Wendy Ide 

That Christmas review – overstuffed but lovingly detailed animation of Richard Curtis trilogy

Locksmith Animation’s second feature goes overboard on snow and suffering but offers plenty of fun nonetheless
  
  

Four children surrounded by a table full of festive food.
‘Eager to please’: That Christmas. Photograph: Netflix

Adapted from a trio of children’s books by Love Actually and Four Weddings and a Funeral screenwriter Richard Curtis, this is an eager-to-please animation that wants to have its Christmas cake and eat it. That Christmas attempts to harness the hokiest aspects of festive nostalgia – every surface in the small town of Wellington-on-Sea is covered with a thick meringue of snow – while also arguing that holiday traditions should be torn up and revamped (turkeys are the main beneficiaries of this plot line) and ticking off a list of hot-button themes: childhood anxiety, broken homes, the climate crisis, loneliness.

There’s a little too much crammed into this overstuffed stocking of a movie, but the gorgeous, lovingly detailed animation style – it’s the second feature from British studio Locksmith Animation (Ron’s Gone Wrong) – and the zippy action sequences should prove a winning combination for family audiences.

Watch a trailer for That Christmas.
 

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