Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Funny / AChristmasCarol

Go To

1!!Works with their own pages
2* Funny/Scrooge1951
3* Funny/Scrooge1970
4* Funny/AChristmasCarol1984
5* Funny/AChristmasCarol1999
6* Funny/AChristmasCarol2009
7* Funny/AChristmasCarolTheMusical
8* Funny/MickeysChristmasCarol
9* Funny/TheMuppetChristmasCarol
10* Funny/ScroogeAChristmasCarol
11
12!!The novel
13* The opening narration describes Marley as "dead as a doornail" and [[OverlyLongGag goes off on a tangent]], musing about the validity of the phrase, since, if a nail is to be the object, surely a ''coffin'' nail would be a better symbol for death, before giving up and conceding that the phrase has probably stood the test of time for a reason and shouldn't be questioned.
14-->"But the wisdom of our ancestors is in the simile; and my unhallowed hands shall not disturb it, [[SeriousBusiness or the Country's done for.]]"
15* Fred inviting Scrooge to Christmas Dinner: "Scrooge said that he would see him–Yes, indeed he did. He went the whole length of the expression, and said that he would see him in [[NarrativeProfanityFilter that extremity]] first."
16* Fred wishing Scrooge a Merry Christmas ''and'' a Happy New Year presses his BerserkButton.
17-->'''Scrooge''': [[PunctuatedForEmphasis GOOD! AFTER! NOON!]]
18* Scrooge's house is described as looking so out-of-place it's like it was playing hide-and-seek, got lost, and decided to stay there.
19* The famous "there's more gravy than grave about you" line in reference to Scrooge thinking Marley is an AcidRefluxNightmare.
20* Upon seeing Marley's ghost and how it's transparent, Scrooge thinks how he'd always heard Marley had no bowels but never believed it until now.
21* Marley's ghost tells Scrooge that he has sat, unseen, beside him many times. When Scrooge is understandably creeped out by this, Marley responds, "That is no ''light'' part of my penance." Disturbing as Scrooge finds the idea, it's no picnic for the ghost either.
22* At one point Marley howls so loudly the narrator says the Ward would be justified in indicting him for noise.
23* When Scrooge learns he's going to be visited by three spirits, he's very averse to the idea: "I'd rather not." And when Marley tells him when to expect the ''first'' ghost, "Couldn't I take 'em all at once, and have it over with?"
24* Unintentional, but the mention of "an ass laden with wood" (as in a donkey carrying firewood) will probably leave you snickering.
25* The blind-man’s buff game at Fred's Christmas party. Fred's friend Topper is playing with a rigged blindfold, and refuses to chase after anyone except Fred's sister-in-law, with whom he has been flirting all evening. The narrator scolds Topper for his behavior in a ''very'' tongue-in-cheek way.
26-->...his conduct...was vile, monstrous! No doubt [the sister-in-law] told him her opinion of it, when, another blind-man being in office, they were so very confidential together, behind the curtains.
27* In a CrossesTheLineTwice kind of way, the fact that Scrooge's maid stole Scrooge's bed-curtains, sheets, and his shirt. ''While he's still lying there, dead''.
28* A bit of Fridge Humor: the charwoman steals Scrooge's silk shirt, declaring that "somebody was fool enough" to try and bury Scrooge in it. The undertaker's man is sitting ''right there.'' It was probably him.
29* The BlackComedy of the moment wherein a pair of Scrooge's debtors fully comprehend their old landlord is dead... [[AndThereWasMuchRejoicing and share a relieved embrace]].
30* Scrooge talking to the young boy after his HeelFaceTurn.
31--> '''Scrooge:''' Come back ''with'' the man, and I'll give you a shilling!\
32''[the young boy looks up in shock]''\
33'''Scrooge:''' Come back in less than five minutes and I'll give you Half a Crown![[note]]A crown is five shillings (one-fourth of a pound which was worth about $85 at the time), so he's offering 2 1/2 shillings -- a bit over ten dollars.[[/note]]\
34''[the boy takes off like a rocket]''
35** What's really funny is that all the dialogue makes it clear the boy thinks Scrooge is 100% out of his gourd. Of course, the boy's opinion of Scrooge's insanity ends the moment he's offered money, at which point it's easy to imagine the poulterer will think the kid is nuts.
36* Scrooge trolling Bob Cratchit after his HeelFaceTurn, which many actors have had a lot of fun with. Once Scrooge switches to SincerityMode, Cratchit's reaction is to start to calculate if he could move fast enough to reach the [[ImprovisedWeapon ruler]] and if he would be able to restrain his boss until someone can bring him a straitjacket.
37
38!!Adaptations
39* Seymour Hicks' 1935 version has Jacob Marley be invisible, which results in him talking and reacting to nothing.
40** In a HilariousInHindsight case, Marley is voiced by [[Film/TheInvisibleMan1933 Claude Rains]]. Apparently he's good at playing invisible characters.
41* The [[Film/AChristmasCarol1938 1938 film]] starring Reginald Owen has Scrooge call the night watchman on Jacob Marley's ghost, to no avail, as he disappears before they arrive. The watchman jokes about alcoholic spirits, and immediately after the police leave Marley reappears.
42* The 1949 version, narrated by Creator/VincentPrice, has Jacob Marley bang on Scrooge's door to get his attention before [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9YVTdwrVd00&t=6m33s crashing through it like the Kool-Aid Man]].
43* The 1954 "Shower of Stars" version gives Scrooge a huge prosthetic nose, which looks hilarious, especially from a side view.
44* In "Ms. Scrooge", the boy recruited on Christmas morning is entrusted with fifty dollars. He is astonished.
45-->'''Boy:''' Can I get that in writing?
46* Dean Jones' ''Scrooge and Marley'' is unintentionally funny at times from overacting and heavy-handedness, but an intentionally funny moment happens early on when Marley dies by choking on his soup and drowning in the bowl. Scrooge lifts his head up to confirm he's dead, immediately plops it back into the bowl, then yells at the undertaker for scraping the coffin against the wall. For added funny points, the coffin has a "Fragile" sign on it.
47** Scrooge and Marley are lawyers in this version. Marley's afterlife is spent chasing an ambulance, but he says the worst part is when he catches it, turning to show Scrooge tire tracks on his back.
48* Stage versions that keep Scrooge threatening to invoke an AcidRefluxNightmare by swallowing a toothpick sometimes change the offending object, ranging from a match to a speck of dust to [[MasochistsMeal the lumps in Scrooge's gruel]].
49* The made-for-TV movie ''Karroll's Christmas'' is predicated on the ghosts seemingly visiting the wrong house, haunting greeting card writer Allen Karroll instead of skinflint Zebediah [[SignificantAnagram Rosecog]]. When he wakes up from the visits, Allen [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7MVra6ZTIe4&t=3456s wonders]] what day it is and sees what appears to be an Easter commercial on TV and starts freaking out that he was asleep for three whole months.

Top