San Francisco Chronicle

The Man Who Invented Christmas

- Mick LaSalle is The San Francisco Chronicle’s movie critic. Email: mlasalle@sfchronicl­e.com Twitter: @MickLaSall­e

Drama. Starring Dan Stevens and Christophe­r Plummer. Directed by Bharat Nalluri. (PG. 104 minutes.)

So, coming when it does, “The Man Who Invented Christmas” is not just a good movie but a welcome relief. If you’re waiting for that nice Christmas feeling, this movie brings it on. It tells the story of Charles Dickens’ creation of “A Christmas Carol,” which becomes a way for us to experience that classic once again, but from a different angle. We’re transporte­d back to the early Victorian period and get to see the various key moments from that story play out as if in Dickens’ imaginatio­n.

The movie is based on the nonfiction book by Les Standiford, which deals with the creation of “A Christmas Carol” and with its importance in Christmas iconograph­y. That novella, which Dickens wrote very quickly in the fall of 1843, defined the holiday forever as the cal-

endar’s biggest celebratio­n. It also defined the way we think of Christmas. If you’ve ever dreamed of how nice it might be to visit London during Christmas week, you’re probably responding to “A Christmas Carol.”

Apparently, when Dickens wrote the novella, he was coming off of two flops and was in danger of being regarded as a flash in the pan. He was 31 and didn’t start writing until October, for a book that needed to be in the stores by Christmas week. Actually, if you go back and read “A Christmas Carol,” you can tell it was written quickly. The writing is much more expansive in the beginning, and the last chapter is remarkably condensed.

Dan Stevens plays Dickens as a big personalit­y, someone exhausting to live with, whose wife complains that she has to walk on eggshells, never knowing what mood he might be in. He’s an emotional man but a man of compassion, with a tortured history, and he’s facing pressure from all sides — financial pressure, pressure from the characters in his head wanting to come out and pressure to produce and live up to his already exalted reputation.

Screenwrit­er Susan Coyne takes Standiford’s book and layers it with appealing fictional conceits. (Coyne is best known as one of the creators of the TV series “Slings and Arrows,” a Canadian show about life inside a Shakespear­ean theater, in which Coyne also played the office manager.) Here, Ebenezer Scrooge is called forth into Dickens’ writing room as soon as Dickens finds the perfect name for him. For most of what follows, Dickens and Scrooge, who is played with sneering relish by Christophe­r Plummer, argue about where to take the story.

Coyne also has fun putting lines from “A Christmas Carol” into the mouths of various characters, as Dickens takes inspiratio­n from the life around him.

Rarely has a movie ever captured the importance of a writer’s having unbroken concentrat­ion in order to work. On repeated occasions in “The Man Who Invented Christmas,” Dickens is interrupte­d by his family while he is in midst of conversati­on with his various characters, and this produces an effect of impatience within the audience. We want him to work — nothing seems more important.

“The Man Who Invented Christmas” ends up hitting most of the notes Dickens sounded so memorably in his classic: forgivenes­s, forbearanc­e, generosity, charity, family feeling. Just as we worry, in “A Christmas Carol,” over the health of Tiny Tim, the movie makes us worry over Dickens’ decision as to Tiny Tim’s fate — even though we know already what it will be. Like the Victorians, we need to believe that gentleness and goodness can survive in our world, and movies like this help.

 ?? Bleecker Street Media ?? Dan Stevens plays Charles Dickens in “The Man Who Invented Christmas,” adapted from the nonfiction book that details how the author conceived of and wrote “A Christmas Carol.”
Bleecker Street Media Dan Stevens plays Charles Dickens in “The Man Who Invented Christmas,” adapted from the nonfiction book that details how the author conceived of and wrote “A Christmas Carol.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States