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Dr. Seuss' How The Grinch Stole Christmas (also known as The Grinch in the UK) is a 2000 holiday comedy drama fantasy musical film directed by Ron Howard and written by Jeffrey Price and Peter S. Seaman, based on the 1957 children's book by Dr. Seuss called How the Grinch Stole Christmas!

The film was released by Universal Pictures and Imagine Entertainment on Friday 17 November 2000. It was the first Dr. Seuss book to be adapted into a full-length feature film.

Because the film is based on a children's book many additions were made to the storyline to bring it up to feature-length including some information about the backstory of the title character and reworking the story's minor character the Grinch as a main character.

Most of the rhymes that were used in the book were also used in the film, though some of the lines were to some degree changed, and several new rhymes were put in.

The film also borrowed some music and character elements (such as the Grinch's green skin tone) that originated in the 1966 animated television holiday special, How the Grinch Stole Christmas!

The film was produced by Howard and Brian Grazer, and starring Jim Carrey, Jeffrey Tambor, Christine Baranski, Bill Irwin, Molly Shannon, Josh Ryan Evans (in his final theatrical role), and introducing Taylor Momsen as Cindy Lou Who.

The film received mixed reviews from critics but was a box office success, spending four weeks at #1 in the United States and grossing $260 million in the United States and over $345 million worldwide, becoming the second highest-grossing holiday film of all time, with Home Alone being the first.

It won the Academy Award for Best Makeup and was also nominated for Best Art Direction and Best Costume Design.

The Story follows the Grinch, a bad-tempered green monster attempting to steal every Christmas presents from the whos down in whoville until a little girl named Cindy Lou Who sees the good in him and sets out to reform him.

Plot[]

The people in Whoville enjoy celebrating Christmas with much happiness and joy, except the Grinch, who hatefully resents Christmas and the Whos.

He occasionally pulls dangerous and harmful practical jokes on them with vengeance. As a result, no one likes or cares for the Grinch. Meanwhile, a 6-year-old girl named Cindy Lou thinks that everyone is missing the point about Christmas by being more concerned about the gifts and festivities.

After her two brothers are scared off by the Grinch when they trespass on his domain, and she herself has a face-to-face encounter with the Grinch at the post office which he reluctantly saves her life and Cindy Lou becomes interested in his history. She then asks everyone what they know about him and soon discovers that he has a tragic past.

The Grinch arrived in Whoville when he was a baby and was adopted by two elderly women. Although he showed some sadistic tendencies as a child, he was rather timid and not cruel as he would become.

He was bullied by his classmates (particularly by Augustus May Who, who grew up to be Mayor of Whoville) because of his appearance, with the exception of Martha May Whovier, whom both the Grinch and Augustus had feeling for.

One Christmas season, when he was eight, the Grinch made a gift for Martha but attempted to shave his face after being made fun of for having a "beard," cutting himself by accident. When his classmates saw his face covered with shaving tape the next morning, led by Augustus, they ridiculed him calling him a "hack job" due to the Grinch unintentionally cutting himself in the process.

He lost his temper, trashed the classroom, and ran away to live on Mount Crumpit, a mountain north of Whoville.

Cindy Lou, touched by this story, decides to make the Grinch the main participant of the Whobilation, much to the great displeasure of Mayor May Who, who reluctantly agrees after pressure from the townspeople, who have been warmed by Cindy Lou's generous spirit.

When Cindy Lou goes to Mount Crumpit and offers an invitation to the Grinch, he turns her down. He gradually changes his mind due to the promise of an award, the presence of Martha at the celebration and the chance to upset the Mayor.

Just as the Grinch is enjoying himself, Mayor May Who gives him an electric shaver as a present, reminding him of his awful humiliation at school. Augustus then asks Martha to marry him, promising her a new car in return.

In response, the Grinch berates the Whos, and criticizes Christmas, claiming that the holiday is only about gifts that they will just dispose of later, in the hopes of making them too ashamed to celebrate the holiday.

The Grinch then goes on to ruin the party by burning the Christmas tree with a makeshift flamethrower, but his actions prove to be fruitless as the Whos have a spare tree which the Grinch sees them erect before he leaves. Mayor May Who then harshly scolds Cindy Lou for inviting the Grinch, making her feel ashamed.

The Grinch, knowing that his attack has failed to remove the Whos' Christmas spirit, instead concocts a plan to steal all of their presents while they are sleeping.

Creating a Santa suit and sleigh with his own dog Max as a "reindeer", the Grinch arrives at Whoville, stealing all of the Whos' Christmas gifts. He is almost discovered by Cindy Lou but lies to her in order to get away.

On Christmas morning, the Whos discover the Grinch's scheme, and the Mayor blames Cindy Lou for the whole disaster. However, her father, Lou Lou Who, the Whoville postmaster, finally stands up to the Mayor, having had enough of his attitude, and reminds everyone they still have the Christmas Spirit — the one thing that doesn't come from a store — and that the true meaning of Christmas is spending it with family and friends, and not about the gifts, the contests or the fancy lights.

The people accept his words and begin to sing. Hoping that the change of mood would inspire the Grinch, Cindy Lou goes to Mount Crumpit to find him.

The Grinch reveals that he intends to push the stolen gifts off the top of the mountain after he hears the Whos crying. However, instead of crying, he hears the joyful singing of the Whos.

Infuriated over the failure of his plan, the Grinch has an epiphany about what Christmas is really about: not material gifts, but spending time with loved ones, an insight that profoundly touches him, and causes his heart to grow to three times its original size.

When the sleigh full of stolen gifts begins to go over the edge of the cliff, the Grinch desperately tries to save them to no avail.

However, when he realizes that Cindy Lou has come to wish him a merry Christmas and is in danger of falling off the cliff with the sleigh, the Grinch finds enough strength to lift the sleigh, the gifts and Cindy Lou to safety.

After a long descent down Mount Crumpit, the Grinch returns to Whoville with Max, Cindy and the gifts. He confesses to the burglary, tearfully apologizes for his actions towards the Whos and surrenders himself to the police as they arrive, but the Whos reconcile with him, much to Mayor May Who's dismay.

Martha turns down Augustus' proposal and decides she would rather stay with the Grinch instead. The reformed Grinch (along with Max) begins a new life with the Whos, commemorating the Christmas feast with them in his cave.

Cast[]

  • Jim Carrey as The Grinch, a bad-tempered, devious and misanthropic, green-furred creature who despises Christmas and the Whos of Whoville. It is revealed in his origin story that he started to hate Christmas after his school classmates mocked him for trying to shave his face. Jack Nicholson, Robin Williams, Dustin Hoffman, Tom Hanks, Tim Curry, Eddie Murphy, and Adam Sandler were all considered for The Grinch before Carrey was cast.
  • Christine Baranski as Martha May Whovier, the Grinch's lifelong crush, and the romantic interest of Mayor Augustus Maywho.
  • Taylor Momsen as Cindy Lou Who, a kind young Who girl who thinks that the Christmas spirit in Whoville is lost and is one of the only people to see past the Grinch's nasty behavior. In the film, she is 6 years old whereas in the book in 1957 and the TV special in 1966 she is "no more than 2".
  • Molly Shannon as Betty Lou Who, Cindy's mother and Martha's rival in a house-lighting contest.
  • Bill Irwin as Lou Lou Who, the cheerful and slightly dimwitted postmaster of Whoville, as well as Cindy's father.
  • Jeffrey Tambor as Mayor Augustus May Who, Whoville's arrogant and judgmental mayor. He is revealed to be a school bully who picked on the young Grinch over his shaved face, which is what motivated the Grinch to hate Christmas in the first place.
  • Ben Bookbinder as 8-year-old Augustus May Who; he tormented the young Grinch, which motivated the Grinch to hate Christmas.
  • Clint Howard as Whobris, Mayor May Who's Assistant
  • Josh Ryan Evans as The Grinch at 8-years-old; his humiliation at school by Augustus May Who is what drives him into a hatred of Christmas.

Production[]

On September 26, 1999, it was announced that Ron Howard would direct and produce a 2000 American fantasy comedy Christmas film titled How the Grinch Stole Christmas or Dr. Seuss' How the Grinch Stole Christmas (promoted theatrically as The Grinch) with Brian Grazer and also with the budget of $123 million based on the 1957 story of the same name by Dr. Seuss which would be released in cinemas on November 17, 2000. Jeffrey Price and Peter S. Seaman would write the film. It was also announced that the film would star Jim Carrey (who plays the title character), Josh Ryan Evans, Taylor Momsen, Jeffrey Tambor, Ben Bookbinder, Christine Baranski, Landry Allbright, Bill Irwin, Molly Shannon, Frank Welker, Clint Howard, Reid Kirchenbauer, Mindy Sterling, Bryce Dallas Howard, Jim Meskimen, Jeremy Howard, Kelley and T. J. Thyne with narration by Anthony Hopkins. Universal Pictures acquired distribution rights to the film. James Horner would compose the music for the movie. Imagine Entertainment co-produced the film.

Reception[]

Critical reception[]

Rotten Tomatoes gave the film with a rating 53%, with the critical consensus reading, "Jim Carrey shines as the Grinch. Unfortunately, it's not enough to save this movie. You'd be better off watching the TV cartoon." On Metacritic, the film has a score of 46 out of 100, based on 29 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews." Roger Ebert criticized the film, referring it as "a dank, eerie, weird movie about a sour creature who lives on top of a mountain of garbage, scares children, is mean to his dog, and steals everyone's Christmas presents," and saying, "There should be...a jollier production design and a brighter look overall... It's just not much fun."

The movie was influential enough for Universal Parks and Resorts to create versions of Whoville (one at Suess Landing at IOA, and the other in USH). Here, you can say hi to the Grinch and the Whos and get your picture taken with them. Even foods from the movie are available for consumption in these areas, such as Who Hash and Roast Beast.

Box office[]

Dr. Seuss' How the Grinch Stole Christmas opened at number-one with a weekend gross of $55,082,230, for an average of $17,615 from 3,127 theaters and staying at #1 for a total of 4 weeks. It closed on April 30, 2001, after five months, with a final gross of $260,044,825 in the United States and Canada and an additional gross of $85,096,578 in other territories, for a total worldwide gross of $345,141,403.

Awards[]

The film garnered three Academy Award nominations, including Best Costume Design (Rita Ryack) and Best Art Direction (Michael Corenblith and Merideth Boswell), and nominees Rick Baker and Gail Rowell-Ryan won the Academy Award for Best Makeup. At the Golden Globes, Carrey was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy, losing the award to George Clooney for O Brother, Where Art Thou?. The film won a Saturn Award for Best Music. However, it was also nominated for two 2000 Golden Raspberry Awards for Worst Remake or Sequel and Worst Screenplay, but lost to Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2 and Battlefield Earth respectively.

Home media[]

The film was released on VHS and DVD on November 20, 2001. A Blu-ray/DVD combo pack was released on October 13, 2009.

Quotes[]

(Opening lines)[]

Inside a snowflake like the one on your sleeve, there happened a story you must see to believe.

(Final lines)[]

Yeah. There's nothing like the holidays. Who wants the gizzard? I do. Too late. That'll be fine.

Crazy Credits[]

  • Near the end of the Imagine Entertainment logo, snow begins to fall, the snow continues to fall even after the words "Imagine Entertainment" fade away.
  • The superimposed opening credits is colored red and green, to both represent The Grinch & his heart and the main colors of Christmas.

Animated Adoptions[]

Universal Pictures and Illumination Entertainment have announced they are working on a computer-animated remake of the film. Peter Candeland is set to direct, following the remake to The Cat in the Hat, with Illumination CEO Chris Meledandri producing and Audrey Geisel, widow of Dr. Seuss author Theodor Geisel, will executive produce. It was released on November 9, 2018.

Extended edition[]

The TV airings, first aired on ABC on November 25, 2004, added in the following scenes that weren't featured in the theatrical/home media releases (some of these do not appear in NBC, FX and Freeform's airings):

  • Lou maxing out a credit card in one of the stores.
  • Lou talking with Cindy Lou before heading to the post office.
  • An extended scene of Lou sending out three more packages at the post office.
  • A parent-teacher conference where Betty and Lou discuss Cindy Lou's report on the Grinch.
  • Augustus asking out Martha while she decorates her house.
  • The Grinch sitting on a swing in his cave.
  • An extended sequence of the Grinch trying to scare Cindy Lou.
  • The lighting contest between Martha and Betty.
  • Martha winning the lighting contest.
  • The Grinch trying to decide on an outfit to wear to the Whobilation.
  • The Grinch breaking Whoville's eggnog record during Whobilation.
  • The entirety of the present pass-it-on sequence.
  • Dru and Stu getting ready for bed.
  • Betty wrapping presents in frustration.

Cultural References:

Thomas and the Magic Railroad: Lady’s train whistle is heard when Cindy Lou Who nearly gets smashed by a stamping tool. To point out the fact that Thomas and the Magic Railroad and How The Grinch Stole Christmas were both released in 2000.

The Wizard Of Oz: The Grinch sings the word “There’s no place like home” similar to the word that Dorothy Gale says.

Scream: The Grinch on tape’s voice “I’ll hunt you down and gut you like a fish!” was referenced.

Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer: The Grinch calls Max Rudolph.

The Mask: Jim Carrey plays a character wearing a green mask.

See also[]

Movies
How The Grinch Stole Christmas!

How The Grinch Stole Christmas!

CatinthehatMoviePoster

The Cat in The Hat

Horton Hears a Who!

Horton Hears a Who!

The Lorax

The Lorax

The Grinch

The Grinch

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