
I’d like to kick off this slightly new column on Arts and Media with some Christmas movie memories and a lesson they teach. In an age of television and film, Christmas traditions have come to include everyone sitting down to watch favorite family Christmas movies. To older classics like It’s a Wonderful Life, Miracle on 34th Street, and A Christmas Story, have been added newer classics like The Muppet Christmas Carol, Home Alone, and Jingle All the Way. Last December I was watching a not-so-classic Christmas movie one afternoon and learned something from it I hadn’t thought of before.
Not Such a Classic
Deck the Halls, starring Danny Devito and Matthew Broderick, is not a Starr family tradition. In fact, the only reason I watched it was because I hadn’t seen it since its first DVD release and thought it might be nice to watch a film I barely remembered. The film is about a pair of neighbors who constantly try to one-up each other on Christmas traditions, mostly in terms of decorations. They lose the true meaning of Christmas, buy into the secular, materialist hype, learn to hate thy neighbor, and are only saved after a series of comic disasters involving severe (though slapstick) injury and massive property damage. The movie was mildly entertaining, though I was mostly reminded of why it was forgettable. Nevertheless it offered an unexpected pleasure.
Deck the Halls was released in 2006. I watched it nearly a year later when it came out on DVD. So I had about four years to forget the movie. This meant I got to enjoy one of those surprise moments that only come from watching movies that are several years old—when you see a movie or TV star who wasn’t a star then, but is now. You recognize his or her younger face and remark (as my daughter would say), "Hey that’s that one guy in that new show!" (My daughter isn’t great with names—she got it from me.)
As I was watching Deck the Halls it happened three times. I recognized an actress from Arrested Development (the funniest sitcom of the ’00s that nobody watched). Then I recognized the actor who played Hurley in Lost (the best dramatic show of the ’00s which just about everyone watched). And then I recognized Kristin Chenowith, that five-foot-tall woman with the great big voice—she was in Pushing Daisies (another great unwatched show) for two seasons but is probably most famous for her stint in the Broadway play Wicked.
And here’s the point that struck me: I had seen this movie before, but now I was looking at these people in a new way based on what they had done since Deck the Halls. Their newer stardom changed the older movie for me as a result. It was like seeing it through a time machine—seeing the movie and these actors in the past in light of who they are and what they’ve done since.
BC and AD
What a great message that was for Christmas. Before the birth of Christ, people didn’t keep calendars saying "BC." The Romans had a calendar from the birth of their empire. The Chinese still have a different calendar from ours. But the dominant calendar in the world, our Western, Christian calendar, marks all of history from the birth of Christ—that single moment in time—and in two directions! We don’t just refer to the years after Christ’s birth with the tag, "In the year of our Lord" (Latin, Anno Domini—from which we get the abbreviation, "AD"). We also mark everything before Christ’s birth with a "BC" (Before Christ). Because of who he is, because of what he did (and continues to do), because he is the most important person in history, the true "morning star" is bigger than any star to come out of Hollywood. For these reasons we date all time in the world, even the times from before he came to earth, from the moment of his birth. Through him we look back in time to see how all times before he came led up to him. Through him we see all times—past, present, and future—in fresh new ways.
Dr. Charlie W. Starr teaches English, humanities, and film at Kentucky Christian University in Grayson, Kentucky.
www.charliewstarr.com
OTHER COLUMNS:
January 8, 2012 - The beat goes on
December 25, 2011 - The purpose of art part 13: in retrospect
December 11, 2011 - The tree falls
November 27, 2011 - The purpose of art, part twelve: listening to music
November 13, 2011 - Chance encounters
October 30, 2011 - The purpose of art, part 11: movies and television
October 16, 2011 - Own-goal
October 2, 2011 - The purpose of art: part 10: how to view literature
September 18, 2011 - An unlikely hero
September 4, 2011 - The purpose of art, part nine: how to view art
August 21, 2011 - The core gospel
August 7, 2011 - The purpose of art, part eight: judging art by experience
July 24, 2011 - Unbroken
July 10, 2011 - The purpose of art, part seven: good art or bad?
June 26, 2011 - The end of the world
June 12, 2011 - The purpose of art part six: art and truth
May 29, 2011 - If you can keep your head . . .
May 15, 2011 - The purpose of art part five: meaning and truth
May 1, 2011 - Painted with the same brush
April 17, 2011 - The purpose of art: part four: beauty and glory
April 3, 2011 - Good news!
March 20, 2011 - The purpose of art--part three: reason and imagination
March 6, 2011 - Making an uplifting difference in a down economy
February 20, 2011 - The purpose of art--Part two: beauty and truth
February 6, 2011 - Encourage one another
January 23, 2011 - The purpose of art--Part one: why it matters
January 9, 2011 - A privileged life
December 26, 2010 - Before Roe v. Wade
December 12, 2010 - A divided world
November 28, 2010 - On the edge or over the line?
November 14, 2010 - The gospel and Humpty Dumpty
October 31, 2010 - Road sins
October 17, 2010 - We need a guide
October 3, 2010 - Inside the next Narnia film
September 19, 2010 - Clint Eastwood and faith
September 5, 2010 - Looking at decades to come (part two)
August 22, 2010 - Why I should not go on mission trips
August 9, 2010 - Looking at decades to come (part one)
July 25, 2010 - The calling
July 11, 2010 - A brief history of the Third Millennium [part two]
June 27, 2010 - Carpe chitchat
June 13, 2010 - A brief history of the Third Millennium (part one)
May 30, 2010 - Love your neighbor
May 16, 2010 - The most popular lies atheists tell (Part Three)
May 2, 2010 - Of lighthouses and stormy seas
April 18, 2010 - The most popular lies atheists tell (part two)
April 4, 2010 - Whose friend are we?
March 21, 2010 - The most popular lies atheists tell (part one)
March 7, 2010 - Vampires everywhere
February 21, 2010 - The new buzz in Narnia
February 7, 2010 - Counting the cost of influence
January 24, 2010 - Clone Wars:
morality tales for parents and children
January 10, 2010 - Christians and Culture
December 23, 2009 - Bad Movies vs. Movies that Are Bad
December 6, 2009 - Unless they hear
November 22, 2009 - Why fighting for sexual truth still matters
November 8, 2009 - Why I believe in God
October 25, 2009 - Commuting in days of evil
October 11, 2009 - Poets and don’t know it
September 27, 2009 - How Hollywood proves abortion is wrong
September 13, 2009 - Significance
August 30, 2009 - Dance alternatives
August 16, 2009 - Gluttons for gossip
August 2, 2009 - Truth from Twilight
July 19, 2009 - Visitor-friendly churches
July 5, 2009 - The Shack
June 21, 2009 - When forgiveness fails
June 7, 2009 - Re-imagining Education (Part Six)
May 24, 2009 - We are not alone
May 3, 2009 - Re-imagining education (part five)
April 26, 2009 - Conviction
April 12, 2009 - Re-imagining education (part four)
March 29, 2009 - An evangelistic proposal
March 15, 2009 - Re-imagining education (part three)
March 1, 2009 - He makes me sick
February 15, 2009 - Re-imagining education (Part Two)
February 1, 2009 - Spiritual insecurity
January 18, 2009 - Re-imagining education (part one)
January 4, 2009 - Church and politics
December 21, 2008 - Heaven’s music
December 7, 2008 - The church and marriage
November 23, 2008 - God and the president
November 9, 2008 - A time for courage
October 26, 2008 - Likes and dislikes: the Prince Caspian movie
October 12, 2008 - What’s that noise?
September 28, 2008 - Modesty matters (part two)
September 14, 2008 - All it takes is some TLC
August 31, 2008 - Modesty matters (part one)
August 17, 2008 - What would you fight for?
August 3, 2008 - Staying through the credits
July 20, 2008 - Honor to whom honor
July 6, 2008 - Tyler Perry and the movies you’re missing
June 22, 2008 - The peaceable kingdom
May 25, 2008 - Another generation grew up
May 25, 2008 - Technology and the Bible (part two)
May 11, 2008 - Technology and the Bible (part one)
April 27, 2008 - What is truth?
April 13, 2008 - And the geek shall inherit the earth
March 30, 2008 - A charactered God
March 16, 2008 - The college choice (part two)
March 2, 2008 - Good news can be hard to hear
February 17, 2008 - The college choice (part one)
February 5, 2008 - Ten suggestions for a godly standard of living
January 20, 2008 - Expelled: that “Bueller” guy’s pro-God movie
January 6, 2008 - Choosing a lifestyle
December 23, 2007 - Teachable TV?
December 9, 2007 - Owners or stewards?
November 25, 2007 - Christians teaching Christians to change TV and film
November 11, 2007 - My money is God’s business
October 28, 2007 - Navigating under the radar
October 14, 2007 - The things God values
September 30, 2007 - Movie moments
September 16, 2007 - God’s economics
September 2, 2007 - The best books to read
August 19, 2007 - There’s a rat in ‘separate’
August 5, 2007 - The art of reading
July 22, 2007 - Atheist chic
July 8, 2007 - Why books matter: the sequel
June 10, 2007 - Books: why they matter
June 3, 2007 - The non-impact of “The Lost Tomb of Jesus”
May 27, 2007 - The universal gospel
May 13, 2007 - Loving Muslims through culture
April 29, 2007 - Hope
April 15, 2007 - God in the dark
April 1, 2007 - The gospel goes to the movies
March 18, 2007 - What the Bible movies can teach us
March 4, 2007 - What will you hurt for?
February 18, 2007 - Why Heroes . . .
February 4, 2007 - Give peace a chance
January 21, 2007 - When fairy tales are true
January 7, 2007 - WYSIWYG lives
December 31, 2006 - What’s coming next?
December 17, 2006 - Mercy, mercy
December 3, 2006 - Proof of evolution!
November 19, 2006 - Hungering for God
November 5, 2006 - Violence and government, war and peace
October 22, 2006 - The mighty meek
October 8, 2006 - The Battlestar and the Bible
September 24, 2006 - Soap for the soul
September 10, 2006 - Right vs. cool
August 27, 2006 - The painful truth
August 13, 2006 - More Lies Hollywood Tells
July 30, 2006 - Christian counter culture
July 16, 2006 - The lies Hollywood tells June 16, 2006
July 2, 2006 - Roll over, Da Vinci July 2, 2006
June 18, 2006 - Blockbuster season June 18, 2006
June 4, 2006 - All things to all men June 4, 2006
May 21, 2006 - When media attacks! May 21, 2006
May 7, 2006 - Culture critiques church May 7, 2006
April 23, 2006 - Responding to The Da Vinci Code April 23, 2006
April 9, 2006 - The Matrix (but not the movie) April 9, 2006
March 26, 2006 - The inside scoop Mar. 26, 2006
March 12, 2006 - Teach your children Mar. 12, 2006
February 26, 2006 - Lessons from the Lost
February 12, 2006 - Syncretism, shmyncretism Feb. 12, 2006
January 29, 2006 - Holy Hollywood?
January 15, 2006 - A people under the Word
January 1, 2006 - Lessons from Kong