Category: Christmas - Christmas / Chanukkah - Movie - Xmas Video
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DVD The Year Without a Santa Claus / Nestor, The Long-Eared Christmas Donkey / Rudolph's Shiny New Year
This DVD contains three holiday titles from Arthur Rankin Jr. and Jules Bass.
The Year Without a Santa Claus Even Santa can suffer a case of the holiday blues. In this 1974 stop-motion holiday family favorite, a sparkly eyed Mrs. Claus (voiced by Shirley Booth) sings and tells about the year her hubby felt too weary and too unappreciated to prepare for his annual Christmas rounds. Mickey Rooney stars as the voice of Santa, a rosy-nosed puppet who travels incognito to Southtown in search of his tiniest reindeer, Vixen, and two well-meaning elves. Seems Mrs. Santa sent them to find proof of Christmas spirit--but all they've discovered is ambivalence about Santa's year off. Luckily, when Santa arrives and befriends a buck-toothed lad named Ignatius Thistlewhite, spirits begin to lift rapidly. Adult fans of this cousin to the 1970 television special Santa Claus Is Coming to Town will remember it as the Heat and Snow Miser movie. Their vaudevillian theme songs, complete with trombone and piano riffs, are hard to forget, but other treasured musical moments include "I Believe in Santa Claus," "I'll Have a Blue Christmas Without You," and "Here Comes Santa Claus." --Liane Thomas
Nestor the Long-Eared Christmas Donkey The wondrous story of Christ's birth is told by an unlikely source: Nestor, a gentle donkey with incredibly long ears and a first-hand knowledge of life in a stable. This simple tale, which takes place in the days of the Roman Empire, is about a humble couple about to take a long journey to Bethlehem and a small, insignificant donkey that is destined to help them along. By all outward appearances, Nestor does not deserve such a privilege. Stable animals tease him incessantly for his long appendages until, finally, he is cast out of the barn into the winter cold. Snow and ice bring about even greater calamity for Nestor until he receives a dose of divine goodness. Nestor meets Tilly, a heavenly cherub (voiced by Brenda Vaccaro) who imparts guidance to the despairing burro and tells him that soon he will be chosen to participate in a miracle involving a star, a baby, a lowly stable, and some travelers named Mary and Joseph. Short and sweet, this stop-motion Christmas gem from Arthur Rankin Jr. and Jules Bass is narrated by Roger Miller. Get out the hanky for an understated holiday classic that will appeal to families of all ages. --Lynn Gibson
Rudolph's Shiny New Year Rudolph is legendary for saving Christmas, but did you know he saved the New Year as well? While Santa Claus is recuperating from his December sleigh ride, he receives a letter from an old friend, Father Time. Seems that Baby New Year is missing, and if the little tyke isn't found, Old Year will continue forever--a catastrophe for Father Time, whose job it is to keep things moving forward. A search party is essential, yet with such thick fog, there's only one reindeer fit for the job. "Rudolph with your nose so bright, you've six days left to set things right," says Santa. Trouble hits immediately when Rudolph discovers that Aeon the Terrible, a big-beaked monster bird, is also searching for the missing baby. Rudolph gets help from a giant whale and a good-natured caveman, who dish up plenty of song and dance in between narrow escapes in their race against the end of the calendar year. Sound far-fetched? Perhaps, but it contains as much magic as its predecessors, Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer and Santa Claus Is Comin' to Town, all produced and directed by Jules Bass and Arthur Rankin Jr., and written by the esteemed Romeo Muller. The same stop-motion animation we've grown to love is here as well, and narrator Red Skelton has as trusted a voice as Burl Ives and Fred Astaire. While the New Year holiday will never be as celebrated as Christmas, this title is a welcome addition to any Rankin and Bass collection of holiday films. --Lynn Gibson
Review(s): DVD The Year Without a Santa Claus / Nestor, The Long-Eared Christmas Donkey / Rudolph's Shiny New Year
ITS GONNA SNOW DOWN IN DIXIE!
Last night NBC introduced a live action version of The Year Without a Santa Claus. It was cool to see that NBC was paying homage to this, a somewhat lost christmas classic at this day and age. However, the live action bit, just couldn't compare at all to this 1974 feature, from Rankin Bass... the kings of the stop animation Christmas classics. Year Without a Santa Claus, is perhaps the most underated of the dozens of specials Rankin Bass created throughout the sixties and seventies, but I gotta say, it is one of the best. It's too bad NBC didn't just play this one on TV. Its far more entertaining, and is guaranteed to get more laughs than the live action version...
All the characters are great, the dissillusioned Santa,.. his wife, the doctor, the two elves, Jingle and Jangle, Iggy, and of course those bumbling hams, the Heatmeiser and the Snowmeiser (Too Much!)Will Santa regain his Christmas spirit?, and will Southtown get that Christmas snow they've been dreaming of? Well, you just have to watch. This one was probably one of the last great Rankin Bass specials, its a littler more advanced then the bonafied hits like Rudolph, Frosty, and Santa Claus is Coming To Town. Much more a story for everyone to enjoy. Kids and adults.
The bonus features are the specialss that came out later, and are sort of weak compared but are ok. Like Rudolphs Shiny New Year, more for the kids, and are a little hokey.
Personally I have to wonder where that special is when the Leprechauns got together to throw an Irish Christmas. I liked that one better than Nestor the Long Eared Donkey. But Year Without A santa Claus should be the reason you purchase this disc. Good story, good music, good stuff.
Classic "Animagic"
When I was growing up in the 1980s before cable was widespread, I would occasionally catch a glimpse of these shows, as well as other "animagic" classics. Of all the Christmas shows I watched growing up, these had the greatest impact on my memory. When I went looking for them in the 1990s, I found many of them on video, but now that the DVD age is upon us, I am looking for them again.
This set contains three excellent, although somewhat lesser known, Rankin-Bass animagic classics.
The first show, "The Year Without a Santa Claus" tells the story of when Santa decides to cancel his yearly Christmas trip, and nobody seems to care. Some of Santa's elves, along with Vixen the reindeer, take off to Southtown to find some Christmas cheer. If only it would snow at Christmas, the town would believe! This show features the well-known "Heat Miser" and "Snow Miser," who battle for control of the weather. I have always enjoyed this one, especially the Miser brothers. I especially like the song "I Believe in Santa Claus," which is a fine Christmas song in its own right. I wish someone would compile a "best of" Rankin-Bass CD.
The second show, "Nestor the Long-Eared Christmas Donkey" tells the story of a donkey with big ears who is kicked out of his original stable, only to wind up accompanying Mary and Joseph to Bethlehem (thanks to the help of an angel). It is short, but it is told beautifully. Rankin-Bass produced a few religious animagic shows, including this and the acclaimed (but sadly out-of-print) "The Story of the First Christmas Snow." They do a wonderful job of creating stories that are entertaining, but also reverent and respectful of the biblical stories.
The final show on the DVD is "Rudolph's Shiny New Year." It is the story of Happy, the New Year's Baby (the future Father Time) with big ears who runs away because he is constantly teased. If he doesn't make it back in time, the new year won't arrive! Rudolph joins the hunt to find the baby. This is the weakest of the three shows, in my opinion. While it is funny in many places and teaches a good lesson of accepting others, overall I find that this show just isn't as memorable as the others. However, it is still much better than most other holiday specials out there and worth owning.
Overall, these are three great animagic shows that teach basic values and always get me in the Christmas spirit. While some kids and adults may not understand the point of animagic, seeing as how we are now in the digital age, I find that the stories themselves are strong enough to draw people in and in turn allow them to appreciate the animagic. I just wish other similar shows would make it to DVD soon, especially "The Life and Adventures of Santa Claus."
kids need to believe
it's a classic show that never gets old. it brings joy to all and a hope which seems to have been forgotten in recent years
Related DVD's The Year Without a Santa Claus / Nestor, The Long-Eared Christmas Donkey / Rudolph's Shiny New Year
Frosty's Winter Wonderland It's no secret that sequels to classic TV specials rarely stack up--they're usually guilty of getting too fancy with characters and story lines, causing irritating fissures to form in our perceptions of the originals. Lucky for a new generation of holiday viewers, that's not the case with Frosty's Winter Wonderland. In fact, lining up a Frosty double feature at home in which the original is directly followed by the new title is a fully cringe-free proposition, thanks mostly to the down-homey, pleasant narration of Andy Griffith and the near-perfect portrayal of the Frosty we all know and love by Jackie Vernon. The Wonderland dialogue doesn't trouble itself with tiresome throwbacks, and even the plot isn't overly ambitious: Frosty, lonely at the... More Info about this DVD Director(s): Arthur Rankin Jr. - Jules Bass DVD Release Date: Released the 05 October 2004 Usually ships in 24 hours
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Accept no substitutes. The 1966 television adaptation of Dr. Seuss' timeless book How the Grinch Stole Christmas!--about an anti-Santa who tries to heist the holiday only to learn a powerful lesson--is a classic in its own right, and looking better than ever in its 50th Birthday Deluxe Edition. (For those doing the math, the 50 years is counting from the book's 1957 publishing date rather than the show's broadcast date.) The most significant improvement is in the digital transfer, cleaning up fuzz and specks and restoring the proper colors to the program. While the awful earlier DVDs showed the Grinch in a mustard-yellow color, this edition restores his proper green gleam. Special features are mostly ported over from the previous DVD--the Horton Hears a Who program, a... More Info about this DVD DVD Release Date: Released the 21 November 2006 Usually ships in 24 hours
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Two of the all-time cartoon classics It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown (1966) and A Charlie Brown Christmas (a Peabody and Emmy winner from 1965) highlight this three-disc, six-episode set. Although the DVDs contain no extras (good grief!) and could have been combined on a single disc (drat!), the collection looks and sounds wonderful on DVD. The content is the same on the VHS and DVD sets, with two episodes per tape or disc. Accompanying Pumpkin is You're Not Elected, Charlie Brown, a cute spin on politics that has aged very well since its 1972 release. Christmas sports a lackluster sequel of sorts, It's Christmas Time Again, Charlie Brown (1992) that has Sally dwelling on getting (instead of giving), Charlie Brown facing a spending dilemma,... More Info about this DVD DVD Release Date: Released the 12 September 2000 Usually ships in 24 hours
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I remember seeing this during Christmastime in elementary school waiting for my piano lesson in my instructor's TV room. It's a classic. Sure, it's not as known as Rudolph the Red-nosed Reindeer, Frosty and The Year Without a Santa Claus, but it deserves to be. Children and adults will enjoy this Christmas classic. Thoroughly enjoyable! More Info about this DVD DVD Release Date: Released the 17 September 2002 Usually ships in 24 hours
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I got this, ahem, for my daughter. Wink wink. So, my daughter (3 years old) and I sat down and watched Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer, Santa Claus is Comin' to Town, and The Little Drummer Boy. All were good, just as I remember them from so long ago. One thing that stood out to me is that even though these shows, for the most part, are about Santa, Rudolph, and yes, a cricket, they still mention the true meaning of Christmas. I found this refreshing in a day and age where the only time you hear 'Jesus Christ' is when someone stubs a toe, gets mad a you, or something similar.
After we finished watching them, I decided to watch the special features. I'm a DVD nut, so I always watch them. My daughter was just along for the ride. So, I started watching the Destiny's Child music... More Info about this DVD Director(s): Arthur Rankin Jr. - Jules Bass DVD Release Date: Released the 05 September 2006 Usually ships in 24 hours
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