And to begin my brief reviews of Christmas specials, I think I'll go with the old classic that I watched the end of a few days ago, A Charlie Brown Christmas. Compared to later Peanuts specials, this one doesn't have all that much padding. If anything, it's too short. We never find out how the Christmas play went. I'm guessing not well, considering that all the kids wanted to do during rehearsals was dance to jazz music. And where is the penguin supposed to come in? Watching it reminds of how John Linnell from They Might Be Giants once talked about how the girl who played Sally was really young, and had a lot of trouble with her lines, which definitely shows.
A few other brief observations that I'm sure a lot of other people have already made:
- Sure, Charlie Brown picks out a lousy tree, but what do the other kids expect when nobody gives him any money?
- Why does Snoopy laugh like some kind of diseased mutant duck, and look about as much like a beagle as I do?
- Linus complains that he won't be able to memorize his lines, yet he's able to recite a fairly long passage from the Book of Luke entirely from memory.
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Date: 2007-12-02 03:04 pm (UTC)Also, I liked that they used younger kids. Because when they started to use older kids, it started to sound not-nearly-as-cute. Which was slightly depressing.
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Date: 2007-12-03 05:01 pm (UTC)Also, I liked that they used younger kids. Because when they started to use older kids, it started to sound not-nearly-as-cute. Which was slightly depressing.
Watching one Peanuts special after another can be really jarring because of how much the voices change. It's cool that they used younger kids at first, and most of them but Sally were pretty good with them anyway.