Cinderella, in a dusky pink hooded cloak, walks across a snow-covered terrace towards a brightly lit castle – at a window she breathes a peephole into the icicles on the pane. The example of a film that enjoys cult status during the Christmas season.
According to a recent survey, “Three Hazelnuts for Cinderella” is the most popular Christmas film among adults in Germany – on a par with “Kevin – Alone at Home”. The other places are followed by »The Little Lord« and »Sissi«. But one in five also says »I don’t watch Christmas films«.
This week, all of those movies are back to traditional television. But where were “Cinderella”, “Kevin” or “The Little Lord” actually filmed? A trip to locations where popular Christmas classics were filmed, in Saxony or the Salzkammergut, in England or even Illinois:
»Three hazelnuts for Cinderella«: The crazy costumes of the wicked stepmother, the prince in the snow, the shoe on the stairs to the castle, Rosalie the owl, Nikolaus the horse – millions of Germans are familiar with it. Above all, the music by Karel Svoboda creates a homely atmosphere and you can hardly get it out of your head when the fairy tale co-production by CSSR and GDR from 1973 is shown on the screen once more.
That is the pretty yellow baroque palace from »Tri orísky pro Popelku« (the Czech title). Moritzburg Castle in the district of Meissen near Dresden. It markets its fame with a winter film exhibition. It will be up and running once more by the end of February.
»Sissi«: The historical Sisi spent large parts of her childhood in Possenhofen Castle in the Upper Bavarian district of Starnberg. But the legendary »Sissi« films of the mid-1950s were not shot at the original location, which was run down at the time. Instead, a former hunting lodge in Austria was used for the sentimental scenes in 1955.
Schloss Fuschl on the turquoise-blue Lake Fuschl has been a hotel since the late 1940s. According to the Marriott Group, the 5-star luxury hotel, 20 minutes by car from the city of Salzburg, is currently being renovated and will therefore be closed “until the end of 2023”.
“The little Lord”: The British TV film by Jack Gold (original: »Little Lord Fauntleroy«) from 1980 gets good ratings on German television every Christmas season. The film is regarding little Cedric (Ricky Schroder), who lives impoverished with his mother in New York. Little does he know that his deceased father belonged to a British aristocratic family and was disinherited for marrying a middle-class American woman.
One day, his grumpy grandfather (Alec Guinness) invites the eight-year-old to England. He would like to get to know his only descendant and educate him appropriately. Acts as the castle where Cedric softens the Earl’s hard heart Belvoir Castle in the English county of Leicestershire. Most of the interior shots were taken in studios.
“Indeed… Love”: The department store in which Harry (Alan Rickman) wants to buy his secretary and lover Mia (Heike Makatsch) an expensive chain in the same shop without being noticed by his wife and the seller (»Mr. Bean« comedian Rowan Atkinson) spends a lot of time invested in their artistic packaging is not Harrods, but this Selfridges & Co department store in the famous Oxford Street (No. 400). The film is of course packed with other London locations, including the little street of St Luke’s Mews in Notting Hill and Heathrow Airport.
“Kevin home alone”: The grand looking home of the McAllister family, who flies to Paris for Christmas and accidentally forgets their youngest son, is in the Chicago area of Illinois. Airbnb caused a stir last year because the »Home Alone« villa might be booked there.
Many scenes from the film – especially those with the traps for the nasty burglars – were probably not shot in the house, but on a set in a gym. All the same. The world-famous clinker house is not far from Lake Michigan, regarding 30 kilometers north of downtown Chicago. The address in Winnetka reads 671 Lincoln Avenue.
Key word: Christmas movie
In a narrower sense, these are films that revolve around the motif of Christmas and the customs associated with the festival. It is often regarding the core of Christmas, i.e. love, the belief that there is something bigger than just the people on earth, or that it is worth helping those in need – such as children and the poor.
However, Christmas films from the USA are often just romantic comedies in an Advent atmosphere – such as »Love doesn’t need a holiday« (Original: »The Holiday«; Director: Nancy Meyers) with Cameron Diaz, Kate Winslet, Jude Law and Jack Black .
The term “Christmas film” is also often used for homely films that are traditionally broadcast on television at Christmas without having a direct connection to the festival.
In Germany, these include, for example, the »Sissi« films with Romy Schneider, the »Kevin« films with Macaulay Culkin, the school comedy »Die Feuerzangenbowle« with Heinz Rühmann, which was filmed during the war, or the GDR film fairy tale »Drei Hazelnuts for Cinderella«.
What is not meant by »Christmas film«, on the other hand, are films in which the story of the birth of Jesus is told or in which Christmas is only mentioned briefly.
The Hollywood melodrama “Isn’t Life Beautiful?” from 1946 is considered one of the most famous Christmas films worldwide.
In Germany, for example, “Santa Clause – Eine schön Bescherung” with Tim Allen (1994) and “Der Polarexpress” with Tom Hanks (2004) have been successful in cinemas in recent decades, as well as “Der Grinch” (2000 with Jim Carrey and then in 2018 as an animated film with the voice of Otto or in the original Benedict Cumberbatch).
© dpa-infocom, dpa:221224-99-09411/4