Showing posts with label A Charlie Brown Christmas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label A Charlie Brown Christmas. Show all posts

Saturday, December 14, 2013

My Top 4 Christmas Movies of All Time

1. A Christmas Story.  Absolutely best favorite Christmas movie ever.  Some day my family (at least some of us) hope to spend Christmas in Cleveland so we can visit the Christmas Story museum (yes, there’s a museum) and sup in a Chinese restaurant to commemorate the event.

2. Love Actually.  Most who admit to liking this one call it a ‘guilty pleasure’, as if it is somehow wrong to admit to enjoying it.  Not me.  I love Love Actually (pun intended).  It strikes just the right chord of pathos and joy within me that quintessentially is Christmas.  And the scene at the airport at the end, of the thousands and thousands of folks coming off the planes into waiting arms or purposeful walking away from no one to greet is one I’ve seen and been a bit player in myself many times over and it never fails to move.

3. Empire of the Sun, perhaps my favorite of all movies for all times (To Kill a Mockingbird is right up there with it, but each to its own time).  I first put it on the list not because I connect it with the Christmas holiday so much as with watching it with my family.  (Interesting side note: the film was released on Christmas day in 1987.)  But reading about the movie again, I learned that the moving song of the boy that frames the movie is a Welsh lullaby Suo Gan that has, as one of its many permutations, been adapted into a Christmas carol.  The scene of one boy singing on one side of a fence as other boys on the other side fly off to their certain deaths stands as the emblem of war for me: the old intentionally and deliberately sacrificing their young with a passive resignation to an inevitability they created, which is not inevitable at all.  The enormity of child sacrifice that is war I cannot watch without weeping.  Christmas is about joy, but it is also about sorrow.



4. A Charlie Brown Christmas.  What’s not to love?  And then, there’s the fact that my family routinely accuse me of always picking out the Charlie Brown tree for our home.

Some honorable mentions

5. (not) Little Women.  Little Women is probably my favorite book, which makes it difficult for any movie rendition to be a favorite movie.  I re-read this book virtually every Christmas and the characters are well-defined in my mind’s eye.  No one else’s visualization will do for people I already know so well.  (My mother nicknamed me Beth for one of the girls.  I always secretly wished she’d named me Jo.  To my delight, I met another Beth in Iraq once – from England – with the same story – her mother nicknamed her for the character and she too always wanted to be Jo.)

6. White Christmas.  I don’t watch it every year, but I do love that formula of the time (think Mickey Rooney and Elizabeth Taylor in the Andy Hardy series, where Andy always seems to be calling on the gang, “let’s . . .” something.  Here, it’s “let’s save our friend’s inn”.  Good stuff.

7. About a Boy.  Another good movie with a transformational theme, as a man moves from herculean self-absorption to caring for others (he first has to literally learn the ability to even see them).  A pretty good message for Christmas.

8. It’s a Wonderful Life.  I used to watch this classic faithfully every Christmas, but I just can’t anymore.  I’ve foundered on it.  I still like it, in theory.  But overexposure has killed it for me.  Word to the wise: if you want to keep this one as a fav, only watch it once during the season and then only every 3-4 years.  Just sayin.



Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Advent: 8 Ways of Telling The Story

Dear Christians, no one has taken Christmas away from us but ourselves.  Advent is a time when we’re invited to travel back into the story, so maybe this advent season, we can use some family time in creative ways to tell and retell the story of God’s entry into time and space in the person of Jesus, son of Mary and Joseph and God.

1. Read the story aloud – from the Bible – specifically from Matthew 1.18-3.23 (you can stop wherever you like, but including the death of the children at the hands of Herod is part of the story) or Luke 2.1-21 – over and over again.  You might read it every night as a bed-time story.  Repetition is how children learn and they don’t mind it.  Even if you’ve no children in your home, reading and rereading the story ingrains it into your very being – you might think of it as an act of prayer.

2. Watch A Charlie Brown Christmas.  Charlie Brown, at a moment of despair, wonders what Christmas is all about and Linus takes center stage and tells it – stars and wise people and Mary and Joseph and shepherds and baby Jesus and all.

3. While you’re driving in the car to the mall or work or wherever the car is taking you, tell the story from your own memory out loud.

4. Whenever you watch a Christmas movie, think about and say out loud (doesn’t matter if you’re by yourself or in a room full of family, story-telling is always done out loud) how this story (doesn’t matter if it’s A Wonderful Life, The Christmas Story – you know, the one about Ralphie and his BB gun, or the latest Hallmark romantic incarnation) how this story ties in to the story . . . the family in the car can tie to Mary and Joseph journeying to Bethlehem. . . buying presents to the magi . . . and there’s always a star somewhere.

5. Tell the story with finger puppets.  Don’t have any?  Make little faces on your fingers with markers or pens and tell away.

6. If you have a nativity, tell the story as you put the pieces out.  You might try putting the wise men and camels in different places, moving them closer to the creche every day and keeping the baby Jesus out of the manger until Christmas morning.

7. Retell the story as if you and your family are the characters.  Who would each of you be?  You can change that up, so that one night you’re Mary and the next a shepherd and the next King Herod – or you can stay the same person.  Entering the story opens eyes and hearts to new understandings.

8. Sing the story.  Pick a favorite Christmas carol everyone knows the tune to and just sing the story – don’t worry about how it sounds or whether the words rhyme or not – just sing away.

It matters whether we know the story or not.  Shouldn’t we devote at least as much time in the story as we do in the mall?  Just a thought.