Chestnuts roasting on an open fire, Jack Frost nipping at your nose... and a fabulous festive film on the telly to warm the cockles of your heart! Yes, Christmas is a-coming - but which magnificent yuletide movies should you choose for your holiday viewing? Here are 12 much-loved classics to consider...

IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE

For many people, Frank Capra’s It’s A Wonderful Life (1946) is the festive film of all festive films. Although it was shot during a summer heatwave, its heart and soul is pure Christmas!
James Stewart stars as George Bailey, a man whose sense of duty sees him forsaking his own dreams and aspirations for the good of his family and community. Weighed down by his heavy responsibilities and no small amount of ill fortune, George decides he’d be better off dead - until, that is, his guardian angel, Clarence, makes him see the error of his ways...    


HOME ALONE

The film that made a child star of Macaulay Culkin, Home Alone (1990) also features Joe Pesci - fresh from his time spent whacking fellow mobsters in Martin Scorcese’s Goodfellas - and Daniel Stern as a pair of incompetent house-breakers. When the bumbling burglars attempt to rob a suburban Chicago home, they get plenty more than they bargained for: Kevin McCallister’s family has gone on vacation and accidentally left him behind. Home alone, he’s determined to keep the property safe and sound... 


ELF

There are those for whom no Christmas is complete without watching Elf. 
The now-cult movie - a stage-musical version of which is visiting the Midlands this month - finds Will Ferrell in fine form as Buddy, a man-child who, having been raised at the North Pole by Santa’s elves, determines to head to New York in search of his biological father, played by Godfather actor James Caan... Celebrating its 20th anniversary next year, Elf is a movie that’s positively overflowing with yuletide cheer. It also comes complete with many a visual gag to keep the kids happy.    


THE MUPPET CHRISTMAS CAROL

What do you get if you combine a much-loved story by the Victorian era’s most famous writer, with an ensemble cast of puppets and an Academy Award-winning actor? The Muppet Christmas Carol, of course! Charles Dickens’ 1843 short story about a grumpy old sinner who’s taught the error of his miserly ways by a trio of festive phantoms provides plenty of opportunity for the Muppets to peddle their absurdist style of comedy. Michael Caine, the Oscar-winning actor mentioned above, stays rock-steady as Ebenezer Scrooge amid the puppet-powered pandemonium.   


HOW THE GRINCH STOLE CHRISTMAS

Jim Carrey’s career was very much firing on all cylinders when he took the starring role in this Year 2000 big-screen adaptation of Dr Seuss’s classic story. The mean-minded, green-skinned Grinch lives at the top of a mountain overlooking Whoville, a town that certainly knows how to keep Christmas in style. Favouring isolation over living in the town - where he’d been brought up but bullied - the Grinch decides it’s high time he took his revenge on the citizens of Whoville - by stealing all of their presents, decorations and food while they’re asleep...


MIRACLE ON 34TH STREET

New York’s 34th Street has seen more than its fair share of Miracles down the years, but there’s no question that the two most popular ones happened in 1947 and 1994. Both versions have become perennial festive family favourites, with the original released just one year after that other classic Christmas cracker, It’s A Wonderful Life... When New York’s biggest department store finds itself short of a Santa, an old fella named Kris Kringle steps in to help out. So far, so good. But the store soon finds itself at the centre of controversy when the benign senior citizen claims that he is, in fact, the real Santa Claus... 


THE HOLIDAY

Bolstered by an all-star cast, Nancy Meyers’ 2006 romantic comedy has established itself as a modern-day Christmas classic and is considered by many to be essential yuletide viewing. The wafer-thin but effective storyline sees two thirtysomething singletons who’ve never met deciding to swap homes for Christmas, with Kate Winslet’s Iris Simpkins heading for LA and Cameron Diaz’s Amanda Woods travelling in the opposite direction to a cottage in the English countryside. Both women are recovering from heartbreak, but it isn’t long before each of them finds the gift of a new romance in their festive stocking...   


THE POLAR EXPRESS

Listed in the 2006 Guinness Book of Records as the world’s ‘first all-digital capture’ film, The Polar Express stars Tom Hanks in a variety of roles and follows the story of a young boy who’s starting to wonder whether Santa Claus really exists. On Christmas Eve he sees a mysterious steam locomotive outside his bedroom window. But this is no ordinary train; this one is transporting its passengers to the North Pole for a meeting with the man himself. The boy is invited on board the locomotive and the adventure begins...


NATIVITY!

You’ve seen the musical (or if you haven’t, book yourself a ticket at the Birmingham Rep, where it’s running across the festive season), now check out the original film! Midlands writer Debbie Isitt’s movie was the surprise Christmas hit of 2009, bringing together an impressive cast of big-name performers and, in due course of time, spawning three sequels. Set in Coventry and partially improvised, the film follows the attempts of St Bernadette’s Catholic primary school to pick up the prize for the best nativity play. But things threaten to spiral out of control when the teacher in charge of the production tells a big fat festive lie...    


THE SNOWMAN

This wordless, half-hour, made-for-television animated film was first screened in 1982, four years after the publication of the Raymond Briggs book on which it’s based. It’s a simple tale about a snowman who comes to life and takes a small boy on an adventure through the starry night sky. The film is routinely screened every Christmas (often alongside its sequel, The Snowman And The Snowdog) and is undoubtedly best known for the central song of its Howard Blake-composed score: Walking In The Air. 


SCROOGE

Of all the versions of A Christmas Carol to grace our cinema screens in the post-war years, this 1951 British offering is widely considered to be the greatest - not least because of a show-stopping portrayal of the title character by legendary English actor Alastair Sim. 
Sim went on to voice Scrooge in an animated version of the Carol some 20 years later. His interpretation of the character on both occasions was so memorable that Jim Carrey decided to mimick him when he himself lent his voice to old Ebenezer (in another animated version of the story, released in 2009).