Sunday, December 24, 2017

Fred Claus (2007) and the North Pole



December 24th, 2017.  Santa Claus is making the final plans for his trip around the world.  He made his list.  He checked it twice.  Now he’s going to give presents to every kid who was nice.  It’s Christmas Eve and Santa Claus is preparing his yearly breaking-and-entering flight.

Can you picture Santa standing there at the North Pole, checking over his reindeer and sleigh before setting off?  I bet you can.  And I bet that most of the imagery that everyone pictured is the same.  Bright lights with older feeling architecture.  A big factory for the elves to work in.  Snow everywhere.  Pretty close, eh?  A lot of the Christmas movies that feature Santa Claus use the same idea of the North Pole.  It has been engrained in our minds.

Fred Claus was a 2007 film that told the story of Fred (Vince Vaughn), the brother of Santa Claus (Paul Giamatti).  He was jealous that Santa was the more beloved brother.  Santa had always been caring.  He had always done crazy, inspired things, carving his own odd path instead of being an average, normal person.  Fred was the average, normal person.  Their mother (Kathy Bates) loved Santa more and it turned Fred into a cynical adult.  Now he needed money from Santa and the only way he could get it was by working at the North Pole.  The work would change him.  Fred would become more compassionate.  He learned about the spirit of Christmas.
Fred Claus was “What would happen if Vince Vaughn was related to Santa Claus.”  It had Vince Vaughn doing his normal Vince Vaughn antics.  The only difference was that he was doing them around Santa Claus and the elves.  The majority of the movie was set within the North Pole.  It was the standard looking North Pole that you would expect.  The architecture was based on the medieval European homes of the not-so-wealthy.  There were bright lights because Christmas has become about capitalism and stringing Christmas lights around your house.  It was the North Pole, so there was obviously snow on the ground.  Everything about it was the picturesque North Pole that most movies depict, at least in part, if not as a whole.

Going a little earlier than Fred Claus, we have The Santa Clause trilogy.  As the series went on, the North Pole that they depicted became more and more like that of Fred Claus.  The first movie had an early 19th century architecture feel to it.  It seemed to be going for the grandiose feel of train stations and churches without the overall vibe of those places.  Big spaces and large, colourful windows.  Even the designs seemed like something you could imagine in the brickwork of those buildings.

The major way that Fred Claus and The Santa Clause shared their North Pole was in how delicious the locations looked.  I don’t mean that I would necessarily eat either of the sets.  That would be ludicrous.  But they both seemed to be basing their design on food.  Though I could relate the architecture to different periods in time, they also felt like different foods.  The Santa Clause went for more of a candy kind of look.  Some poles were like candy canes, others were like licorice.  There were colours that seemed to fit a candy scheme.  Fred Claus, on the other hand, was more of a gingerbread house style.  Sure, there were candy elements to it, but the buildings seemed more in the style of gingerbread houses than your average candy.

What is important is the food aspect of each North Pole.  They both shared a food style of architecture.  It didn’t matter if the building style came from the same era.  As The Santa Clause progressed into The Santa Clause 2 and The Santa Clause 3, the cartoonish nature of the North Pole became more pronounced.  The buildings and their colours grew to resemble icing that gets put on shortbread and gingerbread cookies.  It became more akin to the North Pole of Fred Claus.
If we go back even earlier, 1985 saw the release of Santa Claus: The Movie.  A movie called Santa Claus: The Movie was sure to feature the North Pole.  The location ties into the history of Santa Claus and the movie was all about Santa.  The North Pole that was depicted in the movie wasn’t quite as bright as the North Pole depicted in the movies that came after.  It had a similar feel to the old European architecture of Fred Claus, but the buildings were more wood based.  Log cabins and two-by-fours.  That kind of stuff.  It had hints of the colourful nature of later North Poles.  There were yellows and greens and reds throughout the wood, spicing it up.  It was the ancestor to the North Pole that we know from more recent movies.

One thing that each of the three North Poles shared was a large workshop.  That was something that people decided on fairly quickly for the Santa mythos.  If his elves were going to make enough toys for the boys and girls of the world, there would need to be a lot of elves and a lot of space for them to work in.  The small workshops of Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer and Santa Claus Conquers the Martians would not suffice.  Santa Claus: The Movie, The Santa Clause, and Fred Claus all featured large workshops with many elves to craft toys.  That’s one definite thing in movie versions of the North Pole that everyone agrees about.

As you can see, the North Pole evolved over the years.  It started off small and muted through the 1960s.  As time went on, colour was brought into the North Pole.  Reds, greens, and yellows began covering the walls in the 1980s.  As the 1990s came around, the windows grew and the design of the building became more influenced by sweets.  By 2007, when Fred Claus came out, the North Pole was beginning to look like a gingerbread town that Santa and his elves lived in.  In general, the image of the North Pole slowly turned into this.  People see this image when thinking of the North Pole.  They imagine Santa living in this world.  This is the North Pole.

This entire post can be taken with a grain of salt.  You might think I’m talking (writing, actually) out of my ass here.  I’m simply basing my idea of the North Pole off of some of the major Santa movies that have come out over the past few decades.  I’m assuming that people have similar ideas of the North Pole as I do.  These movies support that idea.  That’s all.  Thanks for reading, even if you don’t agree.  Have some good holidays, guys.  See you on New Year’s Eve.
Before we all go eat some roast beast, let’s get some notes in here:

  • Santa Claus Conquers the Martians and Santa Claus: The Movie were both mentioned in this post.
  • Fred Claus was suggested by @LastFilmSeen, who also suggested Santa, Jr., Jack Frost 2:Revenge of the Mutant Killer Snowman, and Santa with Muscles.
  • Frank Stallone showed up as himself in Fred Claus.  He has also been in Terror in Beverly Hills and Hudson Hawk.
  • Stephen Baldwin and Roger Clinton both made their return to the Sunday “Bad” Movies in Fred Claus after previously being featured in Bio-Dome.
  • Two actors from Jonah Hex were in Fred Claus.  They were Rio Hackford and Jeffrey Dean Morgan.
  • Fred Claus was the second Sunday “Bad” Movie for Chris “Ludacris” Bridges, who was also in New Year’s Eve.
  • Rusty Goffe returned to the Sunday “Bad” Movies with Fred Claus.  He was in Flash Gordon.
  • Kathy Bates made her second appearance in Fred Claus.  She was already in Valentine’s Day.
  • The only mentioned right now Kevin Spacey has been in another Sunday “Bad” Movie.  That was Nine Lives.
  • Finally, one of the workers at the North Pole in Fred Claus was played by Elizabeth Banks.  She was featured in Movie 43.
  • Have you seen Fred Claus?  Do you agree with my assessment of the North Pole?  Let me know in the comments.
  • If there’s a movie that you think I should watch for the Sunday “Bad” Movies, let me know in the comments or on Twitter.  I’m always looking for movies that I might not know.  The crazier the title, the better.
  • There are times when I’m watching bad movies where I like to share clips.  I frequently do that through my Snapchat stories.  Add me (jurassicgriffin) if that sounds interesting to you.
  • One more thing has to be done before we part ways for seven days.  It’s time for me to mention what movie I’ll be watching for next week.  That movie is 54.  I don’t know all that much about it, so I’m looking forward to this watch.  Could be interesting, could be terrible.  Who knows?  I don’t.  I’ll know in a week though.  See you then.

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