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Barbie in a Christmas Carol

Barbie in a Christmas Carol

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Actor: Barbie In The Christmas Carol
Studio: Universal Studios
Category: DVD

List Price: $19.98
Buy New: $8.90
You Save: $11.08 (55%)



New (48) Used (14) Collectible (1) from $8.90

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 46 reviews
Sales Rank: 755

Format: Ac-3, Animated, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, Dvd-video, Subtitled, Widescreen, Ntsc
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled), French (Dubbed), Spanish (Dubbed)
Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Number Of Items: 1
Running Time: 60
Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4
Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.4 x 0.7

MPN: MCAD63103573D
UPC: 025195028516
EAN: 0025195028516
ASIN: B001B7CNZQ

Theatrical Release Date: 2008
Release Date: November 4, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Studio: Uni Dist Corp. (mca) Release Date: 11/04/2008 Rating: Nr

Amazon.com
Barbie™ in A Christmas Carol is a heart-warming adaptation of the classic Dickens story filled with cherished Christmas carols, fabulous fashions and lots of laughs! The tale stars Barbie™ as Eden Starling™ the glamorous singing diva of a theatre in Victorian London. Along with her snooty cat, Chuzzlewit, Eden selfishly plans to make all the theatre performers stay and rehearse on Christmas Day! Not even Eden's costume designer and childhood friend Catherine can talk Eden out of her self-centered tantrum. It's up to three very unusual Christmas Spirits to take Eden on a fantastical holiday journey that will open her heart to the spirit of the season and the joy of giving. Barbie™ in A Christmas Carol is a family favorite to enjoy every holiday season!

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Customer Reviews:   Read 41 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Very Sweet   January 5, 2009
I love this movie. It was colorful, had a wonderful message (as always), and just plain cute for the Holidays.


1 out of 5 stars Barbie is surprisingly unkind to her sister.   December 31, 2008
After reading the many positive reviews for this movie, my wife and I thought it would be a better choice for my daughter than Diamond Castle. We were wrong. We were very shocked by the uncharacteristically spoiled and haughty attitude that Barbie showed to her sister Kelly at the very beginning. It was vastly different than any of the other Barbie videos we have seen and not at all something we would want our daughter to emulate. The rest of the story wasn't particularly good--there were a few good moments, but it was by far the worst of any of the other Barbie movies we have seen. Don't waste your money on this movie.


5 out of 5 stars Very Enjoyable!   December 31, 2008
My 5-year-old granddaughter and I found this movie to be very entertaining--excellent script and animation. She was totally engrossed in the storyline the entire time. Barbie comes off as mature and not at all self-centered, which did surprise me. I thought the movie would be a "fluff" piece, but it is actually a welll-written script with a good message.


5 out of 5 stars What a Beautiful Movie!   December 31, 2008
This movie was so sweet! My little boy and girl (6 & 7) love to sit and watch this movie! They sing and dance to almost all the songs and they both think Chuzzlewit is hilarious! I love the movie because of the many older Christmas carols "Jolly Old Saint Nicholas" "Joy to the World" and "We Wish You a Merry Christmas", in it. I also think that the ideas that this movie portrays, such as giving is better than receiving, treat others the way you want to be treated, and thinking about the choices we make are things that are sorely lacking in today's world. This is one of the greatest movies Mattel has ever produced! I highly recommend this movie and the Barbie Holiday Entertainment Doll Toy Gift Set, Set Includes Three Orphan Characters From the Movie. Great work Mattel!



5 out of 5 stars Probably the funniest Barbie film yet   December 29, 2008

This latest Barbie video, a gender-reversed version of Dickens' story "A Christmas Carol", has all the high production values and beautiful animation of the recent films, put together with a wicked sense of humour and with some delightful performances of many favourite Christmas Carols.

I'm not quite sure whether to describe this as a homage to Charles Dickins' original story, a spoof/parody, or something in between. Although most of the Barbie videos have included a few jokes and references which were obviously aimed at any adults watching with their daughters, this one IMHO is far and away the funniest Barbie video to date. Maybe it just particularly hit my sense of humour, but in spite of the fact that I'm forty years older and the wrong sex compared with the target demographic, this film repeatedly had me laughing out loud.

Rather more importantly my seven year old twins also enjoyed this film and laughed at many of the jokes, and although he now feels obliged to protest when we put a Barbie video on, I noted that my son was laughing as much as my daughter.

It's also a really good Christmas family film if you have small children, and one which will probably become part of my family Christmas until the children are too old to appreciate it.

The story is bookended on Christmas Eve in modern America, with Barbie trying to enthuse her little sister Shelley with the Christmas spirit. They are due to go out to a charity auction for a hospital, and Shelley is not happy at the change to her routine. Barbie gives her a snow globe which contains three fairies dancing in the snow and plays "We wish you a merry Christmas." Barbie explains how this globe is connected with the story of how one girl learned about the Christmas spirit more than a hundred years ago in Victorian London ...

Eden Starling (who is the Ebenezer scrooge figure) was the most successful opera singer in Britain and ran her own theatre. She was beautiful and had the voice of an angel, but was also ruthless, selfish, and very self-centred. She had been raised by her Aunt Maria (the Marley figure) to work hard to further her career and ignore the needs of everyone else on the basis that "In a selfish world, the selfish succeed."

At the start of the story, also on Christmas Eve, Eden is refusing to allow the staff of her theatre to take any holiday over Christmas, and warning them that any who fail to come in and rehearse over the holiday, even on Christmas Day, will face the sack. The only living thing for which she still shows any concern is her snooty cat, Chuzzlewit, and she treats even her childhood friend Catherine Beednall with cruelty and contempt.

But that evening she gets a visit from the ghost of her Aunt Maria. In Dickens' original story, the selfishness which corrupted Scrooge, Marley, and others took the form of greed for gold: in this version it mainly takes the form of vanity and ego, and so instead of chains linked to boxes of gold, Aunt Maria's chains are linked to mirrors in which she is reflected.

Aunt Maria tells Eden that the philosophy of selfishness she had taught Eden in life was wrong, and that three spirits will come to her that evening to show her why. These turn out to look just like the figures in the snow globe which Barbie had given Shelley in the opening scene of the film and which, it transpires, Eden had been given by Catherine when they were both little girls.

The gender-reversed presentation of the spirits of Christmas Past, Christmas Present, and Christmas Future is hysterical. Christmas Past looks like a fairy but talks like a cockney barrow-girl, also happens to be a huge fan of Eden Starling and cannot conceal the fact. Christmas Present is rather like an enormous Essex or Kent farmer's wife, similar to Pam Ferris's character Ma Larkin in "The Darling Buds of May". Christmas Future, rather than the sinister hooded figure of the original, is a dignified society lady.

Between them they remind Eden both of the warm-hearted person she used to be, and how and why that spirit was crushed out of her, and warn her of how her cold and ruthless egotism threatens to destroy her.

Instead of Tiny Tim we have Tiny Tammy, one of the orphans for whom Catherine is organising a christmas show, but who like the rest of these orphans faces an uncertain future.

The quality of the animation of this DVD is so good that much of the humour is presented in the expressions and movements of the characters, though there are a few very good lines. For example, as the spirit of Christmas Past is flying with Eden and Chuzzlewit through a sort of extra-dimensional tunnel which is taking them back in time, she tells Eden how big a fan she is of her music and adds that for her to be such a huge fan of Eden's must seem very strange. Eden looks around at their supernatural surroundings and replies with dry understatement that for the spirit to be a fan of hers was not the part of this experience which is strange.

Chuzzlewit the cat also provides some slapstick comic relief throughout the film, with several running gags such as his propersity to jump on anything which looks like food, such as decorations on the elaborate dress worn by the spirit of Christmas Present which look like sweets.

Throughout the DVD there is a string of Christmas music, composed and arranged by Arnie Roth, with delightful performances of carols including "Deck the Halls", "We Wish you a Merry Christmas", "O Tannenbaum", and "Jolly Old St Nicholas."

DVD extras on the disc include a medley of the christmas carols on the disc with words on the screen so that the viewer can sing along, a number of Christmas games, and a "secret scene" from the previous Barbie DVD, "The Diamond Castle" in which the two puppies, Lily and Sparkles, are painting the ballroom of the castle pink.


As usual, those people who enjoy criticising what the Barbie franchise represents will not have much difficulty finding things in this production to sneer at. If you, or more importantly your kids, are allergic to an excess of twee sweetness, then this film and the Barbie videos generally may not be for them. As usual the the female characters are mostly on the thin side of plausibility.

Barbie is often accused of reinforcing gender stereotyping, but I don't think the charge is entirely fair. In the case of this film, in which almost all the characters are female and taking on roles which were male in the original, the charge is just not applicable.

Different people have different senses of humour, so it may be unrealistic to expect that all adults will enjoy this as much as I did, but I'm quite certain that the vast majority of little girls will love this film, and most other people will not find it any hardship to watch this with the little girls in your family, especially at Christmas.


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