Christmas Cracker
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Initial release | Bismarck |
---|---|
Directors | Norman McLaren |
Grant Munro | |
Gerald Potterton | |
Jeff Hale | |
Featured song | Jingle Bells |
Producers | Tom Daly |
Cast | Grant Munro |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 2254289 |
About Christmas Cracker
Christmas Cracker is a 1963 animated short about Christmas, co-directed by Norman McLaren, Gerald Potterton, Grant Munro and Jeff Hale.
Christmas Actually: Richard Curtis announces festive stage show
... A live band will play classic Christmas songs (presumably including ) while a string of actors and other well-known personalities will deliver poetry, Christmas Cracker jokes and children s letters to Santa...
Four tips for better recycling at Christmas
... Choose Christmas Crackers wiselyLondon-based baker Tom Smith patented the first Christmas Cracker in 1847 according to the Victoria and Albert Museum...
The retailers were the Christmas winners and losers?
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Can LadBaby be Christmas number one again - or will it be Stormzy or Mariah?
... Is it too much to ask of Santa for it to finally go one better over here too? Another Christmas Cracker, Last Christmas by Wham! has never reached the top spot in Britain either...
The Papers: 'Weary TV debate' and 'weekend storm havoc'
... But for the Telegraph, and anything but a Christmas Cracker ...
The Papers: 'Weary TV debate' and 'weekend storm havoc'
Many of the papers lead with reaction to the BBC's two-way debate between Boris Johnson and Jeremy Corbyn on Friday Evening .
For The Sun , The Debate 's highlight was. For The Mirror , the Labour leader "came out on top". But for the Telegraph, and "anything but a Christmas Cracker ".
The PoliticsHome website says, who "stuck to his tried and tested messaging" - while a snap YouGov poll afterwards suggested that Mr Johnson was narrowly seen to have won, but Jeremy Corbyn "came across as more trustworthy".
The Event was a which says it employed a somewhat "stilted format". The website says there are now "calls for a debates commission and American producers to take charge of the TV set pieces at the next election".
The Times have accused broadcasters of sounding "hysterical" by "attempting to embarrass party leaders into doing interviews". It quotes the former ITV boss Lord Grade and the Channel Five founder David Elstein as criticising editorial decisions made during The General election.
Boris Johnson tells the Daily Mail telling The Paper that the country. He dismisses surveys suggesting he is on course for a majority, insisting that he has learned the lessons of the 2017 result and will be "fighting for every vote".
The PM tells the Mail that questions over whether he can be trusted make his "blood boil because it was [Parliament] that forced the government to break its promise" over Brexit.
As the vote nears, The Daily Mirror nails its colours firmly to the mast, offering a handy guide for its readers setting out how tactical voting. It lists all the marginal seats that could swing away from the Tories - including the Prime Minister 's own constituency of Uxbridge and South Ruislip .
The Daily Mail is similarly helpful - voters get Boris Johnson back into No 10 and ensure Brexit is delivered. For those opting to vote according to policy, the provides a comprehensive breakdown of each party's manifesto pledges on all things infrastructure.
'Why was he let out?'Why was Joseph Mccann - Convicted of multiple sex attacks on Friday -
The for scrapping sentences of Imprisonment for Public Protection and making cuts to the probation Service .
highlights "a probation sector in crisis", which has been "hit with a slew of damning reports from the inspectorate" since it was overhauled by Chris Grayling .
- it says the "broken Criminal Justice system is a disgrace and a danger to The Public ," and it demands that the next government "restores sanity to sentencing. . to keep men like Mccann off The Streets ".
"Weekend havoc" could be on the cards, according to the Daily Star , which splashes which it says could bring 80mph gusts. "First blast of winter," The Paper declares, reporting that the Met Office has issued yellow weather warnings for large parts of England.
Meanwhile, the as travellers try to make their trips as low carbon as possible.
British travel agents say growing numbers of customers are looking to book sea crossings - with many opting to take a berth on a cargo ship.
Separately, reservations on sleeper trains such as The Night Riviera from London to Penzance are said to have increased by More Than a quarter in The Past year, as passengers try to avoid flying.
And finallyA banana taped to a wall. Italian artist Maurizio Cattelan says the idea took a year to compose.
Maurizio Cattelan 's banana artwork proved popular while on display in MiamiTwo of The Works were sold but The Paper says buyers were given no clear instructions on what to do if the Bananas start to decompose. The Sun 's headline? "That's Bananas !"
Source of news: bbc.com