Consider This from NPR - What makes a true Christmas movie?

Episode Date: December 25, 2024

What makes a movie a Christmas movie?When the movie Die Hard was released on Blu Ray a few years back, the studio called it "the greatest Christmas story ever told!" It does take place at an office Ch...ristmas party, but is that fact enough to make it a Christmas movie? What about "Elf," "It's a Wonderful Life" or "Eyes Wide Shut" are those Christmas movies? Yes, right? NPR producer Marc Rivers says, "not so fast."Just what makes any Christmas movie a true Christmas movie?For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org.Email us at considerthis@npr.org.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy

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Starting point is 00:00:00 The 1988 movie Die Hard deserves a lot of accolades. It's a genre-defining classic. It cemented Bruce Willis' superstar status. But the studio opted for a more controversial tagline in the trailer for the 4K Blu-ray release. The greatest Christmas story ever told. Die Hard does take place at a Christmas party. Now I have a machine gun. Ho, ho, ho. Is that fact enough to make it a Christmas movie, though?
Starting point is 00:00:31 This of course has become a perennial pop culture question. Is Die Hard a Christmas film? No, it's rubbish. I didn't feel Christmassy when I saw it. Yes, Die Hard is a Christmas film. This is something that has popped up not only online but on news programs. Is Die Hard is a Christmas film. This is something that has popped up not only online, but on news programs. Is Die Hard really a Christmas movie? Last year, CNN's Jake Tapper brought in an expert
Starting point is 00:00:50 to have the debate. And joining me now is Jeremy Arnold. He is the author of Turner Classic movies, Christmas in the Movies. Jeremy, thank you for your time. Even big name actors have gotten in on this discourse, like Edward Norton on The Rich Eisen Show. Do you consider Die Hard a Christmas movie?
Starting point is 00:01:05 Emphatically, yes. Thank you, Edward. Oh my gosh. Okay, I do not. Or Ethan Hawke with Stephen Colbert. Is Die Hard a Christmas movie? Yeah, sure. Yeah, yeah, definitely.
Starting point is 00:01:20 Bruce Willis himself tried to settle this question at one point at his roast on Comedy Central. Die Hard is not a Christmas movie. It's a goddamn Bruce Willis movie. If only it were so simple, Bruce. This debate over Die Hard points to a broader fundamental question. Just what makes any Christmas movie a Christmas movie? Like Elf or Eyes Wide Shut or It's a Wonderful Life?
Starting point is 00:01:51 Merry Christmas! Merry Christmas! Merry Christmas, George! Consider this. One of our producers has developed an objective, you might even say scientific, classification system that tries to answer this question. And it leads to some surprising, and in my case, kind of upsetting places. We'll have more after the break. From NPR, I'm Scott Detro. It's Consider This from NPR. Okay, so as promised, we are going to try to tackle this question. What makes a movie a Christmas movie? Our producer, Mark Rivers, is here to settle it once and for all, or in the spirit of movie discussions, not really settle anything and just lead to more arguments. Hi, Mark.
Starting point is 00:02:42 Hey, Scott. Good to be with you. I mean, it feels like what makes a holiday movie is an obvious question to many, but it is not to you. What makes a holiday movie? Well, you know, I should say that, first of all, I think ultimately a holiday movie can be anything you want it to be. Anything.
Starting point is 00:02:56 So like Ninja Turtles 2, Secret of the Ooze, holiday movie? If you watch it around the Christmas time with your family and it makes you feel warm and fuzzy inside, that's your Christmas movie. So people watch Wizard of Oz from the holiday season. I've heard from my friends who watched Lord of the Rings, Harry Potter on the holiday season. I think a Christmas movie can be whatever makes you feel cozy in the wintertime, anything
Starting point is 00:03:14 that makes you feel nostalgic for when you first watch it as a kid. That can be a Christmas movie. But I feel like there's a turn coming here. But here is the turn. Having said that, a Christmas movie, I think you can break it down to three tiers. I think, so there's the first tier, which is Christmas is the subject of the movie, where if you took it out, there'd be no movie.
Starting point is 00:03:34 And you probably, you kind of know this when you see it. Oftentimes the word Christmas might be in the movie title itself. A Christmas Story, How the Grinch Stole Christmas, Miracle on 34th Street, right? Or Elf. I just rewatched the remake of that a few days ago, holds up.
Starting point is 00:03:48 Yeah, so I think if there are actual residents of the North Pole in your movie, that's in the first tier of Christmas movies. Now we have this second tier, things get a little more interesting, where Christmas might instigate the plot, it might be a part of the plot. But if you took it out, changed a little bit of dialogue,
Starting point is 00:04:03 you could still have the movie. It would still make sense. So I feel like Home Alone might be a good example of that. I think Home Alone's a really good example of that. So yes, sure, Kevin gets left behind for the Christmas season. But it could have been a summer vacation, and the movie could still play out the way it does. Right, and he sets up the Christmas tree.
Starting point is 00:04:17 But we don't actually really need that. We just need to get to the point where the robbers try to get into the house. We just need him stuck in the house. We need the robbers to get in. And we need him to do his sadistic traps to abuse these two for the rest of the movie. Okay, I like this idea.
Starting point is 00:04:29 What's another example? We talked about Home Alone, what's another example? So, you know, so listeners, I don't wanna upset any of you guys, but I think a second tier movie is probably It's a Wonderful Life. What? Yeah, I know, I know.
Starting point is 00:04:39 Okay. The greatest Christmas movie of all time, I've heard it all. Yeah, I wildly disagree, but let me hear you out. If you take out the fact that the movie leads up to Christmas Eve, or that by the very end of it, he's yelling through the town, Merry Christmas! So if you take out the heart of the movie. You don't need any of that. This movie could have taken place on his birthday. People feel
Starting point is 00:04:58 depressed and think about, they take stock of their lives. They don't need Christmas to do that. They could do it on their birthday. They could do it around, they could do it on New Year's. Christmas adds the kind of garnish to it, but if you take it out, he's still depressed. He can still talk to the angels without the holiday season. But the whole community coming together and singing Christmas songs with one another and sharing the Christmas spirit and yelling Merry Christmas. Maybe they're coming together on Groundhog Day like they do in the Bill Murray movie. I love Groundhog Day as a holiday and a movie, but I think I'm with you on everything else
Starting point is 00:05:29 you said this segment. Like I said, it's still Christmas movie. It's just second tier Christmas. Not the top. No one in It's a Wonderful Life lives at the North Pole as I ever lived at the North Pole. Let's disagree and move on. Fair enough. Now, another perennial topic.
Starting point is 00:05:42 What about 1988 film Die Hard? Does it also fit into this second tier that we are talking about? I call it a tier two Christmas movie It could be almost any work party that John McClane gets invited to and he gets chapter side and has to fight as happens At a work party as often happens at a work party. Okay. So what about to your so tier three? I think it is my favorite tier and this is where Christmas is more it's Christmas is in the background It's it's ornament, where it has no influence on the plot going forward, but it's just, it's atmosphere.
Starting point is 00:06:10 So this is something that applies to movie like Eyes Wide Shut, the Stanley Kubrick film, or The Apartment, the classic Billy Wilder film. And I like this tier best of all, I think, because this is the kind of tier that we all live in. We're not all Ebenezer Scrooge or Buddy the Elf. We might buy a present and we're looking forward to the Christmas season, but for the rest of the time,
Starting point is 00:06:30 we're going to work every day. We're putting food on the table, we're grocery shopping. We're- I was gonna say, Buddy the Elf goes to work. Buddy works at the North Pole. And the rest of us definitely work at the North Pole. We have other jobs. So I think the third tier is the most relatable tier,
Starting point is 00:06:44 I think, for the average person. That's where we live. Where Christmas is often in the background. All right. I will say I had never truly thought of it that way before. And you're convincing me. Yeah, I mean, I think it's a way to kind of bring all the movies together. Because this whole debate around is Die Hard Christmas movie, is it not?
Starting point is 00:06:58 Like, yes, it's just not in that top tier. You know, it's not Miracle on 34th Street. Yeah, it is definitely. It is definitely a little more, yeah, a little more cursing than in Mirko on 34th Street. Okay, so of this tier three, what are a couple of your favorites? And are there ones that you watch every single December? So I do have a couple that I watch every December, and I mentioned one of them. It's the apartment with Jack Lemmon and Shirley MacLaine. Jack Lemmon plays this insurance employee who's
Starting point is 00:07:20 trying to climb the corporate ladder. And one of the ways he's doing this is maybe not so nice for the holiday season. Lending out his nice Upper West Side apartment in New York City to top executives who then use it for their extramarital affairs. It's a real nice apartment. Nothing fancy, but kind of cozy. Just right for a bachelor. The only problem is I can't always get in when I want to. The movie sounds a lot sleazier than it actually is, but it's one of those movies that I always turn to for comfort around the holiday season. Let's talk about the very first tier of movie you watched.
Starting point is 00:07:52 It could be any movie whatsoever, but it's just one that you or your family or friends happen to watch every single December. Is there anything for you? Uh, I mean, first tier that I have to watch every year, and we talked about this last year as well, is Elf. Okay, people, tomorrow morning, 10 a 10am, Santa's coming in town. Santa! Oh my god! Santa here? I know him. That's the kind of last really great Christmas movie that we've gotten.
Starting point is 00:08:18 And I think one of the keys to that movie is that only the Elf character played by Will Ferrell actually realizes he's in a Christmas movie. The rest of the cast is more like we are where they're just trying to make it through the day, make it through work. They're trying to appease their boss and they're trying to just like stay together as a family. So I think it's so relatable in that way. It doesn't force the sentiment of the movie. I think the sentiment feels very earned. **Jade Larkin Can I tell you a realization I had about Elf this past week when I watched it for the 500th time. And I say this as someone of a certain age and somebody who consumed a lot of the Lord of the Rings content as well.
Starting point is 00:08:49 It never occurred to me that the kind of annoying Central Park Rangers plot line of Elf is just a Lord of the Rings reference of the Nazgul because those movies came out around the same time. You've just now made me think about that, but that makes a lot of sense. I think Lord of the Rings is another movie that many of my friends that they watch every year, even though it has nothing to do with Christmas time. But I think like something like Lord of the Rings or something like Wizard of Oz or Harry Potter, it's the fantastical magical album of it all, right? Where there's something magical about Christmas and we kind of want
Starting point is 00:09:17 to find that magic in the movies as well. And intergenerational nostalgia and relationships built around that movie or that book and that story. It's a movie that you pass down to your kids, right? Your niece and nephew, for sure. That is NPR producer Mark Rivers. Mark? Thanks as always. Thank you, Scott. This episode was produced by Gabriel Sanchez and Mark Rivers. It was edited by Adam Rainey and Connor Donovan. Our executive producer is Sammy Ennegan.
Starting point is 00:09:44 It's Consider This from NPR. I'm Scott Detra.

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