands the two to stop this sudden outburst of joy that&#8217;s coming from Christmas. 	So Skeletor nabs the kids, as well as a Manchine puppy that follows them. But 	soon enough, enough puppy licks in the face reduce the mighty Skeletor to mush, 	the spirit of Christmas consuming his evil essence for just long enough to turn 	on Horde Prime and save the day.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> In the midst 	of having to put up with the kids&#8217; complaining as they make the cold, snowy journey 	to Horde Prime&#8217;s headquarters, Skeletor gets interested in what exactly it is that 	he&#8217;s helping to stop. So he asks them about Christmas, and the resulting conversation 	is so ridiculous, that you have you hear it for yourself (<img src="http://images.del.icio.us/static/img/mp3/play.gif" style="border: medium none ; margin-right: 0.5em; cursor: pointer" title="listen" height="12" width="12" /><a href="http://i241.photobucket.com/albums/ff16/mafihotz/skeletorchristmas.mp3">play 	the clip</a>).</p>
<hr /><img src="http://i241.photobucket.com/albums/ff16/mafihotz/13.jpg" alt="#13" class="blackFrame" height="150" width="225" /><br />
<span class="entryName">Frosty The Snowman (1969)</span></p>
<p align="justify">Jimmy Durante (&#8220;Hot-cha-cha-cha-cha!&#8221;) narrates 	this Rankin/Bass classic, in which Frosty comes to life when a group of children 	find a top hat and put it on his head. The odd part about this situation is that 	the apparently magic hat didn&#8217;t seem to do a whole lot of magic for its previous 	owner, Professor Hinkle, so he throws it away. But when he sees what it does 	to the snowman, he wants it back. The kids are devastated. How could that mean 	old magician want his hat back? Look, kids. If I put my trash out to the curb, 	and you pick through it, and you find out that something of mine has magic powers, 	I&#8217;m going to want it back. It&#8217;s still my property until the trash truck comes 	and takes it away. I don&#8217;t care how much you miss your giant talking snowman 	that was your friend for a whole 2 minutes.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> Frosty&#8217;s immortal 	first words: &#8220;Happy birthday!&#8221; To this day, I still have no idea what 	in the living crap that means. Maybe it&#8217;s a subliminal reference to the miracle 	of life. Or maybe Frosty&#8217;s only as intelligent as the kids that brought him to life. 	I mean, come on &#8230; they almost named him Oatmeal.</p>
<hr /><img src="http://i241.photobucket.com/albums/ff16/mafihotz/12.jpg" alt="#12" class="blackFrame" height="150" width="225" /><br />
<span class="entryName">The Year Without A Santa Claus (1974)</span></p>
<p align="justify">Of all people to catch a cold, Santa decides to take Christmas 	as a sick day. For as long as he feels like. So two of his elves, named Jingle 	Bells and Jangle Bells, pick a random reindeer &#8230; Vixen gets the honors &#8230; 	and tries to get the children of the world to beg for him to come back. The children 	of Southtown, USA, however, say they&#8217;ll start believing in Santa again when it 	starts snowing. Enter Heat Miser and Snow Miser, the only reason anyone has ever 	watched this special a second time. It&#8217;s a literal battle of elements for the 	fate of Southtown, and ultimately, Santa Claus. Luckily, the Mrs. knows the Misers&#8217; 	mama &#8230;</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> Basically 	any part with the two Miser brothers on the screen at the same time. The tops is 	when Mother Nature whip her boys into shape. They put aside their differences and go 	ahead and let it snow in Southtown. Also, Mother Nature looks and sounds like 	some sort of cross between Dr. Ruth and Florence Henderson. Half the time I watch 	this special, I almost expect her to tell her kids to make out.</p>
<hr /><img src="http://i241.photobucket.com/albums/ff16/mafihotz/11.jpg" alt="#11" class="blackFrame" height="150" width="225" /><br />
<span class="entryName">Emmet Otter&#8217;s Jug Band Christmas (1977)</span>You know that poor kid you&#8217;re friends with regardless because 	he&#8217;s kind of awesome? Emmet Otter is that kid, but he doesn&#8217;t mind at all. He 	works odd jobs for the townsfolk to help him and his mom get by &#8230; while Mom 	pretty much does the entire town&#8217;s laundry. This is a bigger responsibility than 	you might think. The town laundress has access to a lot of secrets that she&#8217;d 	be best off keeping. Like who wets their bed. And who happened to have their 	mistress over sometime last week. And who doesn&#8217;t change their underwear for 	a month because they think it&#8217;s good luck. After finding out about a Christmas 	Eve talent show, Emmet and his mom get into another classic Gift of the Magi 	dilemma, where Ma hocks Emmet&#8217;s tool chest to make herself a pretty little dress, 	and Emmet punches a hole in Ma&#8217;s washtub to make a bass guitar for his jug band. 	With his BARE HANDS and also a hammer. Of course, he COULD just buy her a new 	washtub with the prize money, but how do you explain that? That&#8217;s like driving 	your new car off a cliff the day before your warranty expires.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> <span class="sortofbig">RIVERBOTTOM 		NIGHTMARE BAND!!11</span></p>
<hr /><img src="http://i241.photobucket.com/albums/ff16/mafihotz/10.jpg" alt="#10" class="blackFrame" height="150" width="225" /><br />
<span class="entryName">Tim Burton&#8217;s The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993)</span></p>
<p align="justify">The closer I get to the top of the list, the less I feel I have 	to explain the special to you. So I&#8217;ll keep it brief here in the Top 10. The story 	of Jack, the king of a world in which every day is Halloween, and his discovery and fascination 	of the concept of Christmas has become a classic in its own right &#8230; the way that 	parodying tributes often tend to do. Burton&#8217;s stop-motion masterpiece not only gets 	points for covering two holidays in a three-month stretch, but also in blending 	the two together into a piece that&#8217;s as sweet as it is cynical.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> There&#8217;s a dozen, 	including the part where the mad scientist kisses his new creature on the brain, 	and then its head shuts on his lips. Also the part where the one boy, after Jack&#8217;s 	Christmas run, in a very desensitized manner, shows him parents what he got for 	Christmas &#8230; a human head. But I always had a soft spot for Jack&#8217;s elaborate 	chalk board equation for calculating how to make Christmas, particularly the 	part where he writes &#8220;SANTY&#8221; followed by a drawing of  lobster claws.</p>
<hr /><img src="http://i241.photobucket.com/albums/ff16/mafihotz/9.jpg" alt="#9" class="blackFrame" height="150" width="225" /><br />
<span class="entryName">A Christmas Carol  (1951)</span></p>
<p align="justify">The desert island Scrooge movie. Alastair Sim is downright 	scary when he&#8217;s called to be, and downright adorable come the closing credits. 	Not the first time the story made it to the screen, this is still considered 	the classic version of the tale, and having watched many different variations of 	the story, I come back to this one, and it&#8217;s easy to see why it does its job the 	best.</p>
<p align="justify"><span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> Scrooge&#8217;s transformation 	on Christmas Day. Playing the character by the book, Sim&#8217;s Scrooge still struggles 	with the change of heart, right up to the moment he&#8217;s outside of his nephew&#8217;s house. 	Instantly jovial Scrooges are fun to watch and all, but Alastair Sim made the 	character believably human.</p>
<hr /><img src="http://i241.photobucket.com/albums/ff16/mafihotz/8.jpg" alt="#43" class="blackFrame" height="150" width="225" /><br />
<span class="entryName">The Snowman (1982)</span></p>
<p align="justify">There was a span of a few years growing up where I absolutely 	LOVED this cartoon. I 	 was two when it first aired on HBO, so I don&#8217;t remember very 	much at all about the first time I watched it. But David Bowie had a little introduction, 	praising the illustration of Raymond Briggs, and the orchestra that brought the 	story to life musically. Told without words, this story of a boy whose snowman 	comes to life one night comes to a climax when the snowman grabs his hand, starts 	running, and takes to the sky. They fly above the countryside and the Arctic, 	until they reach snowman headquarters at the North Pole, where Santa has a special 	gift for him &#8230; a scarf, complete with little snowmen on it. The next morning, 	the boy finds the snowman reduced to a puddle outside his house, and he is left 	alone with his tears &#8230; and the snowman&#8217;s hat. It&#8217;s a lump-in-throat moment 	of growing up, but it works better here than it would in, say, Calvin and Hobbes.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> The boy brings 	the snowman into the house, where among other activities, it uses a bowl full of 	fruit to change his peach nose into others, including an apple and a banana. Later, 	they make faces in the Christmas ornaments, and try on some of Dad&#8217;s pants &#8230; 	all the while the snowman is neither quickly melting, nor tracking bits of himself 	through the house. That&#8217;s some pretty powerful magic.</p>
<hr /><img src="http://i241.photobucket.com/albums/ff16/mafihotz/7.jpg" alt="#7" class="blackFrame" height="150" width="225" /><br />
<span class="entryName">National Lampoon&#8217;s Christmas Vacation (1989)</span></p>
<p align="justify">After taking on summer road trips and European getaways, Chevy 	Chase, as old-fashioned everyman Clark W. Griswold, tries his damndest to have a 	decent family Christmas, but to little avail. Our hearts go out to Clark, whose 	plans for peace of mind quickly go awry with no sign of returning, even after you 	think it can&#8217;t possibly get worse. Christmas Vacation reached unprecedented levels 	of I can&#8217;t believe that just happened, and for that, it&#8217;s one of the greatest, 	if not the funniest.</p>
<p align="left"><span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:<br />
</strong></span><br />
<img src="http://i241.photobucket.com/albums/ff16/mafihotz/7a.jpg" height="162" width="216" /></p>
<p><strong><span class="big">SQUIRREL!</span></strong></p>
<hr /><img src="http://i241.photobucket.com/albums/ff16/mafihotz/6.jpg" alt="#6" class="blackFrame" height="150" width="225" /><br />
<span class="entryName">A Muppet Family Christmas (1987)</span></p>
<p align="justify">This is as high as I could rank this one with good conscience. 	For myself and a few other friends, it&#8217;s an absolute favorite that cannot be missed 	any year, ever. In an unprecedented Muppet event outside of the movie theater, the 	entire Muppet cast from Sesame Street, Fraggle Rock and the Muppet Show all end 	up at Fozzie Bear&#8217;s mother&#8217;s house for Christmas. Doc and Sprocket&#8217;s plans of 	peace and quiet are ruined, but as they meet new and  	oddball friends, they don&#8217;t seem to mind as much. Miss Piggy is stuck at a photo 	shoot, and Doc braves a violent snowstorm to bring her back to Kermit. And the 	Swedish Chef tries to cook Big Bird. The only message you&#8217;re getting out of this 	one is &#8220;Happy holidays, from our family to yours.&#8221; Ok, and maybe also,  	&#8220;It&#8217;s great to have everyone together at Christmas.&#8221; But most likely it&#8217;s 	more like &#8220;Hey let&#8217;s see how many of these things we can fit in a camera shot.&#8221;</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> There are 	a few, but my favorite is the part where the Muppets are watching an old film 	reel of Christmas when they little Muppet Babies. At the end of a rendition of &#8220;Santa 	Claus Is Coming To Town,&#8221;  	Baby Animal pops his head out of a wrapped present. Seconds later, grown-up Animal 	pops his head through the projection screen.</p>
<hr /><img src="http://i241.photobucket.com/albums/ff16/mafihotz/5.jpg" alt="#5" class="blackFrame" height="150" width="225" /><br />
<span class="entryName">A Christmas Story (1983)</span></p>
<p align="justify">Ralphie Parker&#8217;s story of the year he got his Red Rider B.B. gun 	is the <a href="http://www.x-entertainment.com/" target="_blank">X-Entertainment.com</a> of 	my parents&#8217; generation, full of nothing but blissful, often cynical,  	and above all passionate nostalgia of the late 1940s. It&#8217;s also similar to Matt&#8217;s 	site in the fact that even kids born after the subject material in question can 	appreciate and thoroughly enjoy its presentation. And instead of a prized-filled 	giant peanut, there&#8217;s a lamp shaped like a woman&#8217;s leg. Now if only TNT would stop 	running marathons on it and ruining its greatness.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> Impossible 	to narrow it down to one; the whole movie is a string of memorable moments, from 	the triple dog dare, to the Chinese dinner. But the one that hit home for me 	the most was when Ralphie&#8217;s parents overhear him say <s>fuck</s> &#8220;the F-word.&#8221;</p>
<hr /><img src="http://i241.photobucket.com/albums/ff16/mafihotz/4.jpg" alt="#4" class="blackFrame" height="150" width="225" /><br />
<span class="entryName">Rudolph, The Red-Nosed Reindeer (1962)</span></p>
<p align="justify">It&#8217;s one of Rankin/Bass&#8217;s first, and yet it&#8217;s still its greatest 	achievement. Which is pretty impressive, considering this is the same company that 	gave us Thundercats. This tale of misfits longing to fit in is often misunderstood 	by the more cynical crowd. &#8220;Santa gives the misfit toys to the poor kids? And 	the rich kids get all the good toys? That sux lol,&#8221; they claim. Yeah. The poor 	kids get all the misfit toys. Because they want to be frigging loved and appreciated. 	Give a misfit toy to a rich kid, and they&#8217;ll throw it against the wall and wait 	for you to come pick it up and put it in the trash can. Give a misfit toy to a 	poor kid, and you&#8217;ve given them a sense of friendship.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> Clarice calls 	Rudolph cute, and that&#8217;s his happy thought, causing him to take off. Unfortunately, 	his nose cover-up comes off in the process, and everybody is face to face with 	his glowing red nose. Even his buddy Fireball is creeped out by it. That&#8217;s kind 	of embarrassing. If it were Mike Fireball, and I was face to face with a dude 	with a glowing red nose, I&#8217;d probably find it cool looking and ask to touch it. 	I MEAN I WOULD SAY HI TED KENNEDY NICE TO MEET YOU LOL UR DRUNK.</p>
<hr /><img src="http://i241.photobucket.com/albums/ff16/mafihotz/3.jpg" alt="#3" class="blackFrame" height="150" width="225" /><br />
<span class="entryName">Dr. Seuss&#8217; How The Grinch Stole Christmas (1966)</span></p>
<p align="justify">Not even an overacting Jim Carrey can put a damper on this original 	animated version of the Dr. Seuss classic. This is partially due to the fact 	that Seuss, himself, was very closely involved with the transfer to the screen. 	The other heavyweights involved, Chuck Jones&#8217;s animation, Boris Karloff as the 	narrator and as the Grinch himself, and Thurl &#8220;Tony the Tiger&#8221;  	Ravenscroft as the singer of the Grinch&#8217;s theme song, breathed more life into 	this tale of a rotten green monster whose heart grew three sizes, thanks to the 	fact that an entire town puts singing out in their town square as the #1 holiday 	priority, than Carrey could&#8217;ve hoped to. Don&#8217;t get me wrong. Jim Carrey&#8217;s a great 	actor. I just could not feel him as the Grinch. My theory is that the casting 	director originally was hard of hearing, and the role was originally recommended 	for Tim Curry and his spot-on Grinch face, but when the other guy pulled up in 	the studio lot, everyone just said &#8220;Forget 	it. We can make it work.&#8221;</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> Sure, there&#8217;s 	Cindy Lou Who&#8217;s line, done beautifully here by June Foray. There&#8217;s the Grinch lifting 	the sleigh packed with toys over his head, and then, for me, there&#8217;s also the 	initial sled down the hill. We take a break from the story, so that Jones can show 	off some visual comedy involving the Grinch, Max, and their makeshift sleigh.</p>
<hr /><img src="http://i241.photobucket.com/albums/ff16/mafihotz/2.jpg" alt="#2" class="blackFrame" height="150" width="225" /><br />
<span class="entryName">It&#8217;s A Wonderful Life (1946)</span></p>
<p align="justify">It&#8217;s a shame that network television has felt the need in the 	past to run marathons of just this movie, over and  	over again, on Christmas Day. Because of that, people have grown some kind of 	unnecessary prejudice for a truly remarkable film about a down-on-his-luck man&#8217;s 	realization of his own self-worth. Its level of inspiration over the years has been 	tremendous, and continues even in as recent as that story about the five people 	you meet in Heaven. And its message is pure and simple: Life sucks sometimes, 	but it sure would suck a whole lot more without you.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> &#8220;Merry 	Christmas, movie house! Merry Christmas, emporium! Merry Christmas, you wonderful 	old building and loan!&#8221; It&#8217;s a silly trio of sentences to inanimate objects, and yet 	it&#8217;s one of the greatest movie quotes of all time. It marks the first point after 	which George Bailey realizes that his life is going to be ok after all, and it 	makes me clap inside every time I see it.</p>
<hr /><img src="http://i241.photobucket.com/albums/ff16/mafihotz/1.jpg" alt="#1" class="blackFrame" height="150" width="225" /><br />
<span class="entryName">A Charlie Brown Christmas (1965)</span></p>
<p align="justify">Even I tried to knock 	Charlie Brown off the top spot, but there&#8217;s no denying that blockhead from the 	core of the Christmas season. Charles Schulz was a simple man who conveyed life 	lessons through the simple language of children like Charlie Brown, who is so bummed 	out about the commercialization of what&#8217;s supposed to be a wonderful time of year, 	that it depresses him. So he goes and finds the most plain looking Christmas tree 	he could find. He understands it. It IS his Christmas &#8230; fragile, but still hanging 	in there. Year after year, and pathetic little tree after pathetic little tree, 	it&#8217;s still an inexplicably great moment when the two find each other,  	and we&#8217;re reminded that Christmas is a fragile thing to take too seriously in 	a commercialized world. But that hasn&#8217;t stopped it from coming. And that&#8217;s why 	this is the quintessential Christmas special.</p>
<p align="justify"> <span class="red"><strong>Memorable moment:</strong></span> &#8220;Lights, 	please.&#8221; Through Linus, Schulz shares with us what Christmas means to him. 	CBS almost didn&#8217;t include Linus&#8217;s Nativity monologue, in fear of getting angry phone 	calls concerning religious bias. But Schulz insisted that it be kept in, not because 	he felt like being preachy, but because if his creation was going to hit the airwaves, 	it was going to contain his complete heart and soul. Linus reminds us in an innocent, 	non-threatening way that even crappy-looking trees and kids born in horse feeders 	can be destined for great things, and THAT is what Christmas is all about, Charlie 	Brown.</p>
<p align="justify">Via: progressiveboink.com</p>
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		<title>The 10 Worst Christmas Movies of All-Time</title>
		<link>http://www.bestchristmasdays.com/2007/12/the-ten-worst-christmas-movies-of-all-time/</link>
		<comments>http://www.bestchristmasdays.com/2007/12/the-ten-worst-christmas-movies-of-all-time/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 19 Dec 2007 20:59:30 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Christmas Movies]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Just as Hollywood launched us into the summer movie season with Spider-Man 3 in early May, they’ve jumped the gun on the Christmas season with Fred Claus. However, this wasn’t as heartwarming as the umpteen radio stations playing Christmas music before Thanksgiving, ‘cause Fred Claus really sucked ass. So that got us thinking… What other [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Just as Hollywood launched us into the summer movie season with <em>Spider-Man 3</em> in early May, they’ve jumped the gun on the Christmas season with <em>Fred Claus</em>. However, this wasn’t as heartwarming as the umpteen radio stations playing Christmas music before Thanksgiving, ‘cause<em> Fred Claus</em> really sucked ass.</p>
<p>So that got us thinking… What other Christmas movies suck ass? For every <em>It’s a Wonderful Life</em>, there’s gotta be a crapstorm of a film to balance it out. So we looked at the holiday movies over the years, and we came up with our list.</p>
<p>To make the list, the film had to either be about Christmas (or Santa Claus) or have Christmas an integral part of the plot. (It can’t be like <em>Gremlins</em>, which did suck ass, but really was just set during Christmastime rather than being about the holiday.)<span id="more-119"></span></p>
<p>Flame on!</p>
<p><strong>10. Santa Claus Conquers the Martians (1964)</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://media.filmschoolrejects.com/images/badxmas10.jpg" style="border: 1px solid black" /></p>
<p>With a title like this, it’s almost too easy. And while you most likely have seen this one during the good old <em>Mystery-Science Theater 3000</em> days, you can still catch it on video and even aired by one of the Turner networks in December. It features a wino Santa and Martians so crappy they put <em>Plan 9 from Outer Space</em> to shame. Oh, and it’s got Pia Zadora in it, too!</p>
<p><strong>9. The Nativity Story (2006)</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://media.filmschoolrejects.com/images/badxmas9.jpg" style="border: 1px solid black" /></p>
<p>We can just imagine the pitch meeting in Hollywood. Some lunkhead producer yelled, “<em>The Passion of the Christ</em> made more than $300 million! What else can we mine from the Bible?” So they cast the 15-year-old Keisha Castle-Hughes, who got herself pregnant for the film’s release (which really pissed off the Pope). Here’s a hint… she wasn’t carrying the baby Jesus.</p>
<p><strong>8. Fred Claus (2007)</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://media.filmschoolrejects.com/images/badxmas8.jpg" style="border: 1px solid black" /></p>
<p>Vince Vaughn and Paul Giamatti were cobbled by the family-oriented bent of this film. It just goes to prove that Vince Vaughn just ain’t funny if you don’t let him swear (or if he is wearing a dress and killing people).</p>
<p><strong>7. Miracle on 34th Street (1994)</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://media.filmschoolrejects.com/images/badxmas7.jpg" style="border: 1px solid black" /></p>
<p>Who the hell had the brilliant idea of remaking this indelible classic… again? The cast was lame, and the climactic courtroom scene was ruined with an unnecessary rewrite. In the 60th anniversary DVD of the original, Maureen O’Hara giggles at the fact that every remake of this film has bombed. You go, Mo!</p>
<p><strong>6. The Santa Clause 2 (2002)</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://media.filmschoolrejects.com/images/badxmas6.jpg" style="border: 1px solid black" /></p>
<p>Yeah, we know this is a cash cow for Disney, but that doesn’t make it any good. The first film was okay, but this one was lame. Even worse, the moronic director did the entire DVD commentary as if he got permission to shoot in the North Pole with the real Santa and his elves. I guess he didn’t realize that second graders don’t listen to DVD commentaries.</p>
<p><strong>5. Christmas with the Kranks (2004)</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://media.filmschoolrejects.com/images/badxmas5.jpg" style="border: 1px solid black" /></p>
<p>Hey look! Another Tim Allen movie has made the list! Written by legal novelist John Grisham, this awkward holiday comedy showed that even a bestselling author can inspire crap.</p>
<p><strong>4. Deck the Halls (2006)</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://media.filmschoolrejects.com/images/badxmas4.jpg" style="border: 1px solid black" /></p>
<p>Why does Matthew Broderick keep getting cast in movies? He hasn’t done a live-action film worth a bucket of snot since<em> Election</em>. And how could Danny DeVito sign on for this stinker? He must have needed rent money. A war of holiday lights turns into wacky family comedy… so much so, you’ll want to throw up.</p>
<p><strong>3. Black Christmas (2006)</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://media.filmschoolrejects.com/images/badxmas3.jpg" style="border: 1px solid black" /></p>
<p>After the Weinstein Company’s dismal release of <em>Wolf Creek</em> on Christmas Day 2005, they tried to repeat their mistake with a horror movie remake in 2006… and they were successful in failing. Maybe they should have had some of the young hotties in the cast (e.g., Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Lacey Chabert or Michelle Trachtenberg) do a gratuitous nude scene.</p>
<p><strong>2. The Santa Clause 3 (2006)</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://media.filmschoolrejects.com/images/badxmas2.jpg" style="border: 1px solid black" /></p>
<p>It’s Tim Allen again, dishing out more holiday pain. But this time, he’s joined by the show-tune loving Martin Short as Jack Frost. Arguably a better premise than #2, the movie melts down in the end with the cheesiest ending since <em>V: The Final Battle</em>.</p>
<p><strong>1. Surviving Christmas (2004)</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://media.filmschoolrejects.com/images/badxmas1.jpg" style="border: 1px solid black" /></p>
<p>Nothing says Christmas in October like James Gandolfini in a Santa hat. ‘Nuff said.</p>
<p><strong>HONORABLE MENTIONS</strong></p>
<p><strong>Jingle All the Way (1996)</strong> – We thought this would be a shoe-in, considering what a joke people remember it to be. But watch it with your kids, and you might agree it doesn’t even belong on this list.</p>
<p><strong>The Preacher’s Wife (1996)</strong> – Okay, we admit it… neither Fat Guy actually has seen this film. We just figured that since it had Whitney Houston in it, it must suck ass.</p>
<p>For more lists, banter and random shenanigans, visit <a href="http://www.fatguysatthemovies.com/">Fat Guys at the Movies</a>.</p>
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