For a generation of radio fans,
Lionel Barrymore was the definitive Ebeneezer Scrooge. Alas,
Barrymore was crippled by arthritis by the time MGM got around to filming
Charles Dickens'
A Christmas Carol in 1938, so the Scrooge role went to contract player
Reginald Owen - who, though hardly in the
Barrymore league, does a splendid job.
Hugo Butler's screenplay must make some adjustments from the source material. The Ghost of Christmas Past, for example, is played not by a robust middle-aged man but by a beautiful young woman (
Ann Rutherford). Impeccably cast, the film includes such reliable character players as
Leo G. Carroll (Marley's Ghost),
Barry McKay (Scrooge's nephew Fred) and
Gene and
Kathleen Lockhart (Bob and Mrs. Cratchit). The
Lockhart's teenaged daughter
June makes her screen debut as one of the Cratchit children, while
Terry Kilburn is a fine, non-sentimental Tiny Tim. Commenably short for a major production (69 minutes), MGM's
Christmas Carol is one of the best adaptations of the oft-filmed Dickens Yuletide classic, and definitely on equal footing with the more famous 1951
Alastair Sim version. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide