Deliver to Portugal
IFor best experience Get the App
Arthur Christmas
K**K
Good Family Fun
Our kids like this Christmas movie so much, they even ask to watch it when it's not Christmas time. There is a lot of humor, and it's a relief to find a movie these days that I can add to our Family Favorites because it is not trying to be politically correct or carrying a hidden message. Just plain FUN. Thank you!
H**R
When a 99.999999% Success Rate is Just Not Good Enough - a FUNNY Holiday Movie!
Santa is real! You knew it in your heart. He lives at the North Pole in an underground complex, the position of Santa being passed down from father to son. In the hallway is a long line of portraits, starting with "Santa Claus the First 295-369 AD", through a line including "Santa Claus the Thirteenth 1549-1634" and so on. The last portrait is of "Santa Claus the Twentieth 1941- _". It has no end date because he still holds the position.But this may be his last year. It's traditional to retire and pass the baton after 70 years. This Santa has two sons. The younger, Arthur, is adorable, happy and enthusiastic, but too bumbling to be trusted with anything other than answering Letters to Santa.The elder brother, Steve, has totally upgraded the Christmas Eve procedure. The sleigh and reindeer have been retired in favor of a giant airship with a cloaking device (whoo hoo!) and well-trained Field Elf Battalions. It is a wonderful imagining of how Santa delivers toys to every child in the world on a single night.But this Christmas Eve, after everyone is back to Mission Control and Operation Toy is "Mission Accomplished", an elf named Briony finds that one toy was missed. There's a child in Cornwall who will not have a gift from Santa! Arthur is beside himself, but Steve is firm. It's 5:10 am, and there's no way to get the toy in place before sunrise: "Arthur. Christmas is not a time for emotion. We will get 4 double 7 85BXK a present... in the window of Christmas. We'll messenger the item - it will be there in 5 days."This isn't good enough for Arthur. With his cantakerous GrandSanta (retired) they pull the sleigh out of mothballs and make sure Christmas comes true for every last child.This is a great Christmas story with your usual feel-good vibe and ending. Steve is not an evil bad guy, he is merely focused on his military-like procedures and his 99.999999% success rate for the year.There is so much humor in this movie. Such as when GrandSanta is not impressed with Steve's smugness: "Christmas 1941, WWII, I did the whole thing with six reindeer and a drunken elf."Meanwhile, Steve is checking his messages on his HO-HO (like a phone) such as this one:"You looked great today.Siri""Arthur Christmas" premiered in 2011, 97 minutes of animated fun. The voice acting is top of the line, with Hugh Laurie ("House") as Steve, James McAvoy as Arthur, Jim Broadbent as Santa and a cackling Bill Nighy as GrandSanta.The DVD is presented in 1.85:1 anamorphic widescreen and 5.1 Dolby Digital. You can listen to the movie, or watch with subtitles, in three languages: English, French or Spanish.The DVD also has 3 Special Features which are fun to watch.1. "Un-Wrapping Arthur Christmas" (13 minutes) Just about everyone involved as cast or crew has a say in this making-of featurette. Bill Nighy says, "It was one of the best scripts I've read for a long time."2. "Progressive Reels" (15 minutes total) This is a look at five different aspects of the movie. I particularly enjoyed the animation people taking us through the initial "Invasion Sequence", where we follow a troop of elves delivering toys. "The camera style in this sequence was heavily from the Cinéma Vérité, a run and gun style of filmmaking." What is was was just like an action movie.3. "Elf Recruitment Video" (1 minute) A cute trailer."They are the world's most elite team.On the SingleLargestCovert MissionEVER."Very recommended family Christmas movie!Happy Reader
S**R
Yes Gwen ... There Is A Santa Claus.
"Operation: Santa Claus Is Coming To Town"... Is beautifully directed by Sarah Smith. She spins out a whole new animated theme of the Christmas scene, headed-up at and coming out of the North Pole. What's first asked is: Just who is actually in charge up there? It would be either the current Santa Claus (Jim Broadbent), who comes down through the generations with each Claus portrait hung on the wall, or the up-and-coming, heir-apparent, eldest son, Steve (Hugh Laurie).While the current Santa (usually awaiting a nap) is more of a position-holder up-north, Steve is in complete control with a militarily disciplined style. With the elves, and everything that needs doing, he's hyped for "efficiency and productivity". The younger and kinder son, Arthur (James McAvoy), obviously operates from the heart. He's in charge of receiving all the letters to Santa and making sure the children are getting what they need; he believes that Santa is the "Greatest Man Ever".In a quaint town in England, little apple-cheeked Gwen slips her annual letter to Santa Claus into the post box with the highest of hopes. She begins an opening monologue asking a whole lot of questions about, and of, Santa Claus: "Why?"-this and "Why?"-that, including her doubts of whether or not he is even real. Her friend told her otherwise while Gwen... Still Believes!We see an entirely orchestrated Christmas Eve night enfold... Steve is at the helm and in the complete direction of all 'operations'. His father is Santa, and he's delivering the toys along with the new, high-tech elves ('1st. Field Elves Battalion'). Steve is choreographing everything behind the scenes, to the most minute of detail. Upon Santa's return to the North Pole, following so much action, the counts are tallied and everything stands as... "Mission Accomplished".This is with the one exception. We soon discover, after Santa's family finishes their Christmas meal around the table, that a child was forgotten. That child just happens to be Gwen. She didn't receive her toy and she is still fast asleep. Arthur is deeply disturbed by this, as he is the one who read her letter, and Santa's own father is also as upset with this situation. Wisecracking Grandsanta (Bill Nighy) is old-school and came before this new, ultra-controlled way of handling Christmas and handling the children. He may be a lot of things, although he genuinely cares and also for Arthur's position as the 'Number Two Son' in the family. He misses the old ways and traditions held throughout his own generation of being the Head Claus.Arthur and Grandsanta join forces and switch back to the old sleigh (endeared "Evie") and reindeer team in favor of this new, high-flying, techno-ride that Santa is using now. The two of them, along with an elf friend, take off to find the sleeping, and still believing, Gwen. The race is on...There is plenty to see in this film with the animation and picture quality vividly done. The Christmas Eve scene at the very beginning is Hyperactive; with the elves in unison performing their tasks, jumping off of suspended ropes that seemingly hang from the sky, skiing all over, and viewing through green-glowing, night vision goggles. The North Pole is so well represented by color, light and hustling and bustling everywhere. Even the dark blue night skies are blanketed in grand style, with a gorgeous mantle of shimmering stars. A truly happy Christmas movie that we enjoyed immensely! Merry Arthur Christmas...
N**G
Great film for kids.
Great for Xmas.
A**R
ARTHUR CHRISTMAS IN 3D [2011] [3D Blu-ray + 2D Blu-ray + ULTRAVIOLET]
ARTHUR CHRISTMAS IN 3D [2011] [3D Blu-ray + 2D Blu-ray + ULTRAVIOLET] Operation Santa Claus Is Coming To Town! Ever Wondered How 2 Billion Presents Get Delivered All In One Night! Supremely Clever Aardman Comedy!How can Santa deliver billions of presents to the whole world in just one night? With an army of one million combat-style Field Elves and a vast state-of-the-art control centre under the ice of the North Pole! So how could this incredible operation have missed one child? To Santa's young son Arthur Claus, it threatens to end the magic of Christmas. With retired Grand-santa, a rebellious young elf, an old sleigh and some untrained reindeer, together with Arthur Claus they set out on a crazy mission to deliver the last present! Deck the halls with excitement, fun and wonder in this new Christmas classic!Voice Cast: James McAvoy, Hugh Laurie, Bill Nighy, Jim Broadbent, Imelda Staunton, Ashley Jensen, Marc Wootton, Laura Linney, Eva Longoria, Ramona Marquez, Michael Palin, Sanjeev Bhaskar, Robbie Coltrane, Joan Cusack, Rhys Darby, Jane Horrocks, Iain McKee, Andy Serkis, Dominic West, Ryan Patrick Donahoe, Finlay Duff, Rich Hall, Clint Dyer, Donnie Long, Jerry Lambert, Deborah Findlay, David Schneider, Ian Ashpitel, Julia Davis, Kerry Shale, Tamsin Greig, Alistair McGowan, Brian Cummings (uncredited), Seeta Indrani (uncredited), David Menkin (uncredited) and Ryan Zamo (Promotion Elf (voice) uncredited)Director: Sarah SmithProducers: Carla Shelley, David Sproxton, Peter Lord and Steve PegramScreenplay: Peter Baynham and Sarah SmithComposer: Harry Gregson-WilliamsCinematography: Jericca ClelandVideo Resolution: 1080pAspect Ratio: 1.85:1Audio: English: 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio, Spanish: 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio, Hindi: 5.1, Catalan: 5.1 and English Audio Description ServiceSubtitles: English, English SDH, Hindi and SpanishRunning Time: 97 minutesRegion: All RegionsNumber of disc: 1Studio: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment / Aardman AnimationsAndrew's Blu-ray Review: Aardman Animations and the festive holidays have gone together for as long as most people can remember. And yet, the vast majority of holiday animation has been television specials, short films, and direct-to-video films. There has been no shortage of theatrical features that centres on Christmas, but they have overwhelmingly been live-action productions. In recent years, that seems to be changing. Last decade, two expensive Robert Zemeckis motion capture films `The Polar Express' [2004] and `A Christmas Carol' [2009] joined the previously pitiful ranks of `The Nutcracker Prince' [1990] and `Tim Burton's The Nightmare Before Christmas' [1993] But there is no doubt that `Arthur Christmas' [2011] a product of Sony Pictures Animation and Aardman Animations, fits the bill 100%.This computer-animated family film, Aardman Animations first since the underperforming `Flushed Away' [2006] and parting with DreamWorks, against some formidable fellow PG-rated competition in `The Muppets Movie' [2012] and `HUGO' [2011] as well as `Happy Feet Two' [2011]. ‘Arthur Christmas' settled for a fourth place debut. As an Aardman Animations film, ‘Arthur Christmas’ hailed from England and it performed better with us in the UK and certain other markets.As its title implies, `Arthur Christmas' is a fully-fledged Christmas animation film, immersed in the North Pole lore on which many modern celebrations focus. Arthur Claus [James McAvoy] is the son of the 20th and current Santa Claus, a man named Malcolm [Jim Broadbent] who has held the position for forty years. Arthur Claus's older brother Steven "Steve" Claus [Hugh Laurie], the efficient Mission Control supervisor who has white hair and a Christmas tree-shaped goatee, expects their father to hand over the reins this year, as their grandfather Grand-Santa [Bill Nighy] did back in 1941. Even ignoring seniority, there is no question as to who will inherit the job. Arthur's enthusiasm greatly exceeds his coordination. The elves talk about his clumsy ways behind his back. And he's been assigned to answering children's letters largely to get him out of the way of more pressing matters.The film opens on Christmas Eve and updates us on Santa's present-day delivery methods. You won't find Santa flying a sled pulled by eight reindeer anymore. Nowadays, Santa flies a massive aircraft, accompanied by dozens of elves who sneak inside houses and make necessary arrangements for the big guy with high-tech gadgetry and spy precision. All that Santa has to do is drop the right present under the tree and move on to the next chimney. The productiveness offers an explanation for the age-old question of how can one man gets to every child in the world in a single night.Wrapping up what appears to be another successful Christmas and Santa announces his intention to not retire, before taking to his room for his desperately needed rest. But, our hero, the colourfully-sweater Arthur Claus discovers one present has not been delivered: a bicycle intended for a girl named Gwen Hines, whose letter he has answered; in Trelew, Cornwall in the Southern part of England. Steve and Santa are ready to make peace with the oversight, accepting it as a statistically insignificant blemish on an otherwise perfectly executed holiday. But Arthur Claus isn't about to give up. He, the 136-year-old Grand-Santa, and a wrapping elf named Bryony [Ashley Jensen] trot out the old-fashioned sled affectionately called Evie and eight reindeer in an effort to make the delivery before little Gwen Hines [Ramona Marquez] can wake up to Christmas morning disappointment.The three unlikely companions do not have the best sense of direction and their mission becomes a wild international adventure with wrong stops made in the Sahara desert and a town in Mexico. Back at the North Pole, Steven "Steve" Claus, the elves, and Malcolm “Santa" Claus scramble to make things right while dealing with a computer system meltdown and antiquated communications methods.Aardman Animations hasn't had the volume of output to be recognised as one of animation's big animation producers, but creatively they have been quite extraordinary, as their perfect streak of overwhelming critical approval confirms. Their first eligible effort ‘Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit’ [2005] won the Best Animated Feature Oscar, an honour interestingly announced three months after ‘Chicken Run' [2000] started winning over critics and cinema audiences. With just four of their pictures qualified, Aardman Animations has as many wins in the category as Studio Ghibli and DreamWorks' ridiculously productive in-house division. True, Wallace's win came during PIXAR's last literally off year. But it was no fluke. The reason why we went five years without an Aardman Animations film was because this studio takes great pride in its work. They have each been technically artful, scripturally substantive, and is in my opinion, a very funny computer animation film.`Arthur Christmas' keeps the studio away from its painstaking signature stop-motion, but still manages to deliver in all the important ways. The film is extremely inspired visually and plenty taut in its structure. Neither of those facts would matter much if it wasn't anchored in appealing humour, genuine heart, and winning personalities, which, it is. Like PIXAR on their usual game, Aardman Animations makes it look so easy. Obviously, both studios pour considerable time, thought, and talent into their movies. Other animation houses don't have as much of that to go around or simply don't push themselves to excel. There's plenty of money to be made in "good enough" family entertainment, even when using that definition loosely. But that mentality clearly doesn't fly very often at PIXAR or Aardman Animations.While `Arthur Christmas' dazzled me consistently as does all the other brilliant Aardman Animations other features, and it is nonetheless a film full of joyous exuberance, lots of good ideas, and respect for its viewers. Santa and the North Pole are well-tread terrain that gives you a great deal of creative leeway. But director Sarah Smith and her co-writer Peter Baynham, both veterans of live-action British television comedy, seize opportunities to make this interpretation stand out. Santa himself does the least of any leading character, allowing the rarely regarded notion of the position's lineage to entertain us with distinctive past and potential occupants. There is little question of how things will turn out and no doubt about where our sympathies are towards. These thoughts rarely cross our minds, though, as breath-taking digital canvases, amusing action sequences, and smart jokes keep us engaged and smiling.Like virtually all of today's big budget feature animations, `Arthur Christmas' was made and theatrically exhibited in 3D, a fact that might very well have had a negative impact on its ticket sales. Though not reliant on in-your-face gimmickry, the film's sets and flying subjects do lend themselves to certain depth effects, no matter how trivial. That is something to consider as you decide which of the film's two physical media editions is right for you: the single-disc Blu-ray 3D, which you can either view in 3D or 2D images. Like most of Sony's newest releases, all Blu-ray discs come equipped with an UltraViolet copy, an increasingly studio-preferred alternative to digital copy files for device streaming and computer download.Blu-ray Video Quality – `Arthur Christmas' features a solid spectacular Blu-ray 3D image. The picture offers amazing good general depth and will truly leave viewers breathless with the scope of the 3D picture element. To be sure, that added depth benefits all of the big, sprawling S-1 interiors that will have you spouting "holy smokes" sort of eye-popping moment. The depth is totally brilliant, and portrays the ship's massive interior, that is totally eye popping insight for the viewer. The 3D effect works best in several scenes depicting the crowds of the thousands of elves. In such shots, the sense of space between them, even as they are bunched together and is very clear, and each one down the line from front to back takes on a very real, tangible shape. A few elements are also nice and shapely, such as the mailbox in which Gwen drops her letter to Santa at film's open. Otherwise, the 3D visuals are totally awesome and especially with the elves dropping down from the S-1 on a gift-giving mission look as if they're about to burst through the screen. On the other hand, the general picture images attributes also sparkle. The image carries over the same fantastic colour from the 2D on the Blu-ray disc, and there's no obvious drop in vibrancy from 2D to 3D. Details remain really sharp and very well defined, too. This is a fantastic awesome 3D image, and will have you saying, "WOW! What an amazing 3D image" and of course you have the choice of whether you want to watch it in either 3D or 2D, but my money is on the 3D version, as it really hits the nail on the head!Blu-ray Audio Quality – `Arthur Christmas' features a 5.1 DTS-HD Master Audio soundtrack that's up to the challenge of complimenting the film's rich visuals. The track excels in presenting everything with just the right sense of harmony and balance, creating a realistic atmosphere in every location. Whether the sense of cavernous space and the various beeps and bloops aboard the S-1 or the sounds of the sea, the African desert, or the barely audible early morning small town England effects, the Sony Pictures audio track, offers a totally precision listening experience, that shapes every single environmental dynamics, with the utmost accuracy. There's a nice sense of power and heftiness to the S-1 in exterior scenes, and some of the more action-oriented sound effects play very well, with natural spacing, great clarity, and faultless balance. Music, likewise, features the same characteristics, playing with natural spacing and fine clarity. Dialogue is crisp and faultlessly delivered, even finding just the right amount of space whether in intimate scenes or wider shots featuring the spoken word gently echoing through larger locales. This is a first-rate soundtrack that should please listeners of all ages.Blu-ray Special Features and Extras:Special Feature: The Christmas Family Tree [2011] [1080p] [10:10] Covers the film's characters with more crew and voice cast comments.Special Feature: Santa's Soldiers [2011] [1080p] [9:07] Applies the same treatment to the elves.Special Feature: Un-wrapping Arthur Christmas [2011] [1080p] [13:26] Is a standard promotional making-of documentary, relying heavily on film clips, recording studio-film split screens, and crew and voice cast members describing the film as if you haven't already seen it. It's better than nothing, but it's a lot less substantial than a companion to an Aardman Animations film should be.Special Feature: Behind-The-Scenes of "Santa Claus Is Comin' To Town" [2011] [1080p] [1:40] A behind the scenes short and lets Justin Bieber discuss the video obnoxiously and this is a totally miss, otherwise you will throw up. So get ready with the sick bag.Special Feature: "Santa Claus Is Comin' To Town" by Justin Beiber [2011] [1080p] [2:33] This Justin Bieber Music Video, is the audio version predominately played over the end credits. as they roll up the screen. Anyway the actual "Santa Claus Is Comin' to Town" Music Video, finds our obnoxious Justin Bieber singing in a toy factory and exposing a busy vest. Whatever possessed Sony Pictures to ever contemplate having this horrendous pubescent childlike person included in this Blu-ray, is beyond my comprehension?Special Feature: Progression Reels [2011] [1080p] [13:51] The filmmakers get all technical on how scenes were created. Adults will probably like this more than kids. It is informative on how much is involved in the different settings, costumes, and movements of the elves and even something as trivial as the hair of the characters. They go into more detail about Arthur’s office, the spectacle of Grand-Santa, the exciting invasion and much more.Special Feature: Elf Recruitment Video [2011] [1080p] [1:03] This merely promotes the film with clips and graphics. The animation film is of more ordinary trailers, including a teaser featuring unique animation of Arthur Claus addressing viewers, are unconscionably absent here.Finally, `Arthur Christmas' takes a stab at answering all of the usual Santa Claus questions, does Santa Claus exist, how does he deliver presents in record time, how does he keep it all organised, how many elves are there, what does he do when he retires, who takes over for him after all the years and approaches them all with resounding joy, visual delights, and heartfelt honesty. This is easily one of the best Christmas animation films of the decade, if not the very best, and certainly at the top amongst films of this magnitude, of such high quality animation and voice work. Aardman Animations goes straight to your heart, because there's a simple joy and pure honesty to `Arthur Christmas' that's totally unique to the animation film and also the embodiment of holiday cheer. Sony Pictures 2D Blu-ray presentation of `Arthur Christmas' delivers also an equally dazzling video image as well as amazing audio. Plus also some amazing supplements to keep you happy for hours. So all in all this is a must-own Christmas holiday package, that only Aardman Animations can produce. Sadly I never got to view it in the cinema, especially in 3D, but I am so very glad I waited for this brilliant 3D Blu-ray animation, as it really was well worth waiting for and has now gone pride of place in my ever increasing Aardman Animations Blu-ray Collection. Highly Recommended!Andrew C. Miller – Your Ultimate No.1 Film AficionadoLe Cinema ParadisoUnited Kingdom
K**R
A great family Christmas film
Lovely Christmas film that can be enjoyed by all ages, a real feel good factor, look forward to watching it with younger members of the family.
M**L
Gift
Kids couldn't get enough of it!
E**S
Ein phonetisches Gebirge auf flacher Story
Statt eines Weihnachtsmannes wird in dem Film gleich eine ganze Weihnachtsmanndynastie angeboten, warum dann nicht gleich die Partei der Weihnachtsmänner mit alljährlicher Wahl des Vorsitzenden? Das wäre so schön demokratisch. Aber na ja...Arthur, der Nachwuchsweihnachtsmann (oder sollte man JuWei sagen?) macht sich auf, ein vergessenes Geschenk noch an den Mann oder vielmehr das Kind zu bringen. Eigentlich eine prima Filmidee aber mit fürchterlicher Umsetzung. Die Weihnachtsmannwerkstätten wirken wie vom "Polarexpress" abgekupfert, nur noch lauter, schriller, gigantischer aber es fehlt der Mythos, das packend geheimnisvolle Wunderbare. Der Film drückt permanent aufs Tempo, was der hektisch furiose Klangteppich der Filmmusik noch unterstreichen soll. Schließlich ist man sehr schnell nur noch genervt. Da gibt es einfühlsamere Weihnachtsmänner, egal ob der im "Polarexpress", der Glöckchen verschenkt, die nur hören kann, wer an ihn glaubt oder der menschliche echte Mr. Kringel aus "Das Wunder von New York". Arthur gehört absolut nicht zu meinen Lieblingsweihnachtsmännern.
Trustpilot
1 week ago
4 days ago