Hate Christmas movies?  Unable to stomach their revolting mixture of  exhausted iconography and sentimental platitudes?  Tempted to suspect  that most Christmas movies and/or TV specials are so staggeringly bad  that they must be fiendishly disguised satires, made by people who  secretly consider their viewers to be dribbling simpletons?  Unable to  get excited about the prospect of watching yet another adaptation of  Charles Dickens’ second worst novel?  Wondering if this year the makers  of EastEnders will achieve what is clearly their dearest desire and  start a wave of Christmas Day suicides across the nation?  Dreading the  prospect of all the ordure adumbrated above yet simultaneously unable to  contemplate surviving the “festive” season without the merciful  presence of the gogglebox?  Tired of rhetorical questions?
Okay then, here’s Jack’s Alternative Christmas Playlist....
The Lion in Winter (1968)
Christmas is a time for family arguments.  You know how it is,  everybody stuck together, desperately trying to get on and have fun…  it’s a recipe for disaster.  But nobody had a Christmas quite like the  Plantagenets’ in this film. 
Katherine Hepburn and Peter O’Toole are the warring married couple,  King Henry II and his older Queen Eleanor, who spend Christmas 1183  tearing great lumps out of each other with a non-stop mutual barrage of  staggeringly vicious barbs, taunts, insults, paradoxes and lies.  Add  their three ruthlessly ambitious sons to the mix – the brutal Richard  (Tony Hopkins), the cold-blooded Geoffrey (John Castle) and the  cretinous John (Nigel Terry) – and Christmas (which comes complete with  hilariously anachronistic trees and wrapped presents) becomes an  excruciating familial apocalypse of plots, schemes, murder attempts,  humiliating revelations and heart-shredding passions.  
Ultimately, this film is only superficially about a struggle for the  crown.  The crown, the lands, the money, the power… these are the  playing pieces in a game that is really about a family eating itself  alive over lost love, sour love, delusional love, destructive love and  the lack of love.  When Kate Hepburn’s Eleanor says that “we” are the  cause of history, she doesn’t mean royalty, she means we humans.  At the  season of love, as she watches her family attack itself, and watches  herself join in, she wonders aloud why they can’t just love each other.   “We have so much to love each other for,” she says, “we have such  possibilities.”
It may be Albee-lite (and Anouilh-liter) but it’s still amazing,  moving stuff, entirely uncontaminated by sentimentality… and guaranteed  to put your own family squabbles into some kind of perspective.
Shooting the Past (1999)
Stephen Poliakoff’s masterpiece (from before he turned into an utter  wanker) begins with Christmas lights.  Christmas is something happening  in the outside world.  Within the peculiar space of the Falham Photo  Library, time works differently, as does value and history and emotion.   The modern world (in the form of an American corporation) buys this  little island and starts to invade it, planning to sell it off and turn  it into some piffling corporate ballsup… their interest in the gigantic  library of old photos being precisely zero.  Until, that is, they start  to be absorbed into the alternative world of the photographs and their  off-kilter guardians.
Tim Spall delivers his greatest performance as Oswald Bates, an  unhappy and heroically annoying man who has been left behind by  modernity, who wants to live within his photos and his own thoughts,  away from the crass commercialism and humourless dedication of the  professional and the self-professedly ‘real’… none of which has as much  human reality as the tragic and resounding stories to be found in the  still and sepia past.
Die Hard (1988)
Holiday carnage.  Bells jingle and Christmas songs tinkle as people  are eviscerated by sprays of bullets and their corpses are arranged  wearing Santa hats.
Whether they knew it or not, in Die Hard, Hollywood created a  sort-of-anti-capitalist revenge fantasy.  The Japanese corporate boss  asks Rickman (who has invaded his skyscraper with a gang of armed men)  if “this is all about our project in Indonesia?” before protesting that  they (i.e. his corporation) want to develop not exploit that region.   Rickman says, apparently sincerely, that he believes this.  Thing is…  this is 1988… and they’re setting up in Indonesia… which means they’re  in business with General Suharto, who was responsible for arguably the  worst act of genocide committed in the 20th century apart from the  Holocaust.  Said corporate boss later ends up with his brains splattered  all over a set of glass doors, which is very satisfying; you don’t  often get to see corporate imperialists get exactly what they deserve in  a big-budget Hollywood actioner.  What’s happening here, you see, is  that the Nakatomi Corporation is being confronted by its own values;  Rickman and his gang turn out to be ruthless thieves rather than  ideological enemies… though, having said that, the film’s beef with  capitalism seems to be that sometimes there are Japanese capitalists who  come over to America and lure married American women away from their  wifely duties with promises of careers, independence, executive  bathrooms and Rolex watches.  At the end, Mrs Bruce Willis has to  symbolically sacrifice her Rolex watch and reassume her clean-cut  hubby’s name in order for him to finally defeat the beardie foreign  baddie.
The film is also a pioneering gay romance, depicting the  mutually-supporting and fulfilling love that blossoms between two men.  At the end of the film, Willis gets to consummate his  over-the-radio relationship with beat cop Richard Veljohnson in a  hysterically romantic clinch, accompanied by music that sounds almost  like that bit of Tschaikovsky that lovestruck couples in films always  hear when running towards each other on beaches.  Veljohnson (who has  been deskbound after accidentally shooting a kid) gets to regain his  male potency and ‘climaxes’ by emptying both barrels (so to speak) into  one last terrorist, thus proving that Willis’ love has made him whole  again… or whole enough to kill someone… which is this film’s idea of   the highest male self-expression.
Joyeux Noel (2005)
One of the problems the people running World War I (on all sides)  continually had to face was the sheer reluctance of their troops to kill  the ‘enemy’.  They would deliberately fire above the heads of the  opposing soldiers, etc., behaviour that had to be stamped on  ferociously.  Everyone knows about the Christmas truce of 1914… well,  this moving film depicts that truce and its consequences, from the  perspectives of the French, British and German soldiers themselves.  We  see not only the eagerness of the ordinary soldiers to stop killing each  other, and their fraternisation, but also the horror at this behaviour  evinced by the generals.  We see a Bishop preaching the virtue of  killing Germans to British troops… after the soldiers of all  nationalities held mass together in Nomansland.
Brazil (1985)
First, let’s go through what it isn’t.  It isn’t set in the future.   It isn’t set in a totalitarian society.  It’s set now (we’re still  “somewhere in the 20th century”).  And it’s set in our world.
Ducts and  pipes and paperwork and the 1940s still dominate our world; our world  abducts and interrogates and tortures people; our world is run by family  men who love their children and give their workmates Christmas presents  and file reports on how many dissidents they’ve interrogated this week.   Our world is still a stifling miasma of filing cabinets and  sociopathic bureaucrats and malfunctioning technology.  Our world is  still a place where the surface glitz of wealth and commercialism covers  reservoirs of corruption, confusion, incompetence, cruelty,  systematised madness and emotional frustration.  And this is never truer  than at Christmas, which is when this story is set.  The shopping malls  and fake snow and gift wrap are the garnish on a state gone mad.  You  feel that this place always pretends to be in the middle of festivities.   One gets the sense that it’s always Christmas where Sam Lowry lives,  which brings me to…
Death in Santaland (2007)
Jon Ronson visits North Pole, Alaska, where every day is Christmas  Day.  While retaining his customary air of amiable innocence, Ronson  reveals this concept to be every bit as ghastly as it sounds.  A place  invented solely for the Christmas industry, the decorations stay up all  year long.  Ronson perambulates his way through this horrifying  tinsel-laden dystopia, becoming increasingly incredulous.
The adults here all claim to really believe in Santa – even to the  point of going into denial about their local Santa Claus (name legally  changed to Kris Kringle, god help us) being killed in a car accident.   Meanwhile, the local school kids are dragooned into answering the  thousands of letters that arrive addressed to ‘Santa, North Pole’, like  unpaid elves in a festive sweatshop.  The teenagers, driven to  distraction by the lunacy around them, carry guns and plot school  massacres.  To we Who fans, it might recall ‘The Happiness Patrol’.  
In any case, if you want a window into the planned neo-liberal  millennium, look no further.  Schools voluntarily training dispirited  children in the ideology of consumption and P.R., populations of happy  drudges smiling through the crushing alienation, communities enslaved to  consumer tat and mindless kitsch, people driven mad by the banality…  and anybody who dares to notice the madness dubbed a freak.  Watch this  and save yourself the trouble of having nightmares brought on by too  much accelerant-steeped pudding. 
What Would Jesus Buy? (2007)
Reverend Billy and the Church of Stop Shopping Gospel Choir tour  just-before-the-recession America, hoping to cure people of their  addictions to credit and consumerism, exorcise the sweatshop-running  demons of Starbucks and stop the ‘Shopocalypse’ – a term of Rev. Billy’s  own devising that the vacuous, tittering TV News anchors (who treat  this particularly astute brand of satire/performance/comedy/activism as  nothing but a jokey novelty) are unable to pronounce.  
On his way through the privatised, mall-dominated USA, littered with  monolithic cathedrals of consumption, the Reverend Billy gets himself  arrested for declaring that Mickey Mouse is the Anti-Christ, sets up a  booth on the streets for taking people’s ‘Shopping Sins Confessions’ and  exhorts congregations to hold up their credit cards (“magnetic strip  facing Reverend Billy”) and tear them up.
(As you can tell, this protest has religious overtones… but that’s  okay with me.  Reverend Billy prays to “the Fabulous Unknown”, which I  believe in.  And, in any case, I’m sick of being told - by supposed  progressives - that the biggest problem with America is its religiosity  and that the American faithful are all right-wing, which is bullshit.   The left-wing Christians just don’t own megabuck media churches.   Besides, religion is the spirit of a spiritless situation, etc., etc.)
Disneyland (corporate sociopathy expressed as architecture) gets  invaded by the choir.  Wal-Mart gets a trouncing.  Roast in Hell, Penn & Teller.  (Pardon me, but I can no longer say the words  “Wal-Mart” without also saying “Roast in Hell, Penn & Teller”.)   
On our way with him we encounter shop assistants who’ve been spat on  by old ladies because they’ve run out of X-Boxes, miniature dogs with  their own Christmas wardrobes and more evidence of a culture driving  itself insane with the worship of stuff.  Meanwhile, the antics of the  Reverend and his choir are as amusing and moving as their chosen foe  (Christmas capitalism gone mad) is terrifying.  
A Life in Pieces – with Sir Arthur Streeb-Greebling (1990-91)
Also terrifying (to me) is the realisation that it was twenty years  ago… that’s TWENTY YEARS AGO… that I was first paralysed with laughter  watching these twelve short interviews with the inimitable Sir Arthur Streeb-Greebling.
In each interview, the heroically straight-faced Ludovic Kennedy  presents Sir Arthur with a chosen gift and then quizzes him about his  life.  The various gifts (the first is a partridge in a pear tree… and  I’m sure you can guess the rest) start Sir Arthur off on a number of  interesting reminiscences.  The three French hens remind Sir Arthur of  his days in Brussels, attempting to devise the “Single European Hen”.   The five gold rings remind him of when he ran for Barbados in the 1936  Berlin Olympics at the special request of Hitler (whom Sir Arthur  remembers as “not the practical joking type”).  Nine drummers drumming  gets Sir Arthur started on how he was recruited as a “deep level mole”  at Cambridge.  The ten pipers piping remind him of his former friend  Peter Piper, who was such a cricket enthusiast that he actually took a  group of crickets on tour so that paying audiences could hear them  rubbing their legs together.  And so on, through such topics as  cannibalism, the use of goats to raise children and secret farming.
As for Christmas itself, well Sir Arthur thinks it was “great fun in  the old days when it was just an orgy of commercial excess, but now I  find that people are tainting the whole thing with a lot of religious  mumbo-jumbo.”
*
But what about Christmassy Who, you ask?  This is supposed to be a Who blog, isn’t it?  
Oh, okay.  But I’m not enthusiastic.  I mean, look at the forthcoming  Christmas Special.  A version of A Christmas Carol.  Hmm.  Written by a  man with all the political savvy of Jan Moir and all the genuine  progressive feeling of Vince Cable.  C’mon, it’s bound to be shit.   Alison Graham (absolutely no relation of any kind whatsoever, I hasten  to add) has already given it a rave review, which is never a good sign.
A Christmas Carol (the book, I mean) is already a problematic text.   Yes, there are wonderful bits where Dickens has his spirits inveigh  against “the insect on the leaf proclaiming there is too much life  amongst his hungry brothers in the dust” and revealing the huddled  symbolic children Ignorance and Want… but, ultimately, it’s just a plea  for capitalist bastards to be bit nicer to their staff and make  charitable donations.  After all, when Dickens warns that Ignorance and  Want will bring downfall if ignored, this is a warning that he wants his  world – the bourgeois Victorian imperial world – to heed and profit  from.  
That’s why I love Blackadder’s Christmas Carol, which ruthlessly  inverts Dickens’ tale and, in the process, undermines his every  sentimental bromide and his every hypocritical appeal to the goodness of  the Victorian bourgeoisie.  Ebeneezer Blackadder, at the end of the  story, is the kind of successful Victorian gentleman who really made  that era… it’s just that, in reality, people like him knew how to talk  the charitable talk and lecture the poor on morals.  (I only failed to  include Blackadder’s Christmas Carol above because everyone’s seen it 48  billion times.)
Of course, Who has done a (sort of) version of this story before.  Let  the Ghost of Series’ Past transport you back to 2005, to the third  episode of the first season of RTD’s glorious revival, ‘The Unquiet  Dead’.  Sadly, what Elton and Curtis did knowingly and with irony, Mark  Gatiss did apparently accidentally and in all seriousness.  By the end  of this wretched episode, we are actually supposed to be inspired by  Dickens’ transformation from a miserable old sourpuss into a  newly-invigorated happy-chappy… but Dickens’ life-changing encounter  with festive spirits is somewhat different to Ebeneezer Scrooge’s.   Where Scrooge learns that charity is a moral obligation and empathy a  human benefit, Dickens learns that empathy and kindness towards those  who are desperate is dangerous folly, to be resisted on pain of  self-destruction.  
It’s perhaps unfair and unreasonable to be too harsh.  After all,  every single televised Christmassy Doctor Who story (with the exception  of the largely enjoyable ‘Christmas Invasion’) has been  scarcely-endurable ordure.
I don’t normally *do* Big Finish here, but I’ll make an exception because they’ve managed a bit better.  
Rob Shearman’s ‘The Chimes of Midnight’ is a lovely, angry Christmas  ghost story with dialogue that – in places – is so calculatedly absurd  and so laced with inner savagery that it verges upon the Pinteresque.  A  story of servants as endlessly-usable chattels in the service of a  cynical master that needs to feed on them to survive.  While one might  kvetch over the idea that a drudge’s life is made bearable by simply  knowing that she has the respect of one member of the middle classes,  this doesn’t really matter all that much because, like much of  Shearman’s work, this is less political than it is a meditation on  parents and children.  The relationship between Charley and Edith is  clearly the embodiment of a longed-for motherhood… and the presence that  becomes the Doctor’s antagonist is a child that demands life at the  expense of parents it feels entirely entitled to abuse.
And then we have Marc Platt’s mighty ‘Spare Parts’, which is easily  the finest Cyberman story made in any medium and also manages to be an  emotionally haunting Christmas story of families gathered around scraggy  old fake trees, while outside the cold draws in… and in… and in…   Politically, Platt’s story flirts with the Trekish mistake of making the  emotionless cyborgs into an expression of collectivism (with Thomas  Dodd as the dodgy but preferable embodiment of free enterprise)… but it  isn’t long before the story has a crowd of ordinary people protesting  outside the palace, resisting police brutality and opposing a People’s  Committee that has become a tyranny.  If the Committee are “the  champions of the proletariat” then it’s only in the same way, and to the  same extent, as Stalin.
Gareth Roberts’ and Clayton Hickman’s ‘The One Doctor’ is a thoroughly  enjoyable bit of space comic-opera, as long as you don’t start sharing  their impression that they’ve satirised anything… and as long as you  don’t worry about the fact that so much of it seems so reminiscent of  the second season of the Hitch Hiker’s radio series.
Of course, there’s always one at every Christmas party isn’t there…  one that spoils things for everybody else.  In this instance, it’s  Jonathan Morris’ ‘Flip-Flop’, a revolting Daily Mail-ish parable about  the horrific dangers posed by dishonest, power-hungry immigrants.  The  immigrants in question are (adding insult to injury) giant slugs with  bad eyesight and a wheedling, faux-humble Uriah Heapesque manner.  They  complain of prejudice and discrimination, explain that no human can  comprehend their “ethnic experience”, call themselves a downtrodden  minority despite covering nine tenths of the humans’ planet (“being a  minority is a state of mind”) and, all the while, they’re scheming to  take over and make the humans their slaves… which is achieved – and the  story is quite explicit about this – through “positive discrimination”.   The alien boss is called the “Community Leader”, which is one of those  terms that tabloids use whenever they want to preach to Muslim  communities about how they should do more to combat ‘extremism’. The  aliens even want to ban Christmas.  I fucking ask you.
I’m not saying anything about Jonathan Morris.  I don’t know the man  or anything about him.  He might be the cuddliest pro-immigrant liberal  there is for all I know.  But ‘Flip-Flop’ is an egregious piece of shit and everyone involved in making it should be thoroughly ashamed of  themselves.
Besides, the time travel paradox doesn't work because the Doctor, Mel,  Stewart and Reed don't bump into alternative versions of themselves  when they go back to the night of President Bailey's assassination.  So  there. 
*
Actually, I’ve been a bit hard on televised Who.  I forgot about one  story.  It’s isn’t a “special” and it wasn’t broadcast on the 25th  December… but it’s certainly a bit Christmassy and is one of the best  episodes of the 21st century series.  I’m referring, of course, to RTD’s  miraculous ‘Turn Left’.  Not only is it a reworking of It’s a Wonderful  Life (with Rose earning her wings by giving Donna a chance to see what  the world would be like without the Doctor) but it also has an entire  ‘act’ set at Christmas.  Donna and family spend the holidays in a hotel  room, waited on by a maid who, it is implied, is a foreign worker.  From  their holiday retreat, the Nobles (who are really the commoners)  witness the explosion that destroys London and turns them into refugees.    
As Simon Kinnear pointed out in DWM 410, although ‘Turn Left’ is “not  per se a story about recession, the parallels – unemployment,  homelessness, a military presence on the streets – are exactly what  scaremongering media pundits are anticipating is going to happen this  summer.”  He was writing in early 2009.  Things aren’t quite as bad here  yet as they get in ‘Turn Left’, but..
Well, there you have it.  Bah humbug, Changealujah, Seasons Greeblings, and a very Merry Christmas to all of you at home.
 








 
 
This actually inspired me to - ahem - track down a copy of "Death in Santaland", so I feel I should thank you for the experience. Certainly better than what Who delivered (A woman in a refrigerator, a man re-living his past glories over and over until they're meaningless, and the supporting cast hurtling over a shark. It's like a window directly into Moffat's brain).
ReplyDeleteAlso want to echo the bile re: Penn & Teller. It's repulsive that they're considered icons of skepticism and critical thinking. It's OK to let a tiny cadre of billionaires have unprecedented levels of control over their employees' lives, but if a college campus regulates against hate speech then it's an egregious violation of our civil liberties.
Re-read this again this year. Still excellent excellent stuff. The part about Shooting the Past actually changed the way I watched it. Before I'd always emphasised with Lindsay Duncan's character, feeling sorry for her impossible situation, I'd been more irritated and baffled by Timpthy Spall's. But after reading your piece about it, I now see he's the heart of the work-he's supposed to annoying and even mystifying. I can't watch it the same way again. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteAlso
-Minor minor point but you missed out Timewyrm Revelation on your list of Doctor Who Christmas stories. The opening is full of Chritmasy stuff. If you did read it I hope you liked it.
Seasons greetings and thank you for being one of the most interesting and entertaing Doctor Who bloggers on the web for another year
all the best
James
Wow - thanks!
DeleteAnd yes, I loved 'Timewyrm: Revelation' when I read it way back when it was originally published. I haven't re-read it since but I'm sure I'd still like it now, whatever quibbles I might find with it. I remember it in detail, which is more than can be said for more 'Who' novels I've read. I didn't write about it here because I was pressed for time when writing the above and would've needed to re-skim it to check things. One day though.
Thanks again for the comment, and for reading the blog.
Merry Christmas.