Casper's Haunted Christmas

5.4
20001h 24m

Kibosh, supreme ruler of all ghosts, decrees that casper must scare at least one person before Christmas Day so Casper visits Kriss, Massachusetts where he meets the Jollimore family and sets out to complete his mission. As usual, kindhearted Casper has a ghastky time trying to scare anyone; so The Ghostly Trio, fed up with his goody-boo-shoes behavior, secretly hires Casper's look-alike cousin Spooky to do the job-with hilarious results.

Production

Logo for The Harvey Entertainment Company
Logo for Universal Pictures

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Casper's Haunted Christmas Trailer

Casper's Haunted Christmas Trailer

Cast

Photo of David Kaye

David Kaye

Narrator (voice)

Photo of Brendon Ryan Barrett

Brendon Ryan Barrett

Casper (voice)

Photo of Kathleen Barr

Kathleen Barr

Carol Jollimor (voice)

Photo of Ian James Corlett

Ian James Corlett

Little Kind (voice)

Photo of Graeme Kingston

Graeme Kingston

Falso (voice)

Photo of Terry Klassen

Terry Klassen

Skinkie (voice)

Photo of Scott McNeil

Scott McNeil

Stretch / Noel Jollimore (voice)

Photo of Tegan Moss

Tegan Moss

Holly Jollimore (voice)

Photo of Colin Murdock

Colin Murdock

Kibosh (voice)

Photo of Lee Tockar

Lee Tockar

Snivel (voice)

Photo of Sam Vincent

Sam Vincent

Spooky (voice)

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Reviews

R

r96sk

3/10

'Casper’s Haunted Christmas' goes fully animated, which - if you've seen how bad the partial animation has been in the live-action hybrid follow-ups - was obviously going to lead to a far poorer product.

This 2000 release drags and overstays its welcome and that's despite an ~80 minute run time - it's a very dull film, to look at and to take in. Brendon Ryan Barrett is, despite his best efforts I'm sure, ill-fitting to voice Casper, due to his deeper tone - the character should sound kid-like; interestingly though, Barrett starred as the main child character in 'Casper: A Spirited Beginning'.

I will actually give minute praise for one aspect of the film: the throwaway humour was actually, relatively (!), alright - one or two bits got the slightest of chuckles out of me, to be fair. It doesn't help the production at all, but it's something I guess.

The only interesting thing about these films at this point is the filmmaking company changes. From standouts like Amblin Entertainment and Universal Pictures for the original, to Saban Entertainment and The Harvey Entertainment Company for the initial two follow-ups and now predominantly just the latter for this and the next follow-up. Gotta admire the resilience to keep the series going!

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