A silly little thing perhaps, but some of the nicest things about Christmas are. At some time in the early/mid 1970’s when I was a child, the BBC showed an award winning, short animated version of A Christmas Carol and my elder brother or sister (I can’t remember which one) recorded the audio of it by the tried and trusted method of placing a tape recorder by the television and pressing the “RECORD” button. Every year after that, in the exiting days leading up to Christmas, we would sit and listen to the muffled sound of a C60 cassette retelling the story. Years later in the early 90s it was screened again and I was so exited at the chance of seeing it once more I actually booked a day of work to ensure I could video record it without any hiccups. A few years later, I would sit and watch that video with my own children every Christmas...the circle is complete
Made in 1971 and featuring the voices of Alastair Sim as Scrooge and Michael Horden as Marley’s Ghost (as in the 1951 version) the exceptional animation is based on the illustrations from the book itself and is very true to the cold, bleak feeling of the tale as originally told. This is NOT made for children, no sickly Disney rubbish here.