Watching A CHRISTMAS STORY (1983) for the First Time Ever // Nostalgia meter is full!!

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  • čas přidán 8. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 1K

  • @alanzlotkowski2695
    @alanzlotkowski2695 Před 3 lety +166

    The father's sheer joy at his son's surprise getting the BB gun is my favorite moment in this movie.

    • @gerry_atric
      @gerry_atric Před 3 lety +4

      I got a heartfelt rush at that great moment. I went rt back to my past in his vision and not a whole lot of entertainment out there has done that. It's really gotta be something special that makes it immediately personal.

    • @GrumpyOldGuyPlaysGames
      @GrumpyOldGuyPlaysGames Před 3 lety +10

      Its the line, "I got one when I was 8 years old..." that does it for me. There was never a chance Ralphie *wasnt* going to get that b-b gun.

    • @AuspexAO
      @AuspexAO Před 2 lety +18

      I know when I was a kid, I loved my dad but was also kinda scared of him (for no reason, he wasn't a mean or abusive man). I mostly talked to my mom during the day, so she would be the one who would "field" our Christmas toy requests. It always blew my mind how my dad would get us the presents my mom never would. Even when I believed in Santa, I somehow also knew my dad was behind certain gifts. They were always the coolest ones that really understood what I was into, and he was always overjoyed to watch me play with them.
      I think this show nails the relationship between Ralphie and his dad. It really gets me on a more emotional level as an adult.

    • @timroebuck3458
      @timroebuck3458 Před 2 lety +6

      Tough exterior and a soft heart.

    • @sirraf23
      @sirraf23 Před rokem +3

      I got a shotgun when I was 8 at Christmas and I was just as excited as Ralph. The only difference was I only got to use it while squirrel hunting with my dad.

  • @thegorn68
    @thegorn68 Před 3 lety +237

    Best line of the whole movie: "Randy laid there like a slug. It was his only defense." LOL!

    • @gawainethefirst
      @gawainethefirst Před 3 lety +6

      It always slays me.

    • @christhornycroft3686
      @christhornycroft3686 Před 3 lety +2

      What about the f dash dash dash word?

    • @WillsonT011
      @WillsonT011 Před 3 lety +2

      @@christhornycroft3686 fudge?

    • @Shr13k
      @Shr13k Před 3 lety +2

      THAT SON OF A BITCH, WOULD FREEZE UP IN THE MIDDLE OF SUMMER ON THE EQUATOR!!! That’s my vote for best line, but I do love the, “Randy lay there like a slug,” line too.

    • @styles9956
      @styles9956 Před 3 lety +1

      Yeah statue

  • @heidifedor
    @heidifedor Před 3 lety +86

    I begged my mother to take me to see in 83. She reluctantly took me to see it, because she thought she was going to hate it, but it ended up being her favorite movie of all time.

    • @greenmonsterprod
      @greenmonsterprod Před 2 lety +6

      My family have been Shep fans for decades. My brother Bri & I treated our Mom & Dad to a showing of this back when it was first released, and we all really enjoyed it.

  • @chrisg9196
    @chrisg9196 Před 3 lety +49

    My favorite line: "My father worked in profanity the way other artists might work in oils or clay. It was his true medium, a master."

  • @dr.burtgummerfan439
    @dr.burtgummerfan439 Před 3 lety +117

    I've seen a lot of younger reactors who didn't grasp that much of the movie was from a child's perspective. Sort of an unreliable narrator not to be taken literally. Glad you got it!

    • @ShanelleRiccio
      @ShanelleRiccio  Před 3 lety +22

      Oh yeah that was so so fun!! All of it is a hazy Christmas memory, but that makes it all the more heightened. Like everything happens all at once kind of deal

    • @MrParkerman6
      @MrParkerman6 Před 3 lety +1

      He isn't an unreliable narrator, yu dumbass. It is literally Jean Shepherd's ( thr narrator) autobiography. It is a true story of him as a kid.

    • @VenathTehN3RD
      @VenathTehN3RD Před 3 lety +18

      ​@@MrParkerman6 No, it's not his autobiography. It's based on semi-autobiographical anecdotes of his childhood that featured fictionalized versions of people and locations that were *inspired* by the people he knew and places where he lived. They were in no way literal, factual accounts of those events, and even Shepherd himself frequently stated in interviews that these stories were works of fiction and not memoirs. Furthermore, this film is an adaptation that made its own fair share of changes in the transition from novel to film, such as turning it into a single cohesive narrative focused entirely on his childhood as opposed to a series of short stories being reminisced upon by Ralphie as he discusses the current state of his hometown with Flick in the latter's bar.
      And none of that is even taking into consideration that, when looking at actual human memory, we often *are* unreliable narrators the further removed we are from the events we're recalling, because humans are generally pretty garbage at accurately recalling details over long periods of time. If anything, an autobiography is going to have arguably unreliable narration by default due to human error, while the reliability of the narration in a work of pure fiction is based entirely on the author's whims. In this case, Ralphie is pretty obviously intended to be an unreliable narrator who is reflecting on his childhood with rose-tinted glasses decades after the fact.

    • @treystewart544
      @treystewart544 Před rokem

      @@ShanelleRiccio I love you 💕💕💕💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜

  • @3DJapan
    @3DJapan Před 3 lety +141

    The narrator is actually voiced by the author of the book.

    • @mem1701movies
      @mem1701movies Před 3 lety +17

      He was the angry man in the Santa line and his wife next to him that helped him write

    • @jejohnson1982
      @jejohnson1982 Před 3 lety +6

      @@mem1701movies the one that told him where the line began?

    • @keithsampino4095
      @keithsampino4095 Před 3 lety +6

      @@jejohnson1982 Yes.

    • @OofusTwillip
      @OofusTwillip Před 3 lety +12

      Jean Shepherd (the narrator) told stories on his radio show, for many years. These radio episodes are on CZcams.
      Shep's original stories are somewhat different from the way they are in the movie. For one thing, in the radio version, the Bumpass hounds stole a ham, not a turkey.

    • @MrSheckstr
      @MrSheckstr Před 3 lety +4

      @@OofusTwillip the ham makes sense when you consider the line about it giving him worms if he eats it raw.

  • @garylee3685
    @garylee3685 Před 3 lety +43

    They used suction to hold the kid's tongue to the pole.
    The reaction to the duck in the restaurant was real.

    • @ShanelleRiccio
      @ShanelleRiccio  Před 3 lety +10

      oh yeah her unscripted reaction is my favorite!! you can totally tell!

  • @jamesbooty
    @jamesbooty Před 3 lety +22

    Regarding the lamp being easily breakable: in the 1940s, it probably wouldn't have been actually made from plastic, but possibly something like bakelite, which - while not as delicate as glass - would still have been fairly "frageeelay"

  • @kinas3973
    @kinas3973 Před 3 lety +86

    My father is 85 and he laughed so effing hard when he first saw this movie because he wanted a red Ryder BB gun and he couldn't get one because his mom said he would shoot his eye out..... So years later about four Christmases ago my sister mother and I got my dad a replica red Rider carbon action BB gun it's a daisy etc and he still has it

    • @chrismitchell9689
      @chrismitchell9689 Před 3 lety +2

      Mine hangs in the garage😊. Got it 10 years ago at an antique mall when I was 40.

    • @rustybarrel516
      @rustybarrel516 Před 3 lety +4

      My wife got me one last Christmas and made me tear up.

    • @gettingpissedoff
      @gettingpissedoff Před 3 lety +5

      you should get him the leg lamp this year.

    • @wheelmanstan
      @wheelmanstan Před 2 lety +2

      That's sooo cool. It's a timeless film.
      Yeah I got one back in the late 80's, lever action with medallion in stock and leather fringe tied on it. Just a great little gun. I was 8 when I got it I think. But I recommend a pellet gut because those bb's ricochet. I actually drank some ovaltine last night too. haha, that stuff lasts forever

    • @billolsen4360
      @billolsen4360 Před rokem +1

      My mom always used the "you'll shoot your eye out" defense against me bringing "a firearm" in our home. AND, she was an emergency room nurse who'd seen that happen. I was TRAPPED. But she did pay for me to take a hunters safety course and that was cool because we got to shoot .22 rifles!!

  • @davidfischer8307
    @davidfischer8307 Před 3 lety +26

    Favorite scenes are when Ralphie looks out the window with everything covered with a snowy winter landscape. The wonder and silence of that moment is just beautiful. To close out Christmas day, in the late evening, his parents finally take a deep breath and get to relax and enjoy a moment for themselves - while also looking out the window at the snow with the beautiful serene glow of the Christmas tree lights. Wonderful screenplay as it ties so many elements together. Though we can't have that same joyful innocence of Christmas as when we were kids, It is that wonder that I miss and one of the few things we as adults can still be captured by. The same joy is captured by his father, getting the "surprise" gift for his son. The sheer delight on his father's face is priceless.

    • @willbacewicz2087
      @willbacewicz2087 Před 3 lety +2

      In 1996 my brother (9 years old) and I (10 years old) both got bb guns for Christmas, clearly because of this movie. Never found out if it was both parents or just Dad, but regardless it felt magical to have a (superficial) connection to a movie the family watched every December.

  • @keithsampino4095
    @keithsampino4095 Před 3 lety +48

    I always thought it was interesting that Ralphie finally got his BB gun from the one person he didn't think to ask.....

  • @jeffphillips9588
    @jeffphillips9588 Před 3 lety +56

    Did you know the Christmas Story House is in Cleveland and you can take a tour of the house and basically re-create famous scenes of the film? We took the tour and it was so fun!

    • @ShanelleRiccio
      @ShanelleRiccio  Před 3 lety +7

      I saw the website! I want to go!! $15 admission for a trip into movie bliss

    • @CasperC1451
      @CasperC1451 Před 3 lety +6

      @@ShanelleRiccio you can also sleep over in the top floor. It’s an inn

    • @jeffphillips9588
      @jeffphillips9588 Před 3 lety +4

      So much fun. You can put on the bunny outfit, put soap in your mouth, hide under the sink lol. Too much fun and hope you get a chance to get out there.

    • @d8trace
      @d8trace Před 3 lety +1

      I've been there also, so much fun.

    • @wrigleyville
      @wrigleyville Před 3 lety +3

      @@ShanelleRiccio The part where the boy's tongue gets stuck to the pole was a suction device that simply held his tongue to the pole.

  • @Hiraghm
    @Hiraghm Před 3 lety +32

    Yes, every evening meal had to include potatoes in my house. If not mashed, then (my father's preferred) fried.
    It also had to include some form of red meat, usually pot roast.
    Filling meals were very important to my Dad.
    His way of showing love was stuffing you with food. My mom used to speak of how, when we were babies, he'd feed us until we puked.
    At one time we had a little indian pony, and the guy at the feed store asked if we had a pregnant mare, because he bought so much grain.
    Did I mention he grew up in the Depression?... He knew real hunger growing up.
    (sorry for the anecdotes... the movie brings back memories).

    • @curtisw502
      @curtisw502 Před 2 lety +2

      My Grandmother grew up in the Depression and was the exact same way...you gonna eat something

    • @thatpatrickguy3446
      @thatpatrickguy3446 Před 2 lety

      Anecdotes are awesome. Just saying. 🙂

    • @msdarby515
      @msdarby515 Před rokem

      Same with my farming grandparents. You had to save and re-use everything. Nothing was wasted. Grandma had a 2 acre garden and we were harvesting and canning the end of summer into fall; tomatoes, green beans, carrots, peppers, and multiple types of pickles. Making multiple gallons of sauerkraut that I still don't like. lol
      Grandpa planted a field of potatoes and a field of sweet corn. Even at 4 yrs old I was out in the field picking up potatoes. We would unload a pickup truck full into the cellar via a coal shoot.
      We canned and froze corn for days and days. We even canned our own creamed corn.
      Our pantry shelves were full!

  • @3DJapan
    @3DJapan Před 3 lety +16

    23:44 Early plastic from those days, bakelite, was very brittle and prone to shattering. Now, whether it would sound like glass I can't say, maybe it was the bulb breaking?

  • @shainewhite2781
    @shainewhite2781 Před 3 lety +26

    "You'll shoot your eye out, kid."
    Ralphie:😱 lol! You can feel his pain!

  • @JimmyMcTrill
    @JimmyMcTrill Před 3 lety +26

    Fun fact: Ralphie is also the elf from Elf that tells Buddy he’s not a cotton headed ninny muggins

    • @eliberdinner4808
      @eliberdinner4808 Před 3 lety +3

      Peter Billingsley. He was also a co-producer on Elf.

    • @greenpeasuit
      @greenpeasuit Před 3 lety +1

      Why have I always been under the belief that Ralphie, aka Messy Marvin, died shortly after filming this, due to childhood cancer? That is a very specific set of memories to have believed my whole life. Is it a mandela effect or something?

    • @videodromeTVversion
      @videodromeTVversion Před 3 lety

      _Elf_ is low brow trash. Who cares about it?

    • @ericstoverink6579
      @ericstoverink6579 Před 2 lety

      @@greenpeasuit nope. It's just a poor memory, just like every so called Madela effect thing.

  • @GodOfTriforce17
    @GodOfTriforce17 Před 3 lety +16

    I got my grandpa one of those lamps even though it was a mini version. He got a kick out of it, and would always say "dont touch my girl". I later had it as a reading lamp during college.

    • @ShanelleRiccio
      @ShanelleRiccio  Před 3 lety +6

      😂😂😂 dont touch my girl!! I’m dying at that

    • @GodOfTriforce17
      @GodOfTriforce17 Před 3 lety +2

      @@ShanelleRiccio Haha he always had a great sense of humor. I hope your channel continues to grow

  • @joeymac3777
    @joeymac3777 Před 3 lety +22

    I still watch this movie multiple times a tear at Christmas time. It's nostalgic for me because my grandfather and I watched it every year when i was a child in the early and mid 90's. I also very much relate to it, for multiple reasons. I was very much like Ralphie as a child...imaginative and obsessed over Christmas. Hell...i still do. I also relate because much of the movie was shot in Cleveland (the opening downtown sequences, the house, and a couple other locations and scenes), which is where I live. The house is actually now open year round for tours, and there is a gift shop accross the street. I have been to the house a few times. Once, whennit first opened, that time it was in August....and again twice during the Christmas season a few years ago. It was a different feeling going in Novemeber and December than it was in August.
    This movie is tops on my Christmas movie list. TBS actually plays this movie for 24 hours straight starting Christmas Eve night.

    • @ShanelleRiccio
      @ShanelleRiccio  Před 3 lety +6

      I would absolutely love to visit this place!! Would be so fun. Maybe one day I’ll make the road trip :) I’m happy I’m in the club now -having finally seen A Christmas story

    • @ShanelleRiccio
      @ShanelleRiccio  Před 3 lety +1

      @Marty McFly II I have not!

    • @Liverpoollassie
      @Liverpoollassie Před 3 lety +1

      Same

    • @joeymac3777
      @joeymac3777 Před 3 lety +2

      I did see it. It was more like the stage play version. Yes there is a stage version of this. I don't know if the stage version is strictly done here in Cleveland or not. I would guess not though, since it's a classic movie...but it's incredibly popular here though. They perform it here at Playhouse Square anually....except of course for this year.
      But yes, i saw the live TV version of it. I didn't like it as much as the movie. I liked it, but not nearly as much. The way they did it, is like they do it on stage. Ralphy as an adult is actually shown taking us to the places in the story, as opposed to simply narrating it. I didn't care for that part too much.

  • @OofusTwillip
    @OofusTwillip Před 3 lety +12

    Zack Ward played Scut Farkus, the bully. Zack's mom is my friend and mentor. She was a big star in Canada, in the 1950s-1980s.

    • @coreymeyer6488
      @coreymeyer6488 Před 3 lety +3

      I enjoyed his work on "Titus"

    • @gator7082
      @gator7082 Před 2 lety +3

      @@coreymeyer6488 Titus was very underrated, very funny show.

  • @emilytrott
    @emilytrott Před 8 měsíci +1

    I think that the scene where mom is coming down the stairs after putting the boys to bed, and then sits on the arm of the old man's chair is one of the most romantic scenes I've ever seen. You can feel the love emanating from the screen. ❤

  • @dragon-ed1hz
    @dragon-ed1hz Před 3 lety +7

    So glad you gave Peter Billingsley his due. One of the best performances by a child actor ever.

  • @Kelga80
    @Kelga80 Před 3 lety +6

    The duck head reactions are genuine reactions caught on film. Her reactions are priceless!

    • @Kelga80
      @Kelga80 Před 3 lety

      Now I saw the part where you read about that. ;)

  • @LovelessDogg1
    @LovelessDogg1 Před 3 lety +7

    The kid that plays Ralphie grew up to be the producer of the first Ironman movie. He also cameos in it as a scientist.
    In the film, Robert Downey Jr makes a passing joke about his character looking like the kid from “A Christmas Story” referencing who he actually is.
    He also shows up again in the MCU playing the same exact scientist in Spiderman Far From Home.

  • @jimpemberton
    @jimpemberton Před 3 lety +7

    This is by far my favorite Christmas movie. These vignettes were from Jean Shepherd's famous accounts. He was the narrator and made a cameo in the department store ("Hey kid, the line starts here; it ends there."). Peter Billingsly (Ralphy) is still active in the industry today, but mostly as a producer and director, although you can still catch him in bit parts: He's a scientist in the MCU movies, and played Buddy's elf supervisor in Elf, for example.

  • @cliffendicott7832
    @cliffendicott7832 Před 3 lety +10

    When my son was 10 I watched this movie with him specifically because he hadn't asked for much for Christmas, and I had bought a few things just hoping that he would like them. One of the things I had for him was a Red Ryder BB gun and I kept mentioning throughout the movie that it was a cool thing for a boy to have. He opened it Christmas morning and was surprised, and ended up loving shooting at the trees in the backyard all day. At Christmas dinner I heard him telling his grandmother that he got a BB gun and that, "I didn't even know I wanted one!" Success ;)

  • @heidifedor
    @heidifedor Před 3 lety +11

    If I had gotten in a fight, my dad would have been thrilled with me.

  • @robertpearson8798
    @robertpearson8798 Před 2 lety +3

    Something like the flagpole scene happened at my Wife's school when she was a kid. A kid put his tongue on the metal railing of a foot bridge and it stuck. The bell rang and everyone went back inside. A teacher had to come out with a glass of water. I sometimes drive past the school in St. Catharines, Ontario, where that scene was shot.

  • @nickmattio3397
    @nickmattio3397 Před 3 lety +8

    “OHHHHHH FFFFFFFFUUUUUNNNNGGGG....” fun fact, Peter Billingsly, Ralphy, was an executive producer/actor on the first Iron Man with RDJ among other Job Favreu comedieslike Elf, 4 Christmases etc really funny

    • @AutoPilate
      @AutoPilate Před 3 lety

      He also directed Couples Retreat, which gets a bad rap but makes me laugh.

    • @CaptainFrost32
      @CaptainFrost32 Před 3 lety

      He was a casting director on Jon Favreaus's movie Zathura. You will see the leg lamp in the house.

  • @DAMIENDMILLS
    @DAMIENDMILLS Před 3 lety +44

    Fun fact: For the tongue on the pole scene, there is actually a small hole with a small vacuum suction, not too strong to rip his tongue off, but enough to keep it in place. The rest is just that kid's acting like it's stuck. In reality he could have just stepped away from it and it would have been fine.

    • @OofusTwillip
      @OofusTwillip Před 3 lety +2

      He could step away IF the crew turned off the air pump. At one point, they didn't. On purpose.

    • @jameskoralewski1006
      @jameskoralewski1006 Před 3 lety

      My most memorable reenactment of the frozen tongue stick was that of Jeff Daniels from Dumb and Dumber.

    • @MrParkerman6
      @MrParkerman6 Před 3 lety

      Wrong! There is a small tube placed in the hole that has the suction that his tongue is against. Get your facts Straight!!!!

    • @FallenHellscape
      @FallenHellscape Před 3 lety +1

      I figured it was vacuum suction. Thanks for confirming.

    • @billolsen4360
      @billolsen4360 Před rokem

      Is that the straight dope? Like from The Fireman's Certified & Approved Training Manual?

  • @davidschecter5247
    @davidschecter5247 Před 3 lety +4

    The department store is Higbee's in Cleveland. I used to live there in the 1980s and they still had those wonderful wooden escalators. Easily one of the greatest Christmas movies ever made, and it NEVER gets old.

    • @markmac2206
      @markmac2206 Před 3 lety

      im amazed how much Cleveland looks like Hammond, the town this is supposed to be. really hard to tell the difference and ive lived here most of my life.

  • @TheFuriousfunk
    @TheFuriousfunk Před 3 lety +4

    The final scene in the restaurant was genuine, those are genuine reactions to the singing and the man cutting the head off the duck.

  • @CaddyJim
    @CaddyJim Před 3 lety +7

    Another culture classic movie with a voice over is *(Stand by Me)*

    • @Rogn1
      @Rogn1 Před 3 lety

      This is another one that @Shinelle Riccio needs to see.

  • @ccjtv809
    @ccjtv809 Před 3 lety +7

    Her:saying it’s hell waiting for parents to yell at you. Me:laughing because I always got my ass whooped and wish that my parents only yelled at me

    • @ShanelleRiccio
      @ShanelleRiccio  Před 3 lety +3

      I feel for you!! But waiting for that yelling/whooping is like THE WORST kind of waiting. I felt Ralphie's pain!

  • @dougimmel
    @dougimmel Před 3 lety +1

    Shepherd, a Hammond, Indiana guy, and later in NY radio, was revered in print and radio. We Hoosiers can relate to the stories - July 4th, Thanksgiving, Christmas, etc. His books, stories and shows are hilarious. He's the narrator and the guy in the Santa line in the store - "the line starts back there..." I have the lamp in miniature. You could have your picture taken with it and the tree in a little living room mockup at the Indiana Historical Society last Christmas, with pink bunny suits, etc. Too much. Loved this movie since college. My brother introduced me to his writing. Great memories.

    • @markmac2206
      @markmac2206 Před 3 lety

      yep. ive lived in NW Indiana most of my life and you can tell he is one of us!

  • @viclagina347
    @viclagina347 Před 3 lety +5

    This was the age of innocence.... Which ended around 1985 sadly...... Thank you for reacting to this.... I watch it every year...... Wouldn't change my childhood for anythi,g

    • @billolsen4360
      @billolsen4360 Před rokem

      For kids, there will always be an age of innocence, even if you're a barefoot slum kid in Juarez living in a wooden pallet house.

  • @izzonj
    @izzonj Před 3 lety +3

    I can't tell you how much I enjoy your reactions to some of my favorite movies! I first saw this when my daughter was about 6. We enjoyed it together, many times. We would re-enact the Santa scene with my daughter climbing on my lap as I did a menacing HO HOHO and whenever she was about to ask for something I'd make her side off my lap and he laughter hysterically!
    My father was born in 1935 and says that Ralphie was him! He listened to little orphan Annie on the radio, with his decoder ring and wanted a red rider bb gun but his mother said, "you'll shoot your eye out!"
    I think the lamp probability would have been glass. Plastic was a pretty new thing and wouldn't be used for something trivial like that.

  • @kellygilbert621
    @kellygilbert621 Před 3 lety +4

    I totally identified with Ralphie growing up...only my childhood took place in the 70s. When I was a little kid I had an extremely active imagination and I would break the fourth wall to my imaginary studio audience...it always got an imaginary laugh.
    My childhood holy grail Christmas gift was ANYTHING Star Wars, especially the action figures and their vehicles! I somehow never even knew about A Christmas Story until I was in my 20s and saw it on tv. The kids screaming and crying while visiting the shopping mall Santa is my favorite...I went through the same thing with the mall Santa 😂 Santa was a scary mofo!
    Snacks during the movie is a MUST! 😋

  • @mena94x3
    @mena94x3 Před 3 lety +2

    It is most definitely a Christmas tradition, I can’t imagine a Christmas without it.
    Favorite part of the movie? Picking a favorite of anything is an impossibility for me. 😂😂

  • @williamjamesrapp7356
    @williamjamesrapp7356 Před 3 lety +12

    I had a friend in High School whose parents put their Christmas tree up on Christmas eve and took it down the day after Christmas. I think they were aliens

    • @Hiraghm
      @Hiraghm Před 3 lety

      sounds like my sister. My mom once gave her all our Christmas ornaments... she tossed them out, and her tree was plastic with every ball ornament identical.

    • @KabukiKid
      @KabukiKid Před 3 lety +1

      LOL! My family actually used to put up the tree and decorate it on Christmas Eve... but we left it up into the New Year for a while, at least. lol At some point, my family halted doing that and we had the tree up much earlier.

  • @TheMadMurf
    @TheMadMurf Před 3 lety +2

    I'm always a bit surprised when I hear that someone hasn't seen A Christmas Story just because there are TV marathons showing it leading up to Christmas.

  • @mem1701movies
    @mem1701movies Před 3 lety +11

    The writer/narrator was the angry “HEY KID” man in Santa line

    • @ShanelleRiccio
      @ShanelleRiccio  Před 3 lety +2

      I didn’t clock his voice! So different sounding when it’s narrated

    • @gawainethefirst
      @gawainethefirst Před 3 lety +2

      Also the Radio DJ in Jingle All The Way.

    • @caspence56
      @caspence56 Před 3 lety

      He was also the Santa Claus at Higbees.

    • @gawainethefirst
      @gawainethefirst Před 3 lety +1

      @@caspence56, no. He was the man who pointed out where the line starts.

  • @DSGodiva
    @DSGodiva Před 3 lety +1

    They show this movie on TV for 24 hours straight every Christmas. And I have it on, even just in the background, every single year. Definitely a classic.

  • @andyleclerc3600
    @andyleclerc3600 Před 3 lety +3

    Darren McGavin's reaction when Randy shows his Mom how the piggies eat slays me😅😅😅. No continuity error with the broken lamp. The top part is clearly seen being cracked☺

  • @EShelby2127
    @EShelby2127 Před rokem

    Ralph putting the BBs in to the gun, in the living room, always gets me. The dad, motioning with his hands how to pour them carefully in, without spilling them. When I got Daisy air rifle for Christmas, we had shag carpeting in the living room, where we opened presents... shag carpeting... When mom vacuumed the next day, I heard my spilled BBs going up the metal wand of the vacuum, into the bag. I remember a small round cardboard tube was 10¢ and a large one was 25¢ at the hardware store.

  • @Rmlohner
    @Rmlohner Před 3 lety +12

    You may recognize Ralphie as the guy who gets told "Tony Stark was able to build this in a CAVE! With a BUNCH OF SCRAPS!"

    • @DAMIENDMILLS
      @DAMIENDMILLS Před 3 lety +4

      And the one that told Buddy that he wasn't a "cotton-headed ninny muggins", he's just special

    • @ShanelleRiccio
      @ShanelleRiccio  Před 3 lety +2

      I knew he became a big shot producer!! But didn’t realize he was still acting also!

    • @dezo343
      @dezo343 Před 3 lety +3

      Yeah, those eyes are unmistakable!

    • @patrickflanagan3762
      @patrickflanagan3762 Před 3 lety +1

      @@ShanelleRiccio He became friends with Vince Vaughn when they did an afterschool special. (Not sure if that's still a thing or not, but it was a sort of ongoing anthology series of nothing but Very Special Episodes about teen problems. I think theirs was about steroids.) Then I think through Vaughn he became friends with Jon Favreau and became a producer on his films as well as doing a cameo in Favreau's first IRON MAN movie.

    • @OofusTwillip
      @OofusTwillip Před 3 lety +3

      Peter's aunt is Barbara Billingsley, who played Mrs. Cleaver on "Leave It to Beaver". They're also related to Sherman Billingsley, who owned the Stork Club, a world-famous NYC nightclub, in the 1930s-1960s.

  • @anothermonday5664
    @anothermonday5664 Před 3 lety +1

    good add, Shanelle. Fully anticipating the "frag-jee-lay" moment for the Italian reference 🤣. The gift reveal was done so flawlessly. The music, the lead up, that the Dad was aware the whole time, and even his elation at watching his kid get something got when he was younger. Ace.

  • @hayleybotte7836
    @hayleybotte7836 Před 3 lety +4

    OMG I'm so surprised you've never seen this!!!! Congrats on 1k+ !!!!!!!

  • @mack7882
    @mack7882 Před 2 lety +1

    The dad seems detached and unaware of the kids battles and needs, but on Christmas he shows he totally gets his kids. He knows about the BB gun and gets it unilaterally for his son, he understands the humiliation of the bunny suit and sticks up for and speaks for Ralphie, and when Christmas dinner is destroyed and he saves it by taking the family out and having a good time. The scene with Ralphie getting the BB gun gets me, especially when his dad asks if he knows how to open it and to be careful as those BB's "go everywhere." This is just about 10 years from my childhood in the 50's and early 60's. So very relatable with the cars, changing tires, the tree and the lights, the toys, the clothes. My dad used to cuss when fixing things. When I raised my kids I was always careful not to swear or cuss in front of them or so I thought. I was making that point one time when my oldest now adult daughter chimed in, "Well dad, unless you were fixing something." She nailed it and this movie nailed it.

    • @peteg475
      @peteg475 Před 2 lety

      Well said. What it tells me is that parents are more aware of things than kids think they are, and especially at Christmastime you realize they really do love you and want the best for you and love to see you happy, and they aren't just an obstacle to be overcome. "My parents are cooler than I thought" is a sentiment kids feel a lot at Christmas.

  • @ThomasStClair-zr2lb
    @ThomasStClair-zr2lb Před 3 lety +5

    Just found your channel and I really enjoy your videos. Reading through the IMDB trivia at the end of the videos is a great idea. For my favorite toy, it's when when I got a super nintendo on Christmas in 1992 and I called my best friend to tell him and he had gotten one too. Best day ever.

    • @ShanelleRiccio
      @ShanelleRiccio  Před 3 lety +2

      welcome aboard! thank you for watching!! and yeah I love when you and your friends all get that same awesome present, you get to all be in on the joy.!!

  • @banjoman101145
    @banjoman101145 Před 2 lety +1

    Jean Shepard, who is the writer-narrator in this film did radio broadcasts out of New York two nights each week usually about similar coming of age tales of his youth. He was a prolific talker filling up his ninety minute time slots with stories that would give his listeners true belly laughs. This was back around 1960. He was great!

    • @billolsen4360
      @billolsen4360 Před rokem +1

      The tone of his voice mirrored my kid memories. How ridiculously important we thought those events of childhood were.

  • @leffew2000
    @leffew2000 Před 3 lety +5

    I love how you referenced "The Wonder Years". Daniel Stern, who did the narration on the TV show also played Marv in "Home Alone 1&2" along side Joe Pesci.

    • @claymccoy
      @claymccoy Před 3 lety +1

      And played the father in A Christmas Story 2...

  • @badkittie23
    @badkittie23 Před 3 lety +1

    You understood that this was from a child's POV and the nostalgia it inspires. My son at 9 years old got a red rider bb gun for Christmas. My husband had the same look as Ralphie's dad, when our son opened the gift. We watch this every Christmas.

  • @Hiraghm
    @Hiraghm Před 3 lety +3

    I was past being a child in 83, and I saw myself in this. Aside from the technology, this was very much the kind of world I grew up in.

    • @billolsen4360
      @billolsen4360 Před rokem

      I remember being chagrined in second grade with how mean kids could be to each other, even tho I'd been mean to a few as far back as Kindergarten. Mom waited til I was 15 to tell me that my Kindergarten teacher told her that the only thing she saw in my future was a stiff rope and a short drop. We had a good laugh after I swallowed hard, know that my nefarious side had been revealed 10 years before.

  • @pinewaves
    @pinewaves Před 3 lety +2

    I love the scene at the restaurant where the waiters were trying to sing, “fa la la la la la, la la la la” but instead sang, “Fa ra ra ra ra, Ra ra ra ra” to Deck the Hall. The actors were trying not to laugh too.

  • @CaddyJim
    @CaddyJim Před 3 lety +4

    Another culture classic is *(Goonies)* & there's an unscripted shot in that movie when the kids come up from the water & see the ship

  • @chiefsteps-in-poo8447
    @chiefsteps-in-poo8447 Před 2 lety +1

    Alright, I'm 43 and I watch this movie every Christmas (a cable channel plays this for 24 hours straight on Christmas day). I laugh all day at the scene when Flick gets his tongue frozen to the flag pole. I lose it watching him alone with his tongue frozen to that pole and he's trying not to lose his balance. Cracks me up every year.

  • @slytheringingerwitch
    @slytheringingerwitch Před 3 lety +4

    This movie is adorable and takes me back to being a kid. Always imagining the worse etc etc. I just wish that in the UK we'd get more merchandise as I want a leg lamp even in miniature.

  • @rabooey
    @rabooey Před 3 lety +1

    Filmed in Cleveland, Ohio, both their house and downtown Cleveland.
    The house is now a tourist attraction, in which one can witness all up front and personal like and in all its glory at 3159 W. 11th St., the legendary A Christmas Story Leg Lamp.
    Side note, two of my cousins(whom I used to babysit throughout my high school years), starred in the roles of two of the Bumpus kids in the A Christmas Story sequel, My Summer Story(1994), the little chubby girl and boy(uncredited)!
    Toronto's house is a replication of the actual house, although most of the interior scenes were indeed filmed in a Toronto sound stage/set.

  • @Downstreamphoto
    @Downstreamphoto Před 3 lety +8

    I was 10 years old in 83, I fully believe they gave him real chewing tobacco, the world was a different place back then. My dad would send me to the convenience store to buy him cigarettes and I never had any problem buying them if I said it was for my dad. Adults often found it amusing to let kids try cigarettes or chewing tobacco because they knew it would make them sick and often did it to discourage future use.

    • @billolsen4360
      @billolsen4360 Před rokem

      That's right! I was sent to the grocery to buy a carton of Pall Mall straights at age 7 for a widower/family friend who was about to turn 80. All the checker said to me was, "Looks like you're gonna be doin' a lot of smokin'."

  • @NoCampDad
    @NoCampDad Před 2 lety

    I remember the first time my dad heard me cuss. We were riding an ATC together and we crashed and I said the s word and then I said shoot shoot shoot. He laughed it off of course. Another great review and this movie really brings me back to my '80s childhood. Thank you so much for helping me relive emotional and important times of my life.

  • @honorsilverthorne7227
    @honorsilverthorne7227 Před 3 lety +5

    "Not a finger!" means "Do not lay a finger on it!" 🎄😊❄️

    • @cliffchristie5865
      @cliffchristie5865 Před 3 lety

      Sorry to disagree but the line the old man speaks at that moment is just intended as more flustered gibberish, like all the rest of his swearing.

    • @honorsilverthorne7227
      @honorsilverthorne7227 Před 3 lety

      @@cliffchristie5865 I was merely referring to what the phrase means. 💁

  • @CraigKinsey
    @CraigKinsey Před 3 lety +1

    I've watched this movie countless times and have never seen the full Western genre connection. Brilliant! You are a pleasure to watch movies with.

  • @thrakkorzog75002
    @thrakkorzog75002 Před 3 lety +4

    Fun fact, the one person Ralphie didn't tell he wanted a BB gun was his dad. So dad was paying attention, just wasn't showing it.

    • @Fardawg
      @Fardawg Před 3 lety

      Always loved that. The one person he didn't figure would care about it ended up being the one who actually did. His reaction to watching Ralphie open it is great. He is remembering his own childhood and is happy to see Ralphie happy. He turned out to be a great dad.

    • @jeffking887
      @jeffking887 Před 3 lety +1

      The old man’s comment at the end of the “Higbee’s”scene: “He knows. He always knows,”

  • @kemowery
    @kemowery Před 3 lety +1

    I was the age of these kids in the early '80s in Ohio. My late stepfather was that age in Texas in the 1940s, and my dad was that age in the 1950s in West Virginia. We all agree that this movie captures the exact feeling of what Christmas was like as a kid, and what it was like to be a kid. And that's why this is my favorite Christmas movie.

  • @joeymac3777
    @joeymac3777 Před 3 lety +7

    They shot the movie in Cleveland, Ohio where i live, and in Ontario

    • @ShanelleRiccio
      @ShanelleRiccio  Před 3 lety +3

      I want to visit the house!

    • @OofusTwillip
      @OofusTwillip Před 3 lety +1

      I live about a mile and a half from the bridge where Ralphie said THE word.
      There's a documentary DVD called "Road Trip For Ralphie", that tracks down all of the locations, including the studio where the interior scenes of Ralphie's house were filmed. It's the same studio where the last few seasons of "SCTV" were done.

    • @joeymac3777
      @joeymac3777 Před 3 lety

      There's a lesser known sequal from 1994 titled "My Summer Story", starring Charles Groden, the Dad from Beethoven and Mary Stienbergen as Mom and Dad Parker. Ralphie and Randy are played by the brothers of Maccully Culkin. That movie takes place the summer after the events of "A Christmas Story" They used the same house, but I'm not sure if Toronto was used at all in that one. That movie wasn't as good as it's Christmas counterpart. It wasn't at all bad either though...in my opinion anyway. In "My Summer Story", they introduce the Parkers" Hillbilly neighbors, The Bumpases, with all the dogs.

    • @ffjsb
      @ffjsb Před 3 lety

      Some of it was shot in Canada.

    • @joeymac3777
      @joeymac3777 Před 3 lety

      @@ffjsb yes...thats what i said. Cleveland and Ontario.

  • @maryloumawson6006
    @maryloumawson6006 Před rokem

    This movie is so special within my family. When I was 23, my youngest sister was 12. I took her to the theater to see the Disney classic Cinderella. But when we got there, the movie had changed. We were so disappointed, but decided to see "A Christmas Story" which was the movie which replaced Cinderella at the theater, instead. We knew absolutely ZERO about this film! In our area (we lived in Philadelphia), it received NO promotion at all! We roared with laughter all through the film and came home and told everyone about it. But NO ONE we knew saw it, and it disappeared after Christmas. But we never forgot it. Years later when it aired on TV my parents finally got to see it. To my surprise, they LOVED it even more than we did, because of the childhood memories it evoked for them. They both grew up in the exact time frame in which the movie takes place, and I (being young) hadn't considered that aspect about it. It became a family favorite, that we all quoted from daily. My Dad even got a BB gun for my youngest brother, and hid it in exactly the same way - and got the same reaction! I got the VHS as soon as it was available, and not long after that, A Christmas Story received widespread acclaim and popularity. But I don't think it did well in the theaters, at least not in our area.

  • @djordan9821
    @djordan9821 Před 3 lety +3

    Congratulations on 1k

  • @Me4u2c42
    @Me4u2c42 Před 3 lety

    It’s so hot the way you talk about movies. Usually I’m the one teaching people about movie stuff, but you seem to shine. I love it. Keep up the good watch.

  • @patrick1984ist
    @patrick1984ist Před 3 lety +6

    The Daisy red rider still has metal bebe's

    • @ShanelleRiccio
      @ShanelleRiccio  Před 3 lety +2

      So scary! You’ll shoot your eye out!! My neighbors would shoot with the plastic Bebe’s and then make the little siblings collect them 😂😂

    • @MigPlz91LivestreamOnly
      @MigPlz91LivestreamOnly Před 3 lety

      Some Walmarts actually sell that brand of Rifle. Same box design too.

    • @blackguardharper7005
      @blackguardharper7005 Před 3 lety

      BB's.

  • @nEthing4Her
    @nEthing4Her Před rokem

    LOL I do indeed have a smaller version of the Old Man's leg lamp. Also having lived on and off in my hometown of Chicago, my wife at the time and I actually took a little winter road trip one year and visited the actual neighborhood where it was filmed. Now that house is actually a museum dedicated to this film. It wasn't when I was there so many years ago however.
    Great reaction as always! Hugs to you and yours and Merry 🎄!

  • @chrispittman8854
    @chrispittman8854 Před 3 lety +4

    "The Lamp" is my FB profile pic and the kid with his tongue on the pole is my cover.

  • @krissiep1317
    @krissiep1317 Před rokem +1

    I loved, loved this reaction! You tie up everything in a nice little bow. Dead right about the kids and parents enjoying this movie when it was released. Definite nostalgia factor. Thank you!

  • @Hiraghm
    @Hiraghm Před 3 lety +6

    "Why would a plastic lamp be fragile?"
    Because it's a fragile form of plastic. Look up filament for 3d-printers.

    • @ffjsb
      @ffjsb Před 3 lety +2

      Plastics were in their infancy at this time, a lot of plastic items were absolute crap. That's why "plastic" got such a bad rap.

    • @melissas4874
      @melissas4874 Před 3 lety +1

      @@ffjsb This. One of the oldest plastics would be something like polystyrene which comes in 2 forms, one of which is considered a glassy form. In fact, the trays in your refrigerator may be made from this. This isn't as flexible and can break or shatter easily depending on how it is made.

  • @stevesilsby9668
    @stevesilsby9668 Před rokem

    We screen "A Christmas Story" every year to formerly kick off our Christmas season. Other movies we watch every December are the animated classics "Mr. Magoo's Christmas Carol" (1962) and "How the Grinch Stole Christmas" (1966). Then "Miracle on 34th Street" (1947), "Scrooged", "National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation", and the original "Die Hard". We tune the television to TBS for the entire day that they do the "A Christmas Story" marathon. We go about all our normal routines all day but when near the TV we stop everything to enjoy favorite scenes when they come around again.
    Actually, we pair up "Mr. Magoo's Christmas Carol" (1962) and "Scrooged" (1988) screenings. You can't help but lose it after seeing these two together. They take us from the songs "I'm All Alone in the World" right through to "Put a Little Love in Your Heart". There's definitely something in my eye.

  • @chrispittman8854
    @chrispittman8854 Před 3 lety +3

    HONESTLY! WHEN are they going to give us a "love" button. Not just "like..." "love." Great work... again.

  • @justinp4996
    @justinp4996 Před 3 lety +2

    This is one of my favorite Christmas films and this year got to show it to a family member for the first time. Very similar reactions to yourself. So many little trivia tid bits for this movie!

  • @mem1701movies
    @mem1701movies Před 3 lety +8

    I wasn’t going to watch reactions to A CHRISTMAS STORY because a lot reactions have been ruining movies for me but yours didn’t

    • @jimchabai3163
      @jimchabai3163 Před 3 lety +1

      Simple: don't watch reactions to films you HAVEN'T seen.

    • @CraigKinsey
      @CraigKinsey Před 3 lety +1

      Thats a great compliment and she deserves it. She is so insightful and fun.

    • @mem1701movies
      @mem1701movies Před 3 lety +1

      @@jimchabai3163 you obviously didn’t get what I mean. Watching a beloved movie get butchered and ruined by some idiot reactor.

  • @LBrobie
    @LBrobie Před 2 lety

    i turned 20 in 1983, and you uploaded this on the 20th of 2020. and i'm watching this exactly one year later, on the 20th of 2021. :)

  • @Hiraghm
    @Hiraghm Před 3 lety +7

    "Kids only know how to be authentic, you guys"
    That's a popular myth.
    Kids are every bit as scheming and deceitful as adults... they're just not very good at it yet.

    • @CraigKinsey
      @CraigKinsey Před 3 lety +3

      She didn't say there weren't scheming and deceitful. She said they were authentic. Authentic doesn't mean, as far as my pea brain understands it, doesn't mean virtuous. It just means that they have not fully learned how to hide themselves from themselves yet and then convey that falseness to the world as if it were the real them. Thats a convoluted way to describe it, but being unauthentic is convoluted. :)

    • @Hiraghm
      @Hiraghm Před 3 lety

      @@CraigKinsey okay... you win. :)

  • @Psilocybin77
    @Psilocybin77 Před 3 lety +2

    There was a Disney movie I remember based on a story from the same author. I recall the father and mother being the same as A Christmas Story. The movie was called Ollie Hopnoodle's Haven of Bliss and remember loving it as a youngster.

  • @ericalexander3526
    @ericalexander3526 Před 3 lety +2

    Ralphie's mom hated that lamp, and I'm convinced she accidentally broke it on purpose. Another great line from this film: "Randy looked like a tick about to pop." Classic '50s style americana

  • @RyneMurray23
    @RyneMurray23 Před rokem

    Ralphie really took that snowball in the face. He said it really hurt and when he started tearing up he just went with it.

  • @MysterD.
    @MysterD. Před 2 lety +2

    I grew up in ancient houses and neighborhoods like that. Some of my aunts and uncles, and my grandparents lived simple, old world lives that were not quite in step with what was then the current era. Though a child of the 70's and 80's, I can easily relate to lifestyles back to the 40's and further, as I had a lot of exposure to lingering environments. I had Ralphie's goofy imagination, too. I LOVE this flick!

    • @billolsen4360
      @billolsen4360 Před rokem

      In the 1960's, I thought our family's 1910 house was ancient as a little kid. Now, 2023, I live in a house that was built when Nixon was President, just 50 some years ago, looks pretty modern to me, LOL.

  • @rhannah7873
    @rhannah7873 Před 3 lety

    Merry Christmas. I drive past a house with a leg lamp in the window to work during this time of year. It makes me smile every time.😀

  • @starlord5032
    @starlord5032 Před 3 lety +2

    This isn't just the best christmas movie ever, it is one of the best movies ever period. Loved your reaction to one of my all time fave movies. I was about the same age as ralphie and yes that all felt very relatable.

  • @steveshute3810
    @steveshute3810 Před rokem

    I'm a year late to this party, but love this reaction and this movie! My dad was born in the 20s, and said that the scenes involving the dad battling the furnace were 100% accurate. When he says "It's a clinkerrrrr!", a clinker was a chunk of burned coal that could cause a blockage in the furnace and other problems. My dad laughed when he saw that scene and said they would get clinkers every once in a while in his furnace while he was growing up.

  • @danielbonett7818
    @danielbonett7818 Před 3 lety +1

    I also have to comment that you have the most adorable laugh and it really adds to the enjoyment of these videos. Your chuckles, gafaws and bursts are just too cute

  • @healthhealingandhappinessw6060

    At the beginning of this video you said you have 1000 subscribers. You now have over 30,000!! Whoa! Oh and I’m in Cleveland….. leg lamps everywhere this time of year!

  • @trailrvs
    @trailrvs Před 3 lety +1

    A Wrist Rocket Slingshot! I loved this in 1983 as a 21 year old. Now we watch it every Christmas. The adult narrator actually reminded me of Johnboy Walton at the beginning and end of each episode we watched as kids in the 70’s.

  • @ploppy9943
    @ploppy9943 Před 9 měsíci

    61.6 thousand subscribers later, and also a subscriber myself for what I think has to be from around that initial first couple thousand subs, I believe this might be my first time watching this reaction. This is my favorite Christmas movie ever. Thanks Shanelle! I was 11 years old when this movie came out and I felt such a connection with Ralphie, his brother and friends. Somehow the correlation of the 40's and the 80's cultures mixed so well. I wonder how well this movie goes over with the newer generations of kids. At least the general ideas have to resonate, right?

  • @timothyholland7982
    @timothyholland7982 Před 3 lety

    You referenced “Porky’s” in the trivia. You should absolutely review Porkys! Definitely one of those movies that would never fly today but totally an old school “guys” movie. One of Kim Cattrall’s first movies and a number of scenes of actors breaking into what HAS to be genuine laughter. Anyway, you’re killing it, Lady! Keep em coming!

  • @cruggiere
    @cruggiere Před 3 lety +1

    I was young in 83 and saw this with my Dad at the theater.

  • @ricksgamemisc10
    @ricksgamemisc10 Před 3 lety +1

    This is such a perfect movie and does a fabulous job of putting you in the character. I always describe it as "Nothing at all like that happened to me, and yet I remember every bit of it."

    • @billolsen4360
      @billolsen4360 Před rokem

      Ralphy suffered all the insurmountable roadblocks to achieving his heroic potential that I did, yeah.

  • @gemmapalmisano7837
    @gemmapalmisano7837 Před 3 lety +1

    12:26 I love when Flick said “shh your mother mother shh.” It was funny.

  • @endymionstcyr8224
    @endymionstcyr8224 Před 2 lety +2

    Love your reactions. You prob don’t recall asking about this, since it’s been the better part of a year, but with regard to the family decorating the tree so late in the season. It used to be customary to not decorate the tree until just before Christmas. I assume because the early tree stands didn’t have any way of keeping the cut tree hydrated and even getting a tree to early could mean a dead looking tree for Christmas. On a related note, there is another old custom, in some parts, that has long since died out in which the tree was decorated on Christmas Eve after the kids went to bed so they woke up to the Christmas Miracle of Santa having decorated their tree.

  • @danielbonett7818
    @danielbonett7818 Před 3 lety

    So I knew I'd want to comment at the end and once again you did not disappoint. I agree entirely that the movie feels like an amalgamation of years from the pov of a child who is now an adult. Those little details didn't bother me since like you pointed out memory is a fickle and inconsistent thing. Loved your comments and reactions and I look forward to hearing more, especially as you experience movies I grew up with as a young boy and you are seeing them as a grown woman.

    • @ShanelleRiccio
      @ShanelleRiccio  Před 3 lety

      yess!! thank you so much for watching! I'm having so much fun doing these. hope to keep you entertained :)

  • @CraigKinsey
    @CraigKinsey Před 3 lety

    And she puts the commercial when Ralphie sees the commercial? And the spaghetti western music when she is taking about the western reference. OK. I'm now a subscriber. wow. Great work. Much respect.

  • @kjmorley
    @kjmorley Před 3 lety +1

    I loved this movie when I first saw it in the 80s, because it so perfectly captured my childhood, right down to the tongue stuck on the flagpole. My fantasy Christmas gift, was a Transonic cassette recorder. I took that thing everywhere!

  • @pmickeyny6002
    @pmickeyny6002 Před 3 lety +2

    Love your reaction! So observant and spot-on, but still really fun.

  • @GlitchCrunch
    @GlitchCrunch Před 2 lety

    So, theres a play version of this movie. My government teacher in high school would be in the yearly play/musical as a cameo appearance. He said that on his final year of teaching, he wants the arts department to do "A Christmas Story" because he wanted to play the Mall Santa and be able to "kick" a kid down a slide. He got his wish, and he played the Mall Santa on the very last year he was teaching saying it was his best performance of all time.