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Inventive film

‘THE MAN WHO INVENTED CHRISTMAS’ ★★★

- By Rick Bentley

‘Man Who Invented Christmas’ is something to cheer about.

MPAA rating: PG (for thematic elements, mild language)

Running time: 1:44 Opens: Wednesday

There have been numerous TV, film and stage adaptation­s of Charles Dickens’ “A Christmas Carol” over the years. None has combined as much charm, warmth and holiday spirit as Bharat Nalluri’s “The Man Who Invented Christmas.”

OK. Before you start shouting “Bah, humbug,” this technicall­y isn’t a direct adaptation of the story of Ebenezer Scrooge, Jacob Marley, Tiny Tim and those three ghosts that Dickens wrote in six weeks in 1843. This version has taken the novella and blended it with biographic­al material to look at the journey Dickens made from being mired in a writing funk to creating one of the greatest pieces of literature.

Dan Stevens, who has already showed a great acting range through his work in the live-action version of “Beauty and the Beast” and the thoughtpro­voking “The Ticket,” takes on the role of Dickens. It’s a demanding part as the character goes from an internatio­nal celebrity to a man wrestling with soul-wrenching demons. The story suggests Dickens had such a vivid imaginatio­n that his characters would spring to life as soon as he found the proper name for them.

Stevens handles every challenge thrown at him, even when Dickens appears to be on the verge of madness as he allows himself to be judged by the characters that he’s fashioned in his mind. There’s an energy to the way Stevens plays the role that makes even the film’s darkest moment feel alive.

His companion on the quest to finish the book is a manifestat­ion of Scrooge

(Christophe­r Plummer), who serves as both a writing guide and a personific­ation of all that Dickens sees wrong with the world and himself. Plummer’s performanc­e beautifull­y gets across the best and worst of Scrooge to make this one of the most entertaini­ng versions of the character. He has the great ability to be both a Scrooge with a black heart and one who, like Dickens, has finally faced his demons.

Much of the darkness in the writer’s life comes from his relationsh­ip with his scallywag of a father, John Dickens (Jonathan Pryce). Charles Dickens is burdened by the natural need for a son to have his father’s approval while trying to keep his father out of sight and mind. This emotional battle is helping choke his creative drive.

Pryce turns in a compelling performanc­e, finding the right amount of charm that makes his character believable as a man who has — as Dickens puts it — spent his life bobbing like a cork on the waters of life. He also handles the moments when John Dickens must show his true dark side, such as when he gets caught rifling through his son’s trash to find a signature that he can sell.

The screenplay for “The Man Who Invented Christmas” by Susan Coyne is based on the book by historian Les Standiford that dramatizes the period when Dickens wrote “A Christmas Carol.” The combinatio­n of fact and fiction is structured to show a parallel of how while Scrooge was seeking salvation from his miserly ways, Dickens himself dealing with being shackled to dark chains created by his fears of failure, the pain of abandonmen­t issues and concerns that his writing abilities were about to wither away.

It’s become a tradition that versions of “A Christmas Carol” be shown during the holiday season. “The Man Who Invented Christmas” should be added to the mix. It not only offers a fresh look at the familiar ghost story, but it also has a lot to say about the good in humans if they stop trying to suppress it. God bless the filmmakers, one and all, for creating such a treat.

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 ?? KERRY BROWN/BLEECKER STREET ?? Christophe­r Plummer (center, left) as Ebenezer Scrooge and Dan Stevens (center, right) as Charles Dickens.
KERRY BROWN/BLEECKER STREET Christophe­r Plummer (center, left) as Ebenezer Scrooge and Dan Stevens (center, right) as Charles Dickens.

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