RT's Top Yuletide Kid Flicks -- Christmas Countdown, Day Four
It's Day Four of RT's Five Days of Christmas Countdown, where we serve up a different list each day of the best holiday flicks around. Today, we've got something for kids and families -- all the Whos down in Whoville, the king of Halloweentown, and the most famous reindeer of all.
The holidays are here, and it's time to break out the sleds, roast the chestnuts, and watch a movie or five about yuletide magic (or a decided lack thereof). And when in doubt regarding your best viewing for any occasion, as always, we're here to help; the merry elves at Rotten Tomatoes have listed the Tomatometers, checked them twice, and will be presenting, during the Five Days of Christmas, the best-reviewed holiday films in the following categories: Classics, Comedies, Animated/Children's, Dramas, and Thrillers. Pour yourself a cup of eggnog and get ready for some fine seasonal viewing!
Top Five Yuletide Animated/Kids Films
Admit it, parents -- kids' movies can be painfully, painfully bad, and kids' Christmas movies tend to be some of the worst. When faced with choosing between giving your children up for adoption or suffering through Macaulay Culkin's "Nutcracker" one more time…well, let's just say life is full of difficult decisions and leave it at that. Thankfully, we're here to help -- here are five holiday movies for the kids, all Certified Fresh, maybe even including one or two you haven't seen 10,000 times already!
5) Tokyo Godfathers (2004) 89%

What do an alcoholic bum, a homeless transvestite, and a violent runaway have in common? They're the stars of this holiday-themed anime feature, in which even the most broken-down, ragtag group of outcasts can find redemption in unlikely and unexpected places. (Hint: there are strong parallels to not only the Old Testament, but the 1948 western classic "3 Godfathers.") If anime for Christmas strikes you as a little odd, well, it is -- but you don't really need to watch "National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation" again, do you?
Directed by: Satoshi Kon
3) [tie] Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer (1964) 90%

A classic example of early stop-motion animation (and, with the 2001 CGI-animated sequel, "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer and the Island of Misfit Toys," an example of why technology can't improve everything), CBS' 1964 holiday offering is TV's longest-running special for a reason. Several reasons, actually -- whether it's Burl Ives' narration, the story's message of acceptance, or the animation alone, it's impossible to argue with this "Rudolph"'s charm.
Starring: Burl Ives, Billie Mae Richards
Directed by: Kizo Nagashima, Larry Roemer
3) [tie] A Charlie Brown Christmas (1965) 90%

Before the Peanuts gang exhausted every major holiday, there was "A Charlie Brown Christmas," still one of the loveliest, most honest examples of animated joy to the world. From the flawless soundtrack to the poignant reminders of what truly constitutes Christmas spirit, Charles Schulz's creations have never looked better on our screens. Now if we could just do something about "It's Secretaries' Day, Charlie Brown"…
Starring: Peter Robbins, Tracy Stratford
Directed by: Bill Melendez
2) The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993) 97%

Given producer Tim Burton's career penchant for unmistakably stylish visuals, it was perhaps only a matter of time before he made the leap into animation, and with "The Nightmare Before Christmas," he did so in signature Burton style. Jack Skellington and his motley crew know how to run the ghoulish festivities of Halloweentown, but when they try to take over Christmas, all heck breaks loose. It isn't for everyone, of course, but if you've got the goth kids coming over for some figgy pudding, there's no better choice.
Starring: Chris Sarandon, Catherine O'Hara
Directed by: Henry Selick
1) How the Grinch Stole Christmas (1966) 100%

There is a generation of children whose first exposure to a moving, talking Grinch came courtesy of the Jim Carrey/Ron Howard live-action "update" of the classic Dr. Seuss story, but unquestionably, the definitive "How the Grinch Stole Christmas" film remains Chuck Jones' animated classic. It celebrates its 40th birthday this Christmas, so if you really needed an excuse to see it again, now you've got one.
Starring: Thurl Ravenscroft, June Foray, Boris Karloff
Directed by: Chuck Jones
Click here for Day Three: Top Five Holiday Thrillers
Click here for Day Two: Top Five Seasonal Dramas
Click here for Day One: Top Five Yuletide Comedies
And check back tomorrow for the final installment of the countdown: RT's Top Five Christmas Classics!
The holidays are here, and it's time to break out the sleds, roast the chestnuts, and watch a movie or five about yuletide magic (or a decided lack thereof). And when in doubt regarding your best viewing for any occasion, as always, we're here to help; the merry elves at Rotten Tomatoes have listed the Tomatometers, checked them twice, and will be presenting, during the Five Days of Christmas, the best-reviewed holiday films in the following categories: Classics, Comedies, Animated/Children's, Dramas, and Thrillers. Pour yourself a cup of eggnog and get ready for some fine seasonal viewing!
Top Five Yuletide Animated/Kids Films
Admit it, parents -- kids' movies can be painfully, painfully bad, and kids' Christmas movies tend to be some of the worst. When faced with choosing between giving your children up for adoption or suffering through Macaulay Culkin's "Nutcracker" one more time…well, let's just say life is full of difficult decisions and leave it at that. Thankfully, we're here to help -- here are five holiday movies for the kids, all Certified Fresh, maybe even including one or two you haven't seen 10,000 times already!
5) Tokyo Godfathers (2004) 89%

What do an alcoholic bum, a homeless transvestite, and a violent runaway have in common? They're the stars of this holiday-themed anime feature, in which even the most broken-down, ragtag group of outcasts can find redemption in unlikely and unexpected places. (Hint: there are strong parallels to not only the Old Testament, but the 1948 western classic "3 Godfathers.") If anime for Christmas strikes you as a little odd, well, it is -- but you don't really need to watch "National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation" again, do you?
Directed by: Satoshi Kon
3) [tie] Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer (1964) 90%

A classic example of early stop-motion animation (and, with the 2001 CGI-animated sequel, "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer and the Island of Misfit Toys," an example of why technology can't improve everything), CBS' 1964 holiday offering is TV's longest-running special for a reason. Several reasons, actually -- whether it's Burl Ives' narration, the story's message of acceptance, or the animation alone, it's impossible to argue with this "Rudolph"'s charm.
Starring: Burl Ives, Billie Mae Richards
Directed by: Kizo Nagashima, Larry Roemer
3) [tie] A Charlie Brown Christmas (1965) 90%

Before the Peanuts gang exhausted every major holiday, there was "A Charlie Brown Christmas," still one of the loveliest, most honest examples of animated joy to the world. From the flawless soundtrack to the poignant reminders of what truly constitutes Christmas spirit, Charles Schulz's creations have never looked better on our screens. Now if we could just do something about "It's Secretaries' Day, Charlie Brown"…
Starring: Peter Robbins, Tracy Stratford
Directed by: Bill Melendez
2) The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993) 97%

Given producer Tim Burton's career penchant for unmistakably stylish visuals, it was perhaps only a matter of time before he made the leap into animation, and with "The Nightmare Before Christmas," he did so in signature Burton style. Jack Skellington and his motley crew know how to run the ghoulish festivities of Halloweentown, but when they try to take over Christmas, all heck breaks loose. It isn't for everyone, of course, but if you've got the goth kids coming over for some figgy pudding, there's no better choice.
Starring: Chris Sarandon, Catherine O'Hara
Directed by: Henry Selick
1) How the Grinch Stole Christmas (1966) 100%

There is a generation of children whose first exposure to a moving, talking Grinch came courtesy of the Jim Carrey/Ron Howard live-action "update" of the classic Dr. Seuss story, but unquestionably, the definitive "How the Grinch Stole Christmas" film remains Chuck Jones' animated classic. It celebrates its 40th birthday this Christmas, so if you really needed an excuse to see it again, now you've got one.
Starring: Thurl Ravenscroft, June Foray, Boris Karloff
Directed by: Chuck Jones
Click here for Day Three: Top Five Holiday Thrillers
Click here for Day Two: Top Five Seasonal Dramas
Click here for Day One: Top Five Yuletide Comedies
And check back tomorrow for the final installment of the countdown: RT's Top Five Christmas Classics!
Related Items
| Movie: | A Charlie Brown Christmas |
| How the Grinch Stole Christmas | |
| The Nightmare Before Christmas | |
| Tokyo Godfathers | |
| Celeb: | Burl Ives |
| Chuck Jones | |
| Tim Burton | |
| Charles M. Schulz | |
| Satoshi Kon |
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dagreenman18 writes: on Dec 21 2006 02:00 PM wow, never expected to see tokyo godfathers on this list, but suprise, surprise. and why is nightmare before Christmas at 97%, i thought itwas accepted as an american holiday classic, deserving 100%. (Reply to this) |
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245_trioxin writes: on Dec 21 2006 02:20 PM thank god home alone was not on this list and any of it's sequels! thomas of the living dead (Reply to this) |
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ajmueller writes: on Dec 21 2006 02:43 PM In reply to this comment (#851537) How can you not like Home Alone? The first two were great and are classics, but the others really did suck. (Reply to this) |
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Kudos Mooney writes: on Dec 21 2006 05:05 PM wait...did that poster for the Grinch say 50th? getting a little ahead of ourselves, aren't we? (Reply to this) |
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245_trioxin writes: on Dec 21 2006 07:54 PM In reply to this comment (#851538) 17 years of having to watch it with family will make you very bitter towards the macalisters. i also hate a christmas story go ahead call me inhuman. thomas of the living dead wait now are we saying animated xmas films or are we saying all kids xmass films? (Reply to this) |
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Depthcharge writes: on Dec 22 2006 08:44 AM I watched the Home Alone movies growing up and I enjoyed them as a kid, but that doesn't necessarily make them good movies. Now they're just obnoxious. Nightmare Before Christmas is my favorite movie on the list and I was in love with it before the goths claimed it theirs (Reply to this) |
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alsanali writes: on Dec 22 2006 11:12 AM I wouldn't really consider Tokyo Godfathers a kid flick... I'd call it a drama before I'd call it a kid flick. I don't think young kids would understand most of it. But eh whatever. (Reply to this) |
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unbreakable_samurai writes: on Dec 23 2006 10:44 PM Yea, you can't beat the Grinch. (Reply to this) |
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jukeboxhero6660 writes: on Dec 24 2006 05:11 PM In reply to this comment (#851539) that is the cover of the book, it was written in 1956-1957. the movie didnt come until ten years later. (Reply to this) |
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