âTis the season for spirited and winless debates about what the best movie is. No one needs us to remind you about the obvious holiday movies playing on repeat on cable, whether it's "It's a Wonderful Life", âHome Alone" or âLove, Actually," or even those holiday adjacent classics like âEyes Wide Shutâ and âThe Godfather.â But perhaps you are looking to go beyond the obvious this year (sorry, âChristmas Story," âWhite Christmasâ etc, etc).
Associated Press Film Writers and have you covered with the best Christmas films for every mood.
A movie that feels like a Christmas movie but isnât, really
âGrand Budapest Hotelâ: Truthfully, thereâs nothing outside of a little snow to make Wes Andersonâs 2014 delight a Christmas movie. But I donât think thereâs another movie that better resembles the experience of opening a present than âGrand Budapest Hotel.â Unwrap Andersonâs intricate designs and the movieâs Russian doll-like narratives, and smile. (Available for digital rental) â Coyle
Best movie for feeling fancy
âMetropolitanâ (1990): Who among us hasnât dreamt of doing debutante season in New York? Maybe donât answer that, but Whit Stillmanâs âMetropolitan,â about a few privileged youths on the Upper East Side, is the ideal film to turn on when youâre craving something that feels like an elegant evening on the town but doesn't require breaking out the white tie and ball gowns. (Streaming on Criterion, MAX, Hulu and Prime Video) âBahr
Best performance next to felt
âA Muppets Christmas Carolâ (1992): Itâs one thing to do Dickens with, you know, other humans. But Michael Caine gives an Oscar-worthy performance as Ebenezer Scrooge while sharing the screen with the likes of Beaker and Dr. Bunsen Honeydew. To be fair, though, Gonzo the Great and Rizzo the Rat are also really good in this. (Streaming on Disney+) â Coyle
Best Christmas cry
âThe Umbrellas of Cherbourgâ (1964): Jacques Demyâs technicolor musical isnât exclusively set at Christmas, but its final tearjerker scene at that snowy gas station is enough for me. The whole candy-colored experience, from Catherine Deneuveâs whimsical bows to Michel Legrandâs sweeping, melancholy score just feels right around the holidays. (Streaming on The Criterion Channel) âBahr
The best L.A. Christmas movie
âKiss Kiss Bang Bangâ: Yuletide traditions donât normally include a motormouth Robert Downey Jr., but Shane Blackâs 2005 neo-noir black comedy is worth revisiting perennially whether or not it technically qualifies as a Christmas movie. In âKiss Kiss Bang Bang,â about a thief-turned-actor in Los Angeles, Christmas is more of a decorative ornament set ironically against all the deliciously unwholesome seediness. (Available for digital rental) â Coyle
Best house swapping fantasy
âThe Holidayâ (2006): Ok, so the cozy English cottage isnât real, but what is? The premise? The romances? Cameron Diazâs sprint through snowy fields and country roads in stilettos? Mr. Napkin Head? (Actually, maybe Mr. Napkin Head). The thing is it doesnât really matter, does it? Nancy Meyersâ romantic fantasy is never trying to be anything other than a delightful movie, a little too earnest, a little too glossy and an unabashed ode to the classic movies Meyers loves right down to Eli Wallach teaching a new generation about the âmeet cute.â (Streaming on Hulu and Prime Video) âBahr
A great Christmas thriller not named âDie Hardâ
âThree Days of the Condorâ: Iâll take any excuse to rewatch Sydney Pollackâs 1975 spy thriller with Robert Redford and Faye Dunaway. But, like in âKiss Kiss Bang Bang,â the Christmas backdrop isnât accidental. If the holidays are the ultimate time of togetherness, âThree Days of the Condorâ questions what that means in a post-Watergate world. (Streaming on Paramount+) â Coyle
Best recent kids Christmas movie
âKlausâ: Thereâs such a steady stream of mediocre or worse holiday movies that it can be easy to miss when a gem arrives. Sergio Pablosâ 2019 animated Netflix film was basically an origin story for Santa Claus by way of a desperate postman stationed in a remote northern village. Further proof, along with âMiracle on 34th Street,â that the best Christmas movies hinge on the postal service. (Streaming on Netflix) â Coyle
For the under-five set
âShaun the Sheep: The Flight Before Christmasâ (2021): Clocking in at only 30 minutes, this is the perfect film for the littlest ones in the house. Itâs sweet, funny and adventurous and not even a little bit scary (unless you fear flying sleighs and botched recipes). (Streaming on Netflix) âBahr
Best general holiday-period movie
âNobodyâs Foolâ: Robert Bentonâs 1994 Richard Russo adaptation, with Paul Newman, spans Thanksgiving through New Yearâs Eve. And while that covers Christmas, the richness of âNobodyâs Foolâ exceeds its vaguely holiday setting. Itâs a movie more about daily smalltown struggles and long-term regrets, yet its warmth could match that any of any more traditional Christmas movie, and then some. Thatâs much owed to Newman, but there are countless great performances here, including Jessica Tandy (in her final film), a never better Bruce Willis and a young Phillip Seymour Hoffman as a sniveling police officer. It makes me happy just thinking about it. (Streaming on Kanopy, available for digital rental) â Coyle
For midcentury style and heartbreak
âCarolâ (2015): Even if Rooney Mara didnât catch Cate Blanchettâs eye while wearing a Santa hat behind the counter of a Manhattan department store, Todd Haynesâ âCarolâ would still be one of the loveliest, most achingly tender Christmas movies around. Romance, heartbreak, plaids and martinis, âCarolâ is truly flung out of space. (Streaming on Netflix, Paramount+ and MUBI) âBahr
The ultimate TCM Christmas movie
âChristmas in Connecticutâ (1945): You donât have to watch it on TCM but itâs certainly a fitting place to catch this 1945 screwball classic, with Barbara Stanwyck. She plays a popular homemaking column writer whose false persona as a family woman with a Connecticut farm is challenged when her boss (Sydney Greenstreet) comes for Christmas dinner. As a rule, itâs good to watch everything with Greenstreet. But the central conceit of âChristmas in Connecticutâ â that the perfect Christmas is a lie, and isnât that fun â has proved remarkably durable. (Streaming on WatchTCM) â Coyle
For 19th century New England vibes
âLittle Womenâ (1994 and 2019): Gillian Armstrongâs âLittle Womenâ just feels like Christmas. Maybe part of that is because it came out around the holidays 30 years ago or that its DVD cover leans into it. But then you remember Bethâs piano, the girls stomping through the snow with their Christmas feast, the caroling, the return of their father, the fireplaces and nightcaps and it makes sense. Those wanting all of this with a side of dancing Chalamet, Greta Gerwigâs version is there for the taking too. (1994 version available for digital rental; 2019 streaming on Hulu) â Bahr
The very best Christmas movie
âThe Shop Around the Cornerâ (1940): You can make a strong case for that other Jimmy Stewart Christmas movie. But in the knock-down, drag-out battle for the Christmas movie title, thereâs no greater delight than Ernst Lubitschâs timeless love story. One of the most charming movies ever made, partly because it doesn't shy away from real darkness, too. It also makes for a very effective drinking game if you sip something every time someone says âMr. Matuschek.â (Streaming on WatchTCM and Max) â Coyle
âMiracle on 34th Streetâ (1947): Itâs not even a remotely out of the box choice, but George Seatonâs âMiracle on 34th Streetâ endures as the platonic ideal of a Christmas movie. Itâs strikingly modern for something that came out 77 years ago with Maureen OâHaraâs single working mom, Natalie Woodâs prematurely cynical New York kid and the litigious and capitalistic culture and yet itâs all full of hope and holiday spirit (and a healthy amount of glossy capitalism), taking us from the Macyâs Thanksgiving Parade through Christmas Day. (Streaming on Disney+, Hulu and Prime Video) â Bahr
Lindsey Bahr And Jake Coyle, The Associated Press