* AlternativeCharacterInterpretation:
** When Scrooge excitedly greets Mrs. Dilber, and dances with her, is he showing the same giddiness he was showing to everyone, or was he being passive-aggressive to the woman he now knows would happily loot his corpse?
** One has to wonder how honest Belle was being when she leaves Scrooge in the past. She mentions that she's left dowerless by the death of her parents, but Scrooge ''hasn't'' broken it off with her. He actually tries to tell her that he would still love her - and maybe his desire for more money is motivated by the fact that she has no dowry - but she refuses to listen. Maybe her self-esteem is just so low that she has imagined that Scrooge feels this way.
** The junior novelization takes Scrooge's line about wishing to speak to his clerk as him wanting to reconnect with Dick Wilkins, says Ignorance and Want are ''his'' Ignorance and Want specifically, and heavily implies the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come nearly killed Scrooge as he fell into his grave.
* SugarWiki/AwesomeMusic:
** Andrea Bocelli has an [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Jg_-izIwxw incredibly epic version of "God Bless Us Everyone"]]. As well as nearly half the movie's soundtrack, especially during the aerial shots of the town.
** The part where the Ghost of Christmas Present takes Scrooge on an aerial tour of Victorian London makes the already magnificent sounds of ''Hark! The Herald Angels Sing'' sung by a full professional choir even more epic.
* BigLippedAlligatorMoment: The Ghost Of Christmas Future chasing Scrooge around on a black coach. While showing off some nifty 3D effects and being genuinely spooky (and giving Jim Carrey a chance to adlib), it doesn't advance the plotline and isn't from the book.
* CrossesTheLineTwice: Marley's jaw unhinging during his "Business" rant? Horrifying! Marley placing his hand under his chin and puppeteering his own mouth to finish his sentence? [[BlackComedy Hilarious!]]
* HarsherInHindsight: Knowing that Imagemover's [[WesternAnimation/MarsNeedsMoms next film]] would take the studio down with its failure makes the DVDCommentary for this film (which is 90 minutes of Robert Zemeckis singing MotionCapture's praises and talking about how it will evolve as a filmmaking medium) depressing to go back and listen to now.
* MagnificentBastard: The Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come is the shadow-like final spirit that haunts Ebenezer Scrooge into being a better man. Chasing Scrooge through the city with a demonic hearse and shrinking him to the size of a bug, the Ghost ushers Scrooge around to see the bleak future ahead of him and those around him if he continues to be a greedy human being. As the kicker, the Ghost forces Scrooge to bear witness to his own potential grave and tries to drag him down into his fiery coffin, giving Scrooge one last jolt of terror that ensures he becomes a more generous person.
* {{Narm}}: The slow way of speaking Christmas Past uses can start sounding ridiculous after too long.
* OlderThanTheyThink: A lot of people think that Creator/RobertZemeckis took a lot of liberties with the ghosts by showing them as a candlelight creature, a giant, and a shadow, but that's how they are described in the original book. Many live-action adaptations had to go with alternative appearances for practical reasons.
* SignatureScene:
** The horrifying appearance of Ignorance and Want and the demise of the Ghost of Christmas Present.
** The NightmareFuel BigLippedAlligatorMoment of Scrooge being chased by the the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come on a phantom hearse.
** The phenomenal scene of Scrooge being forced to bear witness to Bob's utter grief at losing his child, and knowing that it was ''his fault'' (albeit indirectly).
* {{Squick}}: When Marley says Scrooge has a ponderous chain, ghostly spittle flies out. His jaw dislocating and cracking is also hard to watch, especially when his tongue flops out.
* TheyChangedItNowItSucks: The part where Scrooge gets shrunk got a lot of criticism for not being in the book.
* SugarWiki/VisualEffectsOfAwesome: Even those who didn't like it as an adaptation praised the animation and 3-D effects.
* WhatDoYouMeanItsForKids: As a PG-rated Disney film, there are scenes that are especially freaky. Marley's ghost, the Ghost of Christmas Present's death, and Ignorance and Want are decidedly family-unfriendly, as is Christmas Yet To Come.
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