Scrooged



"Frank Cross: I get it. You're here to show me my past, and I'm supposed to get all dully-eyed and mushy. Well, forget it, pal, you got the wrong guy! Ghost of Christmas Past: That's exactly what Attila the Hun said. But when he saw his mother... Niagara Falls."

Scrooged is a 1988 loose modern retelling of Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol, with the twist of taking place In a World where everyone's already familiar with Dickens' tale. Bill Murray stars as Frank Cross, a cynical, selfish TV executive who is planning a live adaptation of A Christmas Carol for a holiday special. Cross' own childhood memories of Christmas were less than fond, leaving him initially unable to appreciate the spirit of the season.

However things start to go downhill when his dead former boss smashes his way into his office to inform him that he is doomed unless he changes his ways. True to the source material he is visited by the three very strange Ghosts of Christmas Past, Present, and Future.

Intended to ride on Murray's earlier success in Ghostbusters, Scrooged contains many references to the earlier (if largely unrelated) film; one of the taglines was, "Bill Murray is back amongst the ghosts, only this time it's three on one."

It's also pretty damn funny, but we shouldn't need to tell you that, right?

"Frank: (thinks he sees a ghost) AH- HAAAAAAAAAAAAAaaaaaaa! Waiter: Oh no sir, that's the Baked Alaska, sir, that's a dessert."
 * An Asskicking Christmas / Badass Santa: Featured in The Night The Reindeer Died, one of the Films Within A Film during the movie. Apparently Santa is a very Jolly Burt Gummer.
 * It's a shame this wasn't made into a Real Life movie.
 * As Himself: Lee Majors manages to pull off a double decker. He's Lee Majors, playing Lee Majors in Scrooged, where he's starring as Lee Majors in The Night the Reindeer Died.
 * Robert Goulet, John Houseman, and Mary Lou Retton don't manage to get quite as meta with their appearances as themselves.
 * Bitch in Sheep's Clothing: Bryce Cummings (played by John Glover) seems really nice but is really gunning for Frank's job.
 * If anything, Bryce is just like Frank, but without the decency to be forthright and obvious about what a giant Jerkass he is.
 * Bland-Name Product: IBC, the network Frank runs, is directly poking fun at ABC. The promo for IBC's Scrooge says "Yule Love It"; ABC's promotional tagline for their shows in the 1985-1986 season (while the movie was being produced) was "You'll Love It".
 * Breaking the Fourth Wall: Frank at the end of the movie. On the one hand, he is in a TV studio, he is speaking into an In-Universe camera, and the closest thing to a physical fourth wall is far behind said camera, but on the other hand, he's talking to the Real Life movie audience as opposed to the In-Universe TV audience.
 * Brick Joke: The Network Censor getting hurt, see Butt Monkey below. However in the final scene it all comes to a head.
 * Butt Monkey: Elliot Loudermilk. Fired on Christmas Eve, sells blood for booze money (and the booze gets stolen by the Ghost of Christmas Past), and ends up . Also The Woobie.
 * The Standards and Practices lady gets hit by a lamppost, run over by a barrel and crushed by a set.
 * Cheek Copy
 * Chewing the Scenery: Frank Cross.

"Ghost of Christmas Present: Oh! What's this...it's a TOASTER! *SMACK*"
 * Closing Credits Cast Party
 * Completely Different Title: In order to play up the Ghostbusters angle, the Mexican title for this movie was "The Ghosts Strike Back."
 * Some dubs change the title to "The Ghosts Attack the Boss."
 * The German dub is titled a bit more creatively: "The Ghosts I Called."
 * Corrupt Corporate Executive
 * Cute Bruiser: The second ghost.

"Frank Cross: Now I have to kill all of you."
 * Cute Mute: Calvin (see Dumb Struck, below), who finds his voice near the end to remind the reformed Cross to say, "God bless us, everyone."
 * Darker and Edgier: Frank wants to replace the Christmas Carol ad campaign with one that features drug addiction, terrorist attacks, and the threat of nuclear war.
 * Defrosting The Ice King
 * Disproportionate Retribution: Frank's response to a Scrooge promo he deems not good. He may seem like he's exaggerating, but later we see him with a pistol shooting at the Ghost of Lew Hayward, makes us believe otherwise.

"Claire Phillips: Taxi! Can you get me to the IBC building in three minutes? Ghost of Christmas Past: Which floor?"
 * Double Standard Abuse (Female on Male): The Ghost of Christmas Present. Yikes.
 * The Driver / Drives Like Crazy: The first Ghost.

"Ghost of Christmas Past: Niagara Falls, "Frankie Angel.""
 * Drowning My Sorrows: Elliot tries to do this after losing his job, but a Roadside Wave wets the paper bag holding his booze and causes it to fall out. He tries again later, only for the Ghost of Christmas Past to drive by and steal his booze.
 * Dumb Struck: Calvin hadn't spoken since he saw his father murdered five years earlier.
 * Even Bad Men Love Their Mamas: Cross is driven to tears when he sees his mother in a vision of one of his first Christmases. The Ghost of Christmas Past had earlier mentioned even "Attila the Hun cried" when he saw his own mother.

"Frank Cross: You jerk! You moron! Why didn't you stay at Claire's? Why didn't you stay with Claire!? She would have taken care of you! You would have eaten and been warm! You might be alive! You'd be a prettier color, I'll tell you that!"
 * Even Evil Has Loved Ones: Frank genuinely does love his brother James. He's the only person aside from Claire that he isn't a flat-out jerk to.
 * Even Evil Has Standards: Though Frank is a self-centered creep, there were some redeeming factors to him prior to the climax. Before he sees the ghost of Christmas past, he dumps water on a waiter, thinking he was on fire.  Afterwards he makes some friends with the homeless people, even singing with them before the big "Bah Humbug parody." Lastly after seeing the Ghost of Christmas Present, he was devastated that one of the homeless men he met was found dead in the sewer he landed in. He even berates the guy for not staying at Operation Reachout where his ex-girlfriend Claire works.

"Poster in Frank's Office: "Cross: (n) a thing they nail people to.""
 * At one point he is surprised by the show's Ghost of Christmas Future coming out of the elevator, believing it to be the real one and immediately pushes Grace away in a very rough manner in a misguided attempt to save her from the ghost.
 * Expy
 * Ebenezer Scrooge - Frank Cross
 * Bob Cratchit - Grace Cooley
 * Tiny Tim - Calvin
 * Fred, (Scrooge's only nephew) - James (Frank's only brother)
 * Alice (Fred's skeptical wife) - Wendie (James's skeptical wife)
 * Jacob Marley - Lew Hayward
 * Family-Unfriendly Death: A lot, though the crowning example has to be Frank's vision of his own funeral by cremation - from inside the coffin.
 * Flipping the Bird: Frank does this to the old woman after stealing a ride from her.
 * Freudian Excuse: Frank apparently had it even worse than Ebenezer Scrooge. While Scrooge's father just sent him off to boarding school but eventually had a change of heart, Frank's father is shown as a callous, emotionally abusive man who never changes his ways, while his mother (while loving) is distant due to not wanting to stay in the house with her loveless husband, leaving him parked in front of the TV while she goes out.
 * Gatling Good: Lee Majors wields a minigun in The Night the Reindeer Died.
 * Genre Savvy: Frank knows the whole Scrooge thing, he has A Christmas Carol In Prose produced for TV right then. Not that his Genre Savviness helps him.
 * The Grinch: Frank, at first.
 * Groin Attack: "The Ballbreaker Suite", indeed.
 * Heel Face Turn
 * Hellevator: Frank meets the Ghost of Christmas Future here. At the bottom is the funeral noted up in Family-Unfriendly Death.
 * Hollywood Driving: The Ghost of Christmas Past takes it Up to Eleven, panicking Frank. In fact, while in the present, his taxi can hit other objects.
 * He responds to Claire's request to take her to the TV studio quickly with "Which floor?"
 * Improv: Half of Frank's lines; the entire closing sequence.
 * Invisible Holes: Frank's old boss, Lew Hayward.
 * Meaningful Name: Lampshaded.

"Stagehand: We've tried everything to glue these antlers on this little guy, but it just won't stick. Claire: Oh, what a cute little mouse! Frank: Have you thought about... staples!?"
 * Meet Cute: Gave rise to Frank's pet name, "Lumpy."
 * Moral Guardians: The Standards and Practices lady.
 * Murder by Cremation
 * Not My Driver: The Ghost of Christmas Past is a borderline psychotic taxi driver.
 * One-Scene Wonder: The Waiter; Christmas Future; the Antler guy; Frank's dead boss; the homeless gent.
 * Our Ghosts Are Different
 * Poke the Poodle: Most of what Frank does outside of canning Elliot, but especially:

"Frank Cross: "Listen, I know I haven't talked to you in... *checks watch* ...about 10 or 15 years, but...""
 * For some reason, Claire starts bitching out the stagehand even though he's just as horrified by the idea.
 * There's also a moment when his boss kicks his own cat.
 * Pun-Based Title
 * Roadside Wave: Elliot Loudermilk gets an impromptu bath, which simultaneously ruins the liquor he was hoping to drown his sorrows in.
 * Roaring Rampage of Revenge:
 * Setting Update
 * Show Within a Show: A TV production of A Christmas Carol is going on while Murray is meeting the ghosts.
 * Shout-Out: Murray shouts out "Feed me, Seymour!"'' in the Closing Credits Cast Party, to encourage the audience to respond to his hilariously over-the-top ad-libbing.
 * Smug Snake: Bryce Cummings, the slimy West-Coast producer called in to "assist" (read: take over from) Frank.
 * Turn the Other Cheek: Claire.
 * Unnecessary Time Precision: When Frank leaves a message for Claire.


 * Verbed Title
 * Wide-Eyed Idealist: Again, Claire.
 * Yet Another Christmas Carol