Los Angeles Times

‘Carol’ told from ghosts’ perspectiv­e

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refreshes Hollywood’s most overtold, and arguably outdated, morality tale as a topical musical comedy that manages to be astute about our divided culture without losing the source material’s streak of sincerity.

From the opening frames, “Spirited” stands out from other clever retreads of Charles Dickens’ 1843 novella by zooming in on its three ghosts. “Scrooge is always the one with the character arc, but the ghosts are the mastermind­s of the mission to transform him,” says director Sean Anders.

“A few years ago, my writing partner, John Morris, and I started talking about what the planning of the whole thing must be like — they can’t just show up on the day and haunt him, they have to go through his entire life and decide what they’re going to show him, right?”

“Spirited” envisions the overnight operation as an elaborate, yearlong endeavor: carefully choosing someone to transform, meticulous­ly re-creating key moments in that person’s life, painstakin­gly rehearsing monologues to inspire major changes. And the three ghosts — Christmas Past (Sunita Mani), Present (Will Ferrell) and Yet-to-Come (voiced by Tracy Morgan) — are power players in a massive corporatio­n, complete with retirement planning and a human resources department.

“This story has been done a lot, but the concept of looking at it from the inside, of how the sausage is made, was the reason to do it,” Ferrell tells The Times. “It takes some chances and is out-ofthe-box in terms of what you expect it’s going to be because it also looks at the burden of the ghosts, and whether or not what they’ve been doing for centuries is even moving the needle in today’s world.”

Ferrell’s Christmas Present wrestles with that question while trying to redeem this year’s Scrooge: Clint Briggs (Reynolds), a ruthless media consultant whose job is described as “creating controvers­y, conflict and disinforma­tion for the benefit of his clients worldwide.” According to Anders, he’s

“very charismati­c and a pretty fun guy to be around,” but he might be more harmful to society than the classic’s grouchy miser, not to mention more relatable to the movie’s modern viewers.

“What’s made Clint Briggs this year’s Scrooge isn’t just that he’s an active Twitter user — although that does qualify you enough

in and of itself — but that he’s harnessing these forces to create controvers­y and division,” Reynolds says. “I am somebody who lives in the muck and mire of social media from time to time, and I see how absurd and crazy and toxic it can be . ... We’re just constantly pushing farther and farther away from each other.”

The timing of the film’s release, coming in the same week as Twitter’s rapid unraveling under new Chief Executive Elon Musk, underscore­s its allusions to culture wars, fake news and trolls, though here the truth is softened by the convention­s of the movie musical — something Anders and Morris have been wanting to make for years.

The songs, written by Benj Pasek and Justin Paul, along with Khiyon Hursey, Sukari Jones and Mark Sonnenblic­k, are insightful about what Paul calls “the main question of the story, which is: Am I able to overcome the worst parts of me to become a better version of myself?” But they are also jam-packed with punchlines and undercut by onscreen eye-rolling about the fact that, yes, someone is starting to sing again.

When Clint is introduced — at a conference of Christmas tree growers, natch — Reynolds channels the charm of Fred Astaire in an elaborate, super-smooth musical number about the exploitabi­lity of human nature. “We leaned into that which is Ryan Reynolds — charming, good looking, a consummate storytelle­r,” says choreograp­her Chloe Arnold. “It’s so fun to watch, but it’s also to illustrate how Clint is this master manipulato­r.”

Adding to that message is Octavia Spencer as Kimberly, a character who, though she works for Clint as Bob Crachit does Scrooge, sends a very different message by beginning to confront her own compromise­d morals. “She sings about that moment when you’re thinking about who you’ve been and who you

want to be and how those two versions of yourself conflict, and questionin­g whether the decisions you’ve made are ones that reflect your values,” says Spencer.

But of all the changes to “A Christmas Carol” that “Spirited” makes, the most astounding is its conclusion, which goes against the ending of its source material. You’ll have to see the film to know how it goes down, but needless to say this Scrooge doesn’t end up throwing money to the masses on Christmas morning.

“I’ve been a huge fan of the original ‘Christmas Carol’ my whole life, and we have fun with all the tropes,” Anders says. “But one reason I wanted to make this movie is that I don’t think people can change overnight. It just doesn’t happen that way; it takes work.”

 ?? Claire Folger Apple ?? RYAN REYNOLDS stands in for Scrooge in Apple TV+’s “Spirited,” a new twist on the Dickens classic updated for the Twitter age.
Claire Folger Apple RYAN REYNOLDS stands in for Scrooge in Apple TV+’s “Spirited,” a new twist on the Dickens classic updated for the Twitter age.

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