PLOT: When Santa (Jim Broadbent) misses a young girl’s house on Christmas Eve, his clumsy son Arthur (James McAvoy) and Grandsanta (Bill Nighy) hijack a de-commissioned sleigh and some old reindeer in a hope to deliver her gift before she wakes up.
REVIEW: ARTHUR CHRISTMAS is the latest film from Aardman Animation, whose last few films, FLUSHED AWAY and THE CURSE OF THE WERE-RABBIT, received a mixed reception in North America, but were blockbusters overseas, especially in their native Britain. ARTHUR CHRISTMAS is their first outing with Sony, and the result is a slightly above-average Christmas tale that’s probably more for the kiddies than their previous, slightly older-skewing films.
However, in the midst of turning their holiday adventure into a minutely detailed operation, the spirit of X-Mas has been lost, and Arthur is horrified when his father and brother shrug-off the delivery they missed. Luckily, Santa’s predecessor, Grandsanta, is a little ornery this holiday season, and decides to show his son a thing or two by having his own unsanctioned adventure.
Voicing Grandsanta, Nighy is friggin’ hilarious. Every second he’s on-screen, ARTHUR CHRISTMAS works, and he’s got some pretty damn funny lines about delivering presents during the blitz in WW2 (with three reindeer having been shot-down by the Nazis), and accidentally starting the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962. Heck, they could have called this film GRANDSANTA, and I would have been thrilled.
Alas, it’s called ARTHUR CHRISTMAS, so Grandsanta ends up taking a backseat in the final stretch, and the film becomes a little maudlin. That said, the kids I saw this with didn’t seem to mind, and I’m sure this will become a much-played holiday favourite for many households.