The BBCs 1977 Adaptation of A Christmas Carol
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It is important to point out that there are a lot of great programs I want to include on this site but have yet to do so because I haven�t yet chosen it from the envelope. So, when this comes up where I can choose the program, it is kind of an honour. Seeing that it is Christmas, I needed to pick something that was in the season and I wanted to have this actually feature the holiday in it, unlike the Lovejoy episode that was chosen last week. There was 3 programs I was interested in looking at for this article. I first thought about watching and writing about The Box of Delights. This would have been the version starring Patrick Troughton from 1984. This would have been fun to do but at this point I was already so far into December, there wouldn�t have been time to watch it all let alone to write proper articles about it. It is six episodes long. The second one isn�t British but The Star Wars Holiday Special. I immediately decided not to do this as I don�t hate myself that much. Christmas shouldn�t be a time for torture. Finally there as something I wanted to write about fir a while and it was perfect for this time of the year. I was going to write about the 1977 BBC adaptation of A Christmas Carol starring Michael Hordern as Ebenezer Scrooge.
A Christmas Carol TX: 24/12/77 I�m not going to waste everyone�s time with a synopsis of the plot for A Christmas Carol. This is one of the most known stories of all time. It is a story of a man�s redemption but it is also a ghost story. I love a good ghost story and when these stories are mixed with Christmas, it seems to be a wonderful combination. The idea of a Christmas ghost story is foreign in the US.
In the US, Christmas is pretty much about the happiness of the season. It�s about doing good deeds and also receiving gifts. It seems less and less about any religion attached to it. In the UK, the idea of Christmas incorporating ghost stories in its lore had been around for a long time. Some had thought that Charles Dickens was the first to create the tradition of a Christmas Eve ghost story but this tradition pre-dates the Victorian era. On a site that I looked at called Gothic Horror Stories, they have a passage from Washington Irving that speaks of a Christmas Ghost story on Christmas Eve and he wrote that passage in 1819. 
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Radio Times Listing |
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Radio Time 1977 |
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There is no rule set in stone that a British television series needs to be released on DVD and Blu-ray in the UK first but it when it isn�t, it does cause some problems. Let�s take the BBC for a start. BBC Home Entertainment that releases titles in the US doesn�t have to release what the BBC in the UK are releasing or vice a versa. There were a few of examples of Doctor Who titles being released in the US first such as the Key to Time season or even a Blu-ray to An Adventure in Space and Time. There has even been instances where BBC Home Entertainment had commissioned BBC Post Production to restore and make HD masters of The House of Cards series for release on Blu-ray in the US. This was a great opportunity to take advantage of the PR from the Netflix series that was premiering at that time. All of the examples above had been rectified for British consumers by eventually getting a release in the UK, but is that always the case?
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Of course stuff like Are You Being Served? and �Allo �Allo! was released in the US prior to the UK because BBC Home Entertainment knew these were big hitters because of their successful run on PBS stations. This worked in the US favour in the sense that the episodes on the R1 Are You Being Served? set are uncut while the ones in the UK are cut for various reasons. The release of �Allo �Allo! in the US has extras and the sets released in the UK by Universal Playback are barebones. Now a days, things will be different because generally one master is made for the discs at the same place for the US and UK just being converted to the country�s broadcast standard. Where this hurt is the original boxset for Blackadder was released in the US in 2001 before the UK. To keep this on topic, it included Blackadder�s Christmas Carol uncut. When the re-mastered set was released in 2009, they included a cut version of the episode where one line �They nailed up the dog.� was cut. This cut version has always beenused on the UK releases. Because these masters are made at the same place and the same time, the US now has the cut version too. This way of created the disc applies only to the BBC discs.
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Speaking of Australia, Madman released the Tom Baker Sherlock Holmes adventure The Hound of the Baskervilles. It�s a wonderful piece of archive television that should have been released years ago. Now it is but only in Australia. Maybe Australians should not worry about releasing that but focus on releasing the Benny Hill in Australiaspecial and the Australian version of Are You Being Served?
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The back cover to the DVD of A Christmas Carol in Dutch. |
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Next week: It will be a Kate O�Mara double feature as we finish up our holiday season with two great episodes of Absolutely Fabulous. Both holiday themed, Happy New Year and Cold Turkey. I will explain why I think Cold Turkey would have been a great way to completely end the series.
Have a great week!
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