The Man Who Invented Christmas Page #2

Synopsis: The journey that led to Charles Dickens' creation of "A Christmas Carol," a timeless tale that would redefine Christmas.
Director(s): Bharat Nalluri
Production: Bleecker Street
  1 win.
 
IMDB:
7.0
Metacritic:
60
Rotten Tomatoes:
80%
PG
Year:
2017
104 min
$5,652,908
Website
612 Views


He's under strict

instructions to remain there.

What is it this time?

"I need money immediately or

productive of fatal consequences,

I beseech you

to do the needful..."

He's been offering Mr. Dickens's

autographs for sale in the newspapers.

- How much did you give him?

- Forty-five, all told.

Forty-five?

Well,

I'll pay it all back.

But not a word of this

to Charles, do you hear?

[men chattering, laughing]

- [chattering, laughing continue]

- [exhales]

"What's the secret?"

they say.

There is no secret.

I sit down...

- Charles. What are you doing here?

- I'm hiding from Thackeray.

They absolutely

come pouring out of me.

He'll no doubt want to commiserate

me on my Chuzzlewit reviews,

which he will quote

by heart.

Come on.

[sighs] I am clammin' for some scran.

Where's Robertson?

Why do we come here,

hmm?

The service is terrible. The food is

inedible. The fees keep going up.

It's full of...

[groans]

Gentlemen.

You're not Robertson.

The name is Marley, sir.

- Marley? Marley with an "E"?

- Yes, sir.

Hmm.

Uh, oh, don't worry.

He collects names.

We'll have some oysters

and a bottle of champagne.

Very good, sir.

- Champagne?

- We're celebrating.

- Celebrating?

- Hello, Thackeray. [sighs]

- How are you?

- Tolerable.

I thank ye.

Charles, I must say I am relieved

to see you out and about.

Relieved?

You know, after those vile things

they wrote about Chuzzlewit.

I won't even

call them reviews.

- No matter. I never read them.

- Quite right.

Scandalous what one is

allowed to print nowadays.

Go on.

What did they say?

"Dull, vapid, and vulgar.

Not a single character capable of

exciting the reader's sympathies."

I certainly didn't think

it was vulgar.

Oh, look.

There's Macready.

Poor thing. His Macbeth was

absolutely shredded in the Times.

I must go and give him

my condolences.

I'm sick of London.

It's overcrowded,

overpriced...

- You love this town.

- No place for a man without money.

Not to mention

the bloody fog.

But it's your inspiration, your

what-do-you-call-it... your magic lamp.

[muttering, grunting]

I tell you, Forster,

my lamp's gone out.

I've run out of ideas.

- [Marley grunting]

- I feel old.

- [cork pops]

- [Marley exhales]

Old?

You're a puppy.

You're exhausted, that's all.

Too many speeches.

I've got another one tomorrow

for the Children's Refuge.

Well, you have to learn

to say no.

How can I say no if I can be useful, if

I can lighten the burden of another?

Well, you have to, what with your

new commission to think about.

Forster, I just told you that...

Sorry. New commission?

It's from Chapman and Hall,

for your new book.

I've told them you'll have the first

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Susan Coyne

Susan Coyne is a Canadian writer and actress, best known as one of the co-creators and co-stars of the award-winning Slings and Arrows, a TV series which ran 2003–06 about a Canadian Shakespearean theatre company. In 2006, she won two Gemini Awards for her work on the show, one for best performance in a supporting role and one for best writing for a dramatic series (shared with her fellow co-creators, Bob Martin and Mark McKinney). In 2007, she again won for writing, but lost to co-star Martha Burns in the acting category. She has been nominated for four Writers Guild of Canada awards, in 2006 and 2007 and 2015, and won three. She wrote the screenplay for the 2017 film,The Man Who Invented Christmas, starring Dan Stevens and Christopher Plummer. Other television writing credits include Mozart in the Jungle, The Best Laid Plans, and L.M. Montgomery's Anne of Green Gables. A veteran of the Toronto theatre scene, she acted for several seasons at the Stratford Festival, was one of the founding members of the Soulpepper Theatre Company and is currently a playwright-in-residence at the Tarragon Theatre. Her two best-known plays are Kingfisher Days, an adaptation of her critically acclaimed memoir of the same name, and Alice's Affair. The edition of this memoir that was published in America was titled In the Kingdom of Fairies. It recounts her experiences in the summer of 1963 at her family's summer cottage on Lake of the Woods. She is also known for her translations of Anton Chekhov. Coyne also appeared in the Fernando Meirelles adaptation of the Jose Saramago novel, Blindness. Coyne comes from a prominent Canadian family: she is the daughter of James Coyne, a former governor of the Bank of Canada, the sister of journalist Andrew Coyne and the cousin of constitutional lawyer Deborah Coyne. She attended the St. John's-Ravenscourt School in Winnipeg, as did her acting colleague Martha Burns. In 2017 she was appointed a Member of the Order of Canada by the Governor General for her contributions to Canadian theatre, film and television as an actor and writer. She is a graduate of the National Theatre School of Canada and was married to Canadian actor/director Albert Schultz. They have two children. more…

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Submitted on August 05, 2018

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