Editors Pick: Our Favorite Holiday Movies
The Montgomery County Patch staff rounded up our favorite holiday movies - what's yours?
Looking for some fun holiday movies to watch with the family? The Montgomery County Patch Editors rounded up our favorites to share with you.
- Home Alone 1 (and 2) (Brittany Tressler, Perkiomen Valley Patch)
- A Christmas Story (Alyson D'Alessandro, Limerick Patch)
- National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation and Gremlins (Tony Di Domizio, Lansdale Patch)
- A Charlie Brown Christmas (Misha Arnosky, Abington Patch)
- Scrooged (Kyle Bagenstose, Plymouth-Whitemarsh Patch)
- Die Hard (Keith Heffintrayer, Pottstown Patch)
- National Lampoons Christmas Vacation (Melissa Treacy, Regional Editor)
- Scrooged (Gerry Dungan, Lower Providence Patch)
- Nativity! (James Myers, Norristown Patch)
- Rudolph the Red Nose Reindeer (Leann Pettit, Lower Gwynedd-Ambler-Whitpain and Upper Dublin Patches)
- A Christmas Story (David Powell, Associate Regional Editor)
What's your favorite holiday movie? Tell us in the comments!
Nancy Boland
8:10 am on Thursday, December 20, 2012
It's a Wonderful Life
Heather Reilly Powell
10:01 am on Thursday, December 20, 2012
Elf!
Len Faulkner Jr
5:38 pm on Thursday, December 20, 2012
Only the Baby Boomers will recall The Spirit Of Christmas (1950) and "The Night Before Christmas" performed by the "Mabel Beaton Marionettes" These two classic short films get my vote and were shown together in a time span of about 1/2 hour. Simple compared to the special effects of today. Check your TV listing for PBS channel. I think they are running them on Dec 23rd. I recently found them on you tube. Here is the link. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EsDBfPWDv28
just saying....
9:45 am on Friday, December 21, 2012
SCROOGE with George C Scott
David Franklin
7:03 am on Saturday, December 22, 2012
I can't limit it to just one, especially since two of mine have been ignored.....
"It's a Wonderful Life," was mentioned and I agree.
"A Christmas Carol/Scrooge," (1953) with Alistair Sim is the greatest version.
"A Miracle on 34th Street," (1947) with Edmund Gwenn is also the greatest version, above all the half-a*sed re-makes.