A Miser Brothers' Christmas (2008 TV Movie)
3/10
Disappointing
30 April 2009
Warning: Spoilers
The bickering brothers are back, this time called upon to save Christmas as Santa Claus suffers from a minor back injury incurred when flying between the feuding Miser Brothers.

While the premise has potential, the execution was faulty. It was a mistake to reintroduce these characters for this special, because it invites comparison to their original appearance in "A Year Without A Santa Claus," and between the two Christmas specials, it's no contest.

"The Miser Brother's Christmas Special" opens with Tinsel, Santa's chief mechanic, working on a new Super-Sleigh for Santa to use, which Santa intends to test.

Mother Nature meanwhile is holding an annual get-together with all of her children (and apparently has a very large number). One of her sons, North Wind (whom both Miser Brothers actively dislike) has learned that if something were to happen to Santa Claus, then he himself would take over Santa's business.

Unlike any of the characters in the previous special, North Wind discloses an unsettling duplicitous nature. Seemingly doting and adoring of his mother, he is actually vain and narcissistic, possibly even sociopathic. He has become obsessed with the idea of taking over Santa's business for his own personal adoration and seemingly has no compunction whatsoever about eliminating Santa Claus permanently to accomplish this.

He dispatches his minions to sabotage the Super-Sleigh, which forces Santa to crash land between the feuding Miser Brothers, causing them to be blamed for his injuries. North Wind is ready to assume Santa's duties, but Mother Nature has decided that the Miser Brothers should fill in for Santa Claus this year.

Operations in Santa's workshop stagnate as the brothers continue to battle. Thanks to Mrs. Claus's delicate touch, the Miser brothers are finally persuaded to put aside their differences and cooperate. The history of the Miser Brothers is revealed at this point (and it may be apocryphal), as we learn they have been on Santa's "naughty" list for mutual bickering since infancy. This is inconsistent with what is known for about them in "A Year Without A Santa Claus," since they refer to each other as "step-brother," but this special suggests that they're actually fraternal twins.

I guess we're to assume that Mother Nature is not bound by normal human laws of gestation and can have step-children obviously very close in age, if not the same age.

North Wind has not stopped his machinations and has attached heating and cooling units to the bottom of Santa's sleigh, apparently capable of heating and cooling vast regions of the planet. The Miser Brothers are convinced that the other is responsible in a plot to heat or cool the entire planet, and they resume feuding. Santa, despite his injuries, decides to do the route himself, and the North Wind attacks, cutting Santa's reindeer loose and conjuring up a vortex to consume Santa forever.

The brothers, who have learned that neither is to blame for Santa's injuries and that Santa was the victim of sabotage by the North Wind, come to the rescue and through some tricky maneuvering, manage to pull Santa out, although nearly becoming swallowed by the vortex themselves. But all are rescued and North Wind has been captured. The Miser Brothers have made Santa's "nice" list for the first time, and North Wind is consigned to doing chores for Mother Nature for the next several thousand years.

Where this special fails is the introduction of malice. The Miser Brothers had a mutual animosity, but this special takes it too far. Where they were once content to annoy and frustrate each other, even to causing minor injuries in the style of slapstick comedy, they have since escalated their hostility and seek genuine harm. And even more disturbing is the North Wind's apparent amorality. Mother Nature's sentence of doing chores, even for a few thousand years, seems rather lenient for someone who tried to murder Santa Claus.

Were it not for the repeated reuse of the Miser Brothers' ragtime song from A Year Without A Santa Claus, the songs would have nothing to redeem them. In contrast with the dynamic styles used in "Year," such as the Dixieland-style "It's Gonna Snow-Ho-Ho Right Here in Dixie," and the poignant numbers, such as "Blue Christmas" and "I Believe In Santa Claus," the new songs for this special are vapid. It gave me the distinct impressions that they were written at the last minute.

It is indeed regrettable, because the Miser Brothers are worthy characters and deserving of their own Christmas special. Sadly, this special has failed them miserably, and it would have been better for this special had they not been used for it. I'd prefer to remember the Miser Brothers as they were in "A Year Without A Santa Claus" and forget this special even exists.
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