Entertainment | Robert Zemeckis Motion-Capture Christmas Carol Hits Wrong Notes Spirit's there, but critics split on wow-factor of evolving tech By Harry Kimball Posted Nov 6, 2009 1:30 PM CST Copied Motion-Capture Christmas Carol Hits Wrong Notes The "A Christmas Carol" trailer. (movtrack) Most critics express a hearty "humbug" for Robert Zemeckis' motion-capture version of A Christmas Carol, starring Jim Carrey. A sampling: "It's a heartwarmer that doesn't have much of a heart itself," Michael O'Sullivan writes in the Washington Post, "populated by figures that are halfway between Wii Fit avatars and real people." Come on, folks: "Just because something can be done with computers doesn't mean it should be." Mike Scott of the Times-Picayune sees something else: a classic version of a classic. 'No cartoon characters to be found here, no Muppets, no shiny, happy singalongs. That's not the way Dickens wrote it, and so it's not the way Zemeckis presents it." "Mo-cap' comes at a cost," Joe Neumaier writes in the New York Daily News. "Like a dime-store holiday card, this 'Christmas Carol' is well-crafted but artless, detailed but lacking soul." Read These Next In the early morning hours in East Hollywood, chaos. CEO resigns after appearance on Kiss Cam. This is why you don't wear metal in MRI rooms. The latest in the generation wars: the 'Gen Z stare.' See 1 photo Report an error