Christmas
Monday, January 15, 2024
Two Dark Christmas Fables
Saturday, January 13, 2024
Santa Claus: Last of the Wild Men
The Ghost Stories of M. R. James
Telling ghost stories during the Christmas season, often around a crackling hearth, after the feasting and gaming, with the wind roaring outside, was a tradition of the British holiday season, in particular during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Outside of Charles Dickens, with his Christmas Carol, and his other lesser known works, no author was more well-known for the Christmas Ghost Story than Montague Rhodes James, a scholar of English Medieval Literature at Kings University, and whose best-known stories were collected in Ghost Stories of Antiquary. These tales were written to be read-aloud, before they were in print, each one of Christmas Eve, when members of the university staff would all gather in a room before a heath, the night wind and snow raging outside.
One curious thing regarding James, and which I only recently discovered ,was that he wrote around the time of the the first world war, the same era that another writer of weird fiction, Robert W. Chambers, penned his "King in Yellow." But unlike Chambers, whose tales took place during the same period in which he wrote, James set his tales in an early time, during the 19th and 18th centuries.
Perhaps the best known of James' tales was "Oh, Whistle and I'll Come To You My Lad." The story concerns a middle-aged gentleman staying in a hotel along the English coast. On one of his forays on the beach, he discovers a curious whistle with strange engraving upon it. Once back in his room, he examines the object further, and blows on it. Later, on the beachfront again, he sees (or thinks he sees) a strange white figure running in his direction. At the climax of the tale, he witnesses the bedsheets of an unoccupied bed rise up to form a "sheet phantom", the crumpled linen pressing into a hideous visage, the entity that the bizarre whistle has summoned.

Saturday, January 6, 2024
Favorite Christmas Movies
Most of my fave Christmas movies were produced back in the eighties. Here are the best, starting with...
George C. Scott's Christmas Carol
Nothing can quite top this CBS TV movie, part of the "Read More About" program, directed by Clive Donner in 1984. There's not a lot to say about George C. Scott's version of Scrooge that I haven't already on my blog about Clive Donner movies. His was the best performance and best version I'd seen before and since. Only the much more recent Jim Carey version was very good as well, and both movies featured songs with the same title "God Bless Us Everyone." The 1984 song was written and composed by Nicolas Bicet, and his available on his website.
The Box of Delights
Masefield's original novel, though, contains even more magical scenes then they were able to fit into the three-part adaptation, including one in which Kay visits a mediaeval tournament of jousting knights, and one where a shrunken Kay converses with a squirrel and other small animals within a tree, and also one in which he risks the bite of a cockatrice! The subtitle of Box is "Where the Wolves were Running," and wolves, both literal and metaphoric, feature throughout the story. At one point Kay reflects that, though wolves are supposed to be extinct in England since Arthur's time, some remote forests regions might still harbor them, and "in this deep winter, out they come!" That incident occurs, though, when the box transports Kay back to Arthurian Bretan, when ravening wolves are raiding the stock, and Kay fights alongside the knights to fend them off. The role that wolves play within the story makes it recall yet another British winter tale The Wolves of Willoughby Chase by Joan Aiken, and her ensuing Wolves chronicles. Those occur in an alternate England in which wolves have invaded England from the Continent via a newly built underground railway between France and England.
I found a copy of the dell-yearling edition of Masefield's novel, with a tie-in cover with the movie, back shortly after it was broadcast, but before I got to see the production in its entiriety. This is a treasured artifact from my childhood, and very unfortunately, just this year the cover got damaged when some sticky stuff from the Christmas feast got on it, as you can see:It seems also that this particular edition of the novel is a rare none, and as yet, I can find no replacement copy. It still has the small black and white illustrations by Faith Jacques, but the hardback edition, which I discovered at a used bookstore years later, came with full-color illustrations, some of which you can see above. My own VHS taped copy of the movie has aged some, but still has that nostalgic factor, as it is unique to my collection, I almost hate to seek out the newer DVD release. of course, doing that would mean ordering from the UK, as this has never been released in the US. And while I did own a UK regional player, I might need a new one--I couldn't play my UK edition of Ghost Stories for Christmas.
Recently, this Christmas, I was very surprised to discover the following:
Opening the Box of Delights is an exploration and critical analysis of Masefield's novel, as well as a biography of the author himself, and exploration of the numerous theatrical, audio and radio adaptation. It is quite a rich history, and I had no idea so many adaptations existed of this relatively obscure story. There is as much to delve into here regarding the history, inspirations, etc., as there is to be found in the books written about C. S.Lewis's Narnia Chronicles or Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials. A real treasure trove of information. I was surprised to learn that the villain Abner Brown made his initial appearance in a novel that did not involve Kay Harker at all, and that The Midnight Folk, though it did not explicitly take place in a dream, nonetheless had a dream-like atmosphere, not unlike Box, shifting between other magic realms and times, and it was never quite certain if the young protagonist was dreaming or not. Speaking of The Midnight Folk, I remember having ordered it from the library many years ago, and began reading it, though somehow I never finished it. I just remember , it wasn't a Christmas story, Kay's wicked guardian, and his friend Nibbins, the black cat. Anyway, Masefield's Kay Harker novels, and Box in particular, have a much richer history than expected, and I've only just started reading this!
The Gift of Love: A Christmas Story
"The Tailor of Glouscester" is a short children's story by "Peter Rabbit" author Beatrix Potter. It was brought to gorgeously animated life as part of the series "Peter Rabbit and Friends", adaptations of the Beatrix Potter stories, which I was produced and shown on PBS. They aired back in the early 90's.
The plot of this is almost exactly the same as the fairy tale "the Shoemaker and the Elves," only with a tailor and mice. The tailor in question is contracted to make a coat of cherry-colored silk with yellow taffetar for the Mayor of Glouscester's wedding on Christmas day in the morning. He runs out of red twist, and falls unexpectedly ill, plus he is double-crossed by his cat Simpkin for releasing the mice he has caught. In their gratitude, the mice enter his shop via the myriad of passages between buildings, and sew the entire coat, which the tailor finds waiting for him, on Christmas morn, just in the nick of time for the wedding.
The animation (as with all of this series) is simply gorgeous, made resemble the original illustrations of the Beatrix Potter books sprung to vivid life. This is no mere "cartoon." Unlike the rest of the series though, which all begin and end with an actress playing the author coming home to her cottage, with shots of the rolling English countryside, andwith the same soundtrack, Tailor has a uniquely Christmas flavor, and begins and ends with the Sussex Carol. One major highlight of the program has Simkin, the Tailor's cat wondering about London on Christmas night, listening to the other local animals singing songs and throwing parties. The best song is sung by the rats at their boisterous drunken revel.
There has sadly been very little like this manner of animation since,; two other PBS presentations that utilize the 'illustrations come to life' approach were The Dinosaurs! a documentary in 1992, pre-Jurassic park, and The Velvet Claw, a series on the evolution of carnivores. But I'll save those for the paleontology blog.
Two Dark Christmas Fables
There are two dark Christmas novels that delve into the mythic origins of Santa Claus, which I outlined in my last post on Phyllis Sieker...
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Most of my fave Christmas movies were produced back in the eighties. Here are the best, starting with... George C. Scott's Christmas Ca...
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There are two dark Christmas novels that delve into the mythic origins of Santa Claus, which I outlined in my last post on Phyllis Sieker...
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Telling ghost stories during the Christmas season, often around a crackling hearth, after the feasting and gaming, with the wind roari...






















