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My favourite Christmas film: Trading Places

Seb Patrick


A now-classic comedy with a big streak of Christmas hilarity running through it...

Published on Dec 19, 2008

John Landis’ 1983 classic is often overlooked in discussion of Christmas films, perhaps because the film’s events take place over the course of roughly a couple of weeks, during which time Christmas – and indeed New Year – is only a part. Nevertheless, it ticks a fair few boxes as an archetypal Christmassy tale: it’s a morality piece, telling a rags-to-riches (and a riches-to-rags-and-back-again) story as successful stockbroker Louis Winthorpe III (Dan Aykroyd) is made the unwitting subject of a bet between his bosses, the wealthy Duke brothers (Don Ameche and Ralph Bellamy), over the relative merits of genetics and environment and subsequently forced onto the street as a disgraced accused criminal, while smart-mouthed petty crook Billy Ray Valentine (Eddie Murphy) is elevated to his former position.

And, of course, in addition to establishing a highly tangible seasonal atmosphere with the snow-drenched pavements of Philadelphia and the lavish decorations at the Heritage Club, Christmas is an integral part of the film’s middle section, as the Christmas Eve party at Duke and Duke represents the lowest point in Winthorpe’s cruelly-induced fall from grace – drunkenly crashing the party in a grubby Santa suit before getting pissed on by the weather, a passing dog and, indeed, life itself.

Christmas aside, it’s a terrific film – sharp and witty (you have to love the multiple meaning of the title, referring not only to the swap performed on the two leads, but also to the way they swap fortunes with the Dukes at the end, the physical switching of the all-important crop reports, and even to the fact that the film’s denouement takes place at a 'trading place': the World Trade Center), and with a uniformly superb cast (of whom too many – Bellamy and Ameche, Denholm Elliott, Paul Gleason – are no longer with us) all at the top of their game. Murphy has arguably never been funnier, but Aykroyd shows some real chops as well, making Winthorpe snobby enough in the early stages that we can take schadenfreude in his initial downfall, but showing enough depth of character – and the influence of Jamie Lee Curtis’ Ophelia – that we’re firmly on his side even before that Christmas party.

It’s only really at the beginning of the final act, with the tedious train sequence and its uncomfortable use of Aykroyd blacking up to 'disguise' himself as a Jamaican (in a film that had already done well in pointedly demonstrating the shockingly flippant racism of white upper class gentlemen like the Dukes, it feels wildly incongruous), that it sags. But the scene is easily skippable (you miss only a single chapter point on the DVD by doing so) and doesn’t detract from the enjoyment of an otherwise pitch-perfect feel-good romp.

It’s also on Christmas morning, meanwhile, that Elliott’s butler Coleman gets to magnificently deliver one of the film’s best lines. As Louis and Billy Ray debate how the Dukes are planning to use their ill-gotten insider information to corner the frozen orange juice market “unless someone stops them”, those terribly English tones chime in from the corner of the room. “Or beats them to it,” he declares, brandishing a tray. “Eggnog?”

My favourite xmas film: Batman Returns
My favourite xmas film: Home Alone
My favourite xmas film: Die Hard
My favourite xmas film: It's A Wonderful Life
My favourite xmas film: Elf
My favourite Christmas TV Programme: Knowing Me, Knowing Yule

22 December 2008

 

Users Comments

Re: My favourite Christmas film: Trading Places
Posted By benskelly 1 December 23, 2008 03:59:26 AM

Great choice! A classic comedy and absolutely Murphy at his funniest. I agree that the train sequence is the weakest part, too silly, but I don't find Aykroyd's Jamaican offensive at all. It reminds me of Gene Wilder "blacking up" under Richard Pryor's tutelage in "Silver Streak". (Trains - coincidence?) I think we sometimes tend to look back thru PC glasses and see things that aren't really there. In any case, the message on snobbery, class warfare and racism is made pretty unambiguous.

Re: My favourite Christmas film: Trading Places
Posted By bunny_ann 1 December 24, 2008 04:00:56 AM

Don't forget, it's also a Thanksgiving movie (one of Eddie Murphy's co-prisoners tells him "It ain't wise being no jive turkey this close to Thanksgiving"). And I do love this movie, but I disagree with your comment on the train sequence; I don't think it is skippable at all! I love Jamie Lee Curtis' foreign character, whose accent seems to be a mixture of Swedish, German and Russian, and the two baggage handlers (one of whom is a very young Al Franken) arguing over whose turn it is to drive. But still, good choice on a favorite Christmas film.
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Dan Ackroyd eating a fish out of his beard in Trading Places (1983)

Dan Ackroyd eating a fish out of his beard in Trading Places (1983)

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