The Junky's Christmas

1993
7.5| 0h21m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 14 April 1993 Released
Producted By: VH1 Television
Country:
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

Burroughs takes down a book and reads us the story of Danny the Carwiper, who spends Christmas Day trying to score a fix, but finds the Christmas spirit instead.

Genre

Animation

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The Junky's Christmas (1993) is currently not available on any services.

Director

Nick Donkin, Melodie McDaniel

Production Companies

VH1 Television

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The Junky's Christmas Videos and Images

The Junky's Christmas Audience Reviews

TinsHeadline Touches You
SoTrumpBelieve Must See Movie...
Tymon Sutton The acting is good, and the firecracker script has some excellent ideas.
Curt Watching it is like watching the spectacle of a class clown at their best: you laugh at their jokes, instigate their defiance, and "ooooh" when they get in trouble.
Horst in Translation ([email protected]) "The Junky's Christmas" is an American (mostly) animated short film from 1993, so this one has its 25th anniversary soon and it was written and narrated by William S. Burroughs, who we also see in here slightly under the age of 80 already. It is a little black-and-white movie made for the holidays and Burroughs' inclusion as well as the runtime should tell you already that this is a pretty dark and inconvenient story, no sweet feel-good happy ending stuff for your kids to watch, but a movie of slightly over 20 minutes that won't let us forget about the ugly truth that may come with life only because it is the holidays. As you can easily see from the title, addiction and drugs as well as lonesomeness are crucial ingredients here. Burroughs did a job as good as I expected with the narration while I also liked the other aspects of the audio here like sound effects and music that turned this into a really good watch most of the time. The one thing I was not too fond of was the animation style, but that's just subjective I guess. It still fits the tone and atmosphere of it all and it's also not a problem that it looks way older than early 90s. The ugliness of the locations and characters was in fact exactly what the movie needed. I just cannot put a finger on it really what bothered me. Still all in all, this was a good watch and I give it a recommendation. This was certainly a somewhat different Christmas special, but that's far from the only reason to see it. There are several pretty classy production values attached to it and the story even reaches greatness occasionally. One for the disadvantaged. And those empathic enough to care about their existence too. See it, not just during the holidays. This is a solid watch all year, don't be tricked by the title into thinking otherwise. Pretty bleak, but also pretty good.
coconaturalmystic First let me say I am a huge fan of good claymation, and the claymation here is pretty damn cool. It has a gritty noir feel that not only suites the story but is interesting in its own right. But that's not to say it's purely a noir exercise in 'grittt for gritty's sake"; the mood isn't oppressive or ridiculously bleak but finds the right balance between down-and-out blues and solemn observation and curiosity. It's imaginatively rendered and has some nice moments.Now on to the not so good: the film is narrated by William Burroughs, but not in a way that at all lends itself to the visuals. He simply reads his short story word for word, and since there are no sound effects or voices to accompany the claymation it really distracts the viewer from the visuals. It's pretty pointless, as he is reading descriptions of things as we are seeing them. Nothing he reads couldn't have been conveyed with sound effects or dialogue, or even some creative inner-dialogue. It would have been far more interesting to follow the main character in this way, but with the narration it didn't let the story unfold, and it wouldn't let the animation tell the story visually (if you're at all familiar with how an animated movie can be effective you know this is a huge problem).The claymation would have been that much more vivid if it had been matched to some sound effects, or even some good music, but that's yet another point of contention: the music for the most part is jingly Christmas music, which doesn't fit the animation AT ALL. If anything it could be seen as an ironic choice, but it's used too seriously and for much too long; even a clichéd beatnik jazz soundtrack would have been an improvement.All in all I was pretty impressed with the animation, but the use of soundtrack really marred this little movie for me.
john-t-harris Mind you, if you hate Burroughs and his life, you might hate this. But I've yet to see an animated or clay animation feature that captures the spirit of Christ and Christmas more than this, and that of course was Burroughs', and Matthew's, point. Jesus and Mary were low- lives, carrying an illegitimate child, with no place to stay for the night. Burrgoughs draws the parallels very clearly with Danny the Car Wiper's own quest. The technical execution of the clay animation is a treat and the hip hop soundtrack succeeds in creating the urban atmosphere. I have looked all over the world to find this on DVD or a new VHS, with no luck. Why has it not been re-released?!
sirarthurstreebgreebling II Based on the short story by Burroughs or the same name this is a short clay-mation released by Francis Ford Copolla.Narrated by Burroughs, we follow Danny a junk sick and broke bum on his aimless wanderings to find that christmas fix, his eyes are sting and all he can feel is the raw ache in his bones, only the warming rush of Junk will make his at ease. Severed leg's, drunk Doctors and and a 1/4 grain all go into making this a superb little tale that every family should gather round come christmas morning.With a small scene during Thanksgiving at Burrough's house tagged on the end (he slices the Turkey with a switchblade) it's a worthy way of spending 22 mins over and over again.