Pros: Fun and charming look at the origins of Santa
Cons: Dated. Very dated
The Bottom Line:
Santa's origins
Fun and charming claymation
But very dated
Have Questions about Santa? Get the Answers in Santa Claus is Comin' to Town
I was recently sent a set of Christmas specials in exchange
for review, most of which I had never seen before. One of them was the stop motion classic Santa Claus Is Comin' To Town. Nope, I'd never
even heard of it before, but I found it pretty fun.
As the special opens, we run into a mail man (voiced by Fred
Astaire) who is delivering letters to Santa.
He decides to tell us all about Santa.
It starts many years ago when a baby was left in the care of
the Burgermeister Meisterburger (Paul Frees).
Being the mean guy that he is, Burgermeister throws the baby out. But he winds up in the care of a family of
elves named Kringle who happen to be toy makers.
The baby grows into a man named Kris (Mickey Rooney) who
decides to deliver the toys that his family makes to share the joy with kids
everywhere. But when he returns to his
home village, he finds that the Burgermeister Meisterburger has outlawed all
toys. As a result of defying the ban,
Kris becomes a wanted fugitive. Can he
find a way to bring joy to the kids of the village? And what about the Winter Warlock (Keenan
Wynn) who lives between the Kringles and the village?
To be honest, I wasn't expecting much from this special, and
I'm not quite sure why. Maybe my low
expectations were why this one surprised me so much. I actually got quite caught up in the story even
though I had most of it figured out early.
The characters were so great, too, from Kris to his adopted family and
his love interest Jessica (Robie Lester) on the good side to the villain you
love to hate, Burgermeister Meisterburger.
I'm not a big fan of stop motion animation. It looks too jerky to me most of the
time. That was certainly the case here,
but I actually found it charming. Maybe
I'm softening in my old age.
One drawback to this short is the music. Outside of the title song (which Fred Astaire
sings so well), all the songs were unfamiliar to me. Frankly, they didn't add much. In fact, I found myself wanting to fast
forward through them to get back to the story.
Not helping at all was how dated the musical segments
were. This special was released in 1970,
and it shows. I got a definite flower
power vibe off the animation during the songs.
There were a couple of other times I felt a bit of that crept into the
story. You might also describe it as
psychedelic. My roommate found this
aspect even more annoying than I did; I was mostly able to ignore it and get lost
in the story again when it was over.
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