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1%%Administrivia/{{Zero Context Example}}s are not allowed on wiki pages. The examples with no context have been commented out. Please add context to each example before uncommenting them.
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3[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/christmas_that_almost_wasnt.jpg]]
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5''Il natale che quasi non fu'' (aka ''The Christmas That Almost Wasn't'') is a fairly low-budget 1966 Italian-American Christmas film, directed by and starring Creator/RossanoBrazzi.
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7Cold-hearted landlord [[MeaningfulName Phineas T. Prune]] (Brazzi) charges an exorbitant amount of rent to SantaClaus (Alberto Rabagliati), Mrs. Claus (Lydia Brazzi), and their elf workers up at the North Pole; Prune locks down the sleigh and Santa's gift-giving operations unless he pays through the nose. What can be done?
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9Enter Sam Whipple (Paul Tripp), a lawyer who, as a child, offered his help to Santa in his letter, and just before Christmas, Santa shows up to see the offer fulfilled...
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11Though initially released to theaters in 1966, it enjoyed a run on Creator/{{HBO}} in the '70s and early '80s. In 2017, it made a return as one of the films riffed on in the Creator/{{Netflix}} revival of ''Series/MysteryScienceTheater3000''. For more information on that episode, click [[Recap/MysteryScienceTheater3000S11E13TheChristmasThatAlmostWasnt here]].
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13----
14!!The Tropes That Almost Weren't:
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16* AnimatedCreditsOpening: The film opens with a 2D animated credits sequence, complete with a very catchy theme tune.
17%% BigFancyHouse: Prune's would be one, if it were in better upkeep. And, after the cleanup at the end, it is one again.
18* CardCarryingVillain: Prune hates compliments and kindness, and enjoys being called evil.
19* ChildHater: Phineas T. Prune. He hates everything about children, hates to see them happy, and especially hates Christmas. He's forgotten that he ever was a child, a fact he's reminded of at the end when his FreudianExcuse is rectified.
20* DastardlyWhiplash: Prune, to a T. EvilBanker holding the mortgage on Santa's home? Curling black mustache? Dramatic dark coat and top hat with cane? Over the top villainy? The man ticks every box.
21* DespairEventHorizon: After Prune buys Prim's Department Store and basically steals the rent money to pay for toys he damaged, Santa and Whipple stroll listlessly down the street, hoping desperately for a miracle...
22* DeusExMachina: Santa and Whipple are suffering a DespairEventHorizon when a boy named Charlie, improbably dragging his last-minute Christmas tree down the same street Santa and Whipple are sitting on, learns of their predicament and summons all the children on the street to contribute, lifting Santa and Whipple's spirits.
23* DoItYourselfThemeTune: Co-star and co-writer Paul Tripp wrote the movie's theme tune. While he didn't perform the version used in the movie itself -- Glenn Yarbrough did -- Tripp did perform the version that was released on LP.
24* TheEdwardianEra: The fashion and sets give off an early 1900's vibe.
25%% ForTheEvulz: Prune also seems to have no concrete explanation for why he does what he does, until the end, when he gets better.
26* FreudianExcuse: Because his letter to Santa was accidentally misplaced and never processed, Prune never got the sailboat he asked for as a kid, and so decided to forget he ever was one (a kid, that is, not a sailboat).
27* GoodCannotComprehendEvil: At one point Mrs. Claus implores Prune to ThinkOfTheChildren and abandon his evil plot. She has apparently forgotten that, not sixty seconds earlier, Prune had stated in no uncertain terms that he is a ChildHater whose explicit goal is to make the children of the world unhappy.
28* HardWorkMontage: Whipple, Santa and his Mother help to clean and decorate Prune's dusty old house at the end, with "We Wish You A Merry Christmas" accompanying.
29* HaveAGayOldTime: One song wonders 'why can't every day be gay?'
30* HeelFaceTurn: Prune has a change of heart at the end when Santa's elves finally find the letter that Prune sent to Santa as a kid, allowing Santa to give Prune the toy sailboat he asked for all those years ago. This is hammered home when he gives it to a little boy at the VERY end!
31* HeroicBystander: When Prune tries to blow Santa up with a stick of dynamite, a random boy in a tweed coat stops him before he can light the fuse.
32* HollywoodLaw:
33** Under international law, no nation owns the North Pole (several nations have claimed it for themselves, but these claims are not legally recognized by the international community) so Mr. Whipple could have made a valid case that whoever Mr. Prune bought the North Pole from never owned it in the first place, making his status as Santa's landlord legally void.
34** Also, because Santa has lived continuously on the property for centuries, he may have a right of adverse possession ("squatters rights") that would limit the right to evict him. At the very least, Mr. Whipple should have filed for a preliminary injunction against eviction until these questions were settled.
35** Generally, owning a piece of property does not grant a person any rights over the possessions that a tenant living in that property might bring there. A landlord evicting a renter who fails to pay the rent can lay claim to any items left behind after the leave-by date, or possibly make an arrangement to claim some of the renter's possessions in lieu of cash, but cannot arbitrarily seize the personal possessions of the people being evicted. As such, Mr. Prune might have a claim to evict Santa if he can get through the other legal points, but he would not have the right to take away the reindeer, sleigh, and whatever items Santa could load into it when moving out.
36** On top of that, Prune exerts his questionable authority on what Santa can do with his own belongings BEFORE the rent is due. In many jurisdictions this is tantamount to Breach Of Contract and Prune would have thus voided his own (already tenuous) landlord rights.
37%% HypercompetentSidekick: Blossom views himself as one to Prune.
38* HypocriticalHumor: In the soundtrack-only song "Kids Get All the Breaks," Prune complains that kids are {{spoiled brat}}s and sings "Why will no one spoil me too?" Prune is a very rich man with a butler who is completely devoted to him. If he wants to be spoiled, he doesn't have to look very hard.
39* TheIdealistWasRight: When Prune asks Santa why he gives out presents, Santa explains that not only is it because GoodFeelsGood, but also that those he gives to learn the value of giving themselves. Later, during the film's DarkestHour, when the children learn about Santa's problem, they all join together in giving their money to Santa, as thanks for all he has done for them, allowing Santa to pay Prune's rent in time.
40* IronicEcho: Prune, after his HeelFaceTurn, reprises "Why Can't Every Day Be Christmas?" originally sung by Whipple in the department store.
41* TheKenBurnsEffect: The montage of Santa delivering toys is accomplished by panning and zooming over still shots.
42%% LargeHam: Prune, who embraces every evil villain stereotype with gusto.
43* MakingASpectacleOfYourself: Prune sports a rather steampunkish pair of goggles when he visits Santa at the department store.
44* ManChild:
45** Prune exhibits this, even before rediscovering his forgotten childhood. He's extremely petty in his actions and outlook, even breaking toys and blaming it on Santa so the rent money all goes to repairs, and fusses like a little boy when Blossom tries to give him his "soothing tonic".
46** Though he's at least more emotionally mature than Prune, Sam Whipple is still quite childish, still believes in Santa even as an adult, and gets really into playing with the toys at Prim's department store.
47** Santa himself is rather childish. Sam isn’t the only one playing with those toys when he’s supposed to be working.
48* MrsClaus: Referred as "Mrs. Santa" in the film and posters, she's one of the main characters and is seen reading a Christmas letter Prune sent to Santa as a child wishing for a sailboat.
49* NeverHadToys: Implied. Although it's never specifically stated that Mr. Prune had ''no'' toys as a kid, he did [[FaceHeelTurn turn evil]] after an incident where Santa Claus failed to bring Prune a toy sailboat one Christmas when Prune was a kid. It was the only thing that Prune asked for that year. Prune is shown to [[ChildHater despise children]] because their parents pile so much love on them. (This is made especially clear in his VillainSong, "Kids Get All the Breaks," which was only featured on the soundtrack, and not in the movie.)
50* NoSongForTheWicked: Downplayed. Prune has a VillainSong, "Kids Get All the Breaks," but only on the soundtrack. In the actual movie, he does not sing until [[spoiler:after his HeelFaceTurn, upon which he sings a joyful song about how it's good to be kind]].
51* NothingPersonal: Prune may be trying to evict Santa and ruin Christmas, but he has nothing against Santa--it's the children that he hates.
52* OffscreenTeleportation: Prune somehow makes his way ''to the North Pole'', ''every night'', just to demand the rent money from the Clauses. (The movie implies that he simply walks there!) He even times his visits to coincide with their suppertime, [[ForTheEvulz just so he can spoil their dinner]].
53* ThePiratesWhoDontDoAnything: Mr Whipple claims to be a good lawyer, but his lawyer skills basically have no bearing on the plot or its resolution. He does exactly one lawyer-like thing in the entire movie: delivering an impassioned opening statement... to Santa and his elves. Aside from this -- and one occasion when he points out that Mr. Prune still has to pay him and Santa their wages from the department store even if he fires them, which in fairness is something Santa may not have known -- he never acts like a lawyer at all. On the one occasion when you might expect his lawyering skills to be deployed, namely to find a loophole in Santa's tenancy agreement during the scene where he first confronts Prune, all he does is goad and insult Prune. He doesn't even bill his clients who owe him money.
54-->'''[[Series/MysteryScienceTheater3000 Tom Servo:]]''' A lawyer who forgets to send out bills? [[ArbitrarySkepticism This movie just became unrealistic]].
55* RhymesOnADime: The rhymes during the song "The Name of the Song is Prune," are all fairly natural, but have ''nothing'' to do with Prune himself and [[ThatRemindsMeOfASong exist solely to fill out the melody]]. This is directly noted in the chorus.
56%% ServileSnarker: Blossom, Prune's butler.
57* ShoutOut:
58** In a blink-and-you'll-miss-it line in the department store, Mr. Prim makes a comment about "Mr. Macy" - a reference to Macy's Department Store and likely to ''Film/MiracleOnThirtyFourthStreet'', which also happens to involve Santa working at a department store and getting into legal trouble.
59** When Santa and crew show up in Prune's house and accidentally wake him up, his first reaction is to scream that [[Literature/AChristmasCarol three ghosts have come to haunt him]].
60* SpaceCompression: Could be just a matter of editing, but Mr. Whipple's office seems to be just across the street from Prune's BigFancyHouse.
61* StillBelievesInSanta: Sam Whipple is a rather childish man. One of the ways this is shown is that he explicitly still believes in Santa.
62* SycophanticServant: Blossom again, who's way into Prune's plans to stop Christmas. The only reason he begins showing kindness to everyone at the end seems to be because of his boss's sudden change of heart.
63%% TimeCompressionMontage: When Santa finally gets to deliver his gifts, after a reprise of "I've Got A Date With Santa."
64%% TriumphantReprise: There is one in the [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eINEr5dqTAE soundtrack]].
65* VillainousBreakdown: Near the end when Santa finally turns in the rent money, Prune is so beside himself, he can't even bring himself to stop Santa, Mrs. Santa and the elves from loading the sleigh up (or to take the money with him, for that matter)! Of course, the fact that Santa paid him in coins didn't help, plus he did say that he didn't actually care about the money.
66* VillainSong: [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2GSKEAjG2R4 'Kids Get All the Breaks']] from the soundtrack. In it, Prune explains that he is a ChildHater because he believes all kids are {{Spoiled Brat}}s who get more love and affection than they deserve.
67* TheVillainSucksSong: "The Name of the Song is Prune"...in theory, anyway. It doesn't actually say anything about Prune himself and is just a melody that arbitrarily spouts off words that rhyme with prune.
68* VoodooShark: Whipple doesn't just pay the rent himself because he's behind on sending bills to his clients and so has little cash in hand. He then spends a month working in a toyshop instead of just mailing those bills.

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