We watch a LOT of Christmas-themed shows in my house.
The Grinch (original) - can't beat the combination of Chuck Jones, Dr. Seuss, and Boris Karloff. Didn't care for the Jim Carrey version.
Charlie Brown Christmas, Frosty, and Rudolph get a lot of rotation with my kids.
The Year Without a Santa Claus - pretty pedestrian Rankin-Bass stop-motion special, exceptional only for the genuinely bizarre characters of Heat Miser and Cold Miser and their catchy theme songs. Cold Miser was voiced by Dick Shawn, who also played the hippy-Adolph Hitler in the original film of "The Producers".
The 1951 Christmas Carol seems to be a favorite version for a lot of us - Sims was the BEST Scrooge, bar none. Alos cool to see a young Patrick MacNee as Jacob Marley, and Ernest Thesiger (Dr. Praetorius in "Bride of Frankenstein") as the undertaker. Really chilling, bleak visuals - the scenes with the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come are like something out of a Hammer horror film.
Blackadder's Christmas Carol - I love the Blackadder series.
Mister Magoo's Christmas Carol - a favorite of my childhood. Hard to find on DVD or VHS, but I think Amazon has it.
The Christmas Carol with George C. Scott is also pretty good and stays very close to the book. Scott's Scrooge is the most physically threatening and imposing Scrooge, I think.
An SCTV Christmas - The 2 SCTV Xmas specials, this just came out on DVD and I bought it yesterday, can't wait to see it. Include's Johnny LaRue's famous crane shot.
Lethal Weapon - First (only) Xmas movie with Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu fight scenes.
Love Actually - Very sweet-natured adult Xmas movie.
The Ref - I'm a big Dennis Leary fan, nice antidote to the sweetness and light overload of a lot of Xmas films.
Mr. Bean's Christmas - Goofy fun.
The Lord of the Rings - The movies were originally released at Xmas time, so I tend to associate these with the season. My son and I are going to take a Sunday and watch the extended version of all 3 back-to-back. How is it Christmas-themed? Well, according to the Middle-Earth calendar, the Fellowship sets out on its quest on December 25...
(I'm also reading Tolkien's "Letters from Father Christmas" to the kids as a bedtime story this year)
Some TV Xmas specials and shows, thanks to the wonder of DVD series sets:
"Amends" - the Xmas-themed Buffy the Vampire Slayer 4th season episode - a ghoulish cross of "It's a Wonderful Life" and "A Christmas Carol", as Angel is haunted by the shades of innocents he murdered through history (actually the work of a series villain who reappears in the 7th season story arc. The final scene is pretty touching.
"Midnight of the Century" - the 2nd season Xmas episode, with Darren McGavin as Frank Black's estranged father, and Frank seeing ghosts wandering the streets of Seattle. The flashbacks to Frank and his parents as a kid, his mother, and the ending, always gets to me.
The Simpsons Christmas Special - still a hoot.
Some that I saw as a kid but haven't seen in years:
The Waltons: The Homecoming - the series pilot was actually a made-for-TV Xmas movie - a lot bleaker view of the depression than the series had, I'd like to find a copy of this.
The House Without a Christmas Tree - A special with Henry Fonda that I enjoyed a lot.
A Christmas Memory - Based on part of Truman Capote's biography, another interesting, somewhat downbeat Christmas film.
My all-time favorite, that no one else has mentioned: The animated verison of "A Christmas Carol" directed by Richard Williams and produced by Chuck Jones for ABC in the 1970s. If you haven't seen this, please do yourslef a favor and buy it. It is, I think, one of the BEST animated features EVER made. Based on Victorian engravings, narrarated by Sir Michael Redgrave, with Alaistair Sims repeating his role as Scrooge and Michael Hornden repeating his role as Marley from the 1951 production, the swooping, detailed animation is nothing short of amazing, and this is one of the creepiest things ever animated. Try to find a copy of this!
"Flow with the Go."
- Rickson Gracie