It's an annual holiday tradition of my own accord to consume in some way a version of Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol. It's one of my all-time favorite stories and I am a sucker for it in any form of media. I'll even fawn over a parody or a reboot of it. I just love the story and it's not the holidays without it's heartwarming message.
This year, I selected this 2009 adaption from Campfire. An Indian publisher, this version is in English and is a very faithful retelling of the Victorian era classic. The art is very good. But it's not clean. For one thing, Victorian era London wasn't a very tidy place. But the images by Naresh Kumar have a sort of woodcutting effect to them that makes the artwork seem a little faded and muddled from multiple printings over time.
Every year, I notice something that I never really noticed before. Here, Scrooge's time visiting his nephew, Fred, is covered more in-depth, with the reformed miser actually partaking in holiday parlor games with the entire household. Meanwhile, Scrooge's visit to the Cratchit household doesn't even occur. Instead, Scrooge provides the family with a Christmas feast as an unknown benefactor, thanks for multiple deliveries, while not even revealing to Bob Cratchit his emotional change of heart upon the employee's return to work on December 26th. At least it's revealed that Tiny Tim DOES NOT DIE and that Ebenezer becomes like a second father to the lad.
I still can't figure out Jacob Marley's timetable. He always makes it seem like Scrooge gets visited by ghost #1 on Christmas morning, ghost #2 on Boxing Day and the third ghost on December 27th. It's got to be some kind of old English way of telling time because it has never made sense to me.
A very good retelling. More classic than contemporary. That's not a bad thing! I've read quite a few versions of the book that really try to push the envelope and it was refreshing to get a very straight forward adaptation for a change.
Worth Consuming!
Rating: 8 out of 10 stars.

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