Amazon.com Review
Spode’s Christmas Tree pattern has delighted families and collectors world-wide since its introduction in 1938. The collection has grown considerably to anticipate every holiday need, from entertaining to gift-giving. Introduced in 2006, this 96-ounce clear glass pitcher decorated with the classic Spode tree comes in handy for a multitude of uses: mixing cocktails, serving milk with homemade cookies, and displaying flowers, to name a few. The pitcher is formed with a pleasingly round belly and pulled handle for a graceful yet sturdy look.
Product Description
An elegant glass pitcher, perfect for holiday eggnog, featuring Spode’s beloved Christmas Tree pattern. A full evergreen tree is impeccably decorated with baubles and tinsel, with gifts placed underneath. Sprigs of holly and ivy complete the scene. Pitcher holds 96 ounces.
An excellent gift for a friend or family member, the glass pitcher comes packaged in Spode’s signature red holiday box and complements a full range of Christmas Tree dinnerware and accessories. After use, the pitcher can be safely cleaned in the dishwasher. –Ann Bieri
A Christmas Story Full Screen Edition

Set in Indiana during the 1940s; nine-year-old Ralphie desperately wants a Red Ryder BB-gun for Christmas, over his parents’ objections.
Genre: Christmas
Rating: PG
Release Date: 27-SEP-2005
Media Type: DVD
5 Stars Best Christmas movie ever!
I have this movie in the full screen edition and am looking to upgrade to the Blu-ray edition. I watch this movie over and over between Thanksgiving and Christmas and it gets me in the holiday spirit. A Christmas classic that everyone should own.
5 Stars Peter Billingsley is so Hot!
I love this movie it makes you laugh and cry. By the way have you ladies seen Peter Billingsley (Ralphie) lately? He is SOOOOOOOOO HOT.
5 Stars Ho ho ho! Ultimate Collector’s Editions due out November 4th, 2008, comparison here
New Ultimate editions of A Christmas Story are coming out in standard definition and Blu-ray. It appears from the announcement that each will repackage the current version with special memorabilia. So, the standard DVD Ultimate edition will have the same DVDs as the 2003 2-disc Special Edition, and the Blu-ray Ultimate edition will have the same DVD as the 2006 Blu-ray. In addition, they’ll have these non-DVD extras:
– a collectible retro Christmas cookie tin (the container for the set)
– 48-page cookbook with recipes inspired by the movie
– photos and quotes from the movie
– a red chef’s apron with an A Christmas Story logo on it
– 5 collectible cookie cutters “in iconic Christmas Story shapes” (looks like a star, a house, a leg lamp, Ralphie in his bunny suit, and what may be Peking Duck)
And the Blu-ray will have an exclusive strand of leg-lamp Christmas lights (see the Blu-ray page for a photo, the second thumbnail). Pretty cute.
There’s nothing in the studio press release that indicates the new editions will be remastered.
The 2-disc Special Edition from 2003 and the Blu-ray from 2006 both have the same DVD special features, which are shared by the Ultimate editions:
– audio commentary by director/co-writer Bob Clark and star Peter Billingsley (Ralphie)
– two readings by Jean Shepard, author and narrator for the movie (audio only)
– Another Christmas Story featurette, includes interviews with Clark and a few members of the cast
– Get a Leg Up featurette, about the making and ongoing sale of the (in)famous leg lamp
– A History of the Daisy Red Ryder featurette, on the object of great desire’s actual history
– Triple Dog Dare Interactive Trivia
– Decoder Match Challenge
– easter eggs (including an actual ad for the leg lamp)
– original theatrical trailer
The video quality of the 2003 standard DVD release is fairly good, a bit soft, with good mono sound. It includes both the original 1.85:1 widescreen format (anamorphic) and full screen versions. The Blu-ray from 2006 is soft-looking for a hi-def version, with fairly good color and the same mono sound.
Now, about the really good stuff, the movie. A Christmas Story is that odd film that appeals to a cross-section of viewers who often can’t agree on what to watch. Fans of sweet Christmas cheer are happily joined by people with a more jaundiced eye to the holiday. To be sure, the movie leans more to the sweet than the sour, but it has enough edge and good-natured twistedness to please some of our darker Christmas angels too. It conveys a genuinely warm nostalgia and some sharp, sometimes pretense-deflating observations about human nature.
The story is set at some indefinite time around 1940 in an Indiana town approaching the holidays. Young Ralphie (Peter Billingsley) wants only one thing for Christmas, the Official Red Ryder Carbine-Action 200-Shot Lightning Loader Range Model Air Rifle with a compass in the stock. (That is, a BB gun, a very particular one.) He plans carefully well in advance how to lay the groundwork for this while avoiding the dreaded rebuff, but almost everyone says it anyway: “You’ll put your eye out!” The relentless struggle for the one true gift develops alongside several other small stories and amusing details, a tongue-on-frozen-pole triple-dog dare, facing the local bully, the notorious leg lamp, the Santa slide, Peking Duck for Christmas, and several others, each memorable in itself.
The actors aren’t very well known, but they’re all just right. There is narration throughout, representing an older Ralphie, done by the originator of the story, Jean Shepard, also just right.
This movie, made in 1983, has gradually become a favorite Christmas classic, now shown in an annual 24-hour Christmas marathon on cable, which attracts a huge number of viewers. If you’ve never seen it, give it a try, even if you have a little Scrooge in you, and you’ll probably enjoy it. If you’re a big fan, or know one, you might want the memorabilia with one of the new Ultimate editions for yourself or a gift. If you don’t care about such extras, just get one of the older editions.
There are Amazon pages to pre-order the Ultimate editions here (standard DVD) and here (Blu-ray).
5 Stars My favorite Christmas movie
This is our family’s favorite Christmas movie. It’s perfect for all ages! The narrator does a great job throughout the movie helping us all to recall fond memories of our childhood Christmases. You’ll be giggling throughout the movie!
5 Stars A must see classic!!!
My wife first saw this movie when she was a teenager….she saw it again when it appeared on Cable and recorded it :)Sadly, we moved and had to give the Cable/DVR box back, so we lost it…so I re-ordered it here on Amazon.com.If you only every see ONE Christmas movie, make it this one!!! You will NOT be disappointed!!!
The Santa Clause Widescreen Special Edition

Disney presents the original smash hit THE SANTA CLAUSEavailable for the first time in a Special Edition. Re-experience this hilarious holiday classic starring the popular Tim Allen now with all-new never-before-seen bonus footage and loaded with interactive games the entirefamily will enjoy.DVD Special Features: Exclusive The Santa Clause 2 Sneak Peek “Fly Santa’s Sled” GameDVD-ROM Advent Calendar Screensaver “Letter To Santa” With Automated Replies “The Making of The Santa Clause” Featurette From An Elf’s Perspective Holiday RecipesSystem Requirements:Starring: Tim Allen Judge Reinhold Wendy Crewson Peter Boyle and Eric Lloyd. Directed By: John Pasquin. Running Time: 107 Min. Color. This film is presented in “Widescreen” format. Copyright 2002 Buena Vista Home Video.Format: DVD MOVIE Genre:

Donald “Doe” Holiday is a con man with a knack for trouble. But before he can inherit his uncle’s fortune, he must convince Harriet Pendergast, the estate’s straight-laced executor, that he has given up his lowlife ways to become the perfect family man, complete with a wife, kids and even a dog.
4 Stars Good Family Movie
This was ok Family movie it did not hold my 10 & 7 year old attention - they went for a short bike ride in the middle.
It’s a Christmas story of man who is con-artist who will come into money if he has a stable job, wife and family - so he finds some - learns his life lessons - happy ever after.
4 Stars Cute Christmas movie
This is a fun, wholesome movie, shot in Spokane, WA, that incorporates the best of two homeless kids, a very cute dog, conniving adults who are all looking for the same thing - family. There is sometimes corny but cute dialogue - and of course, a happy ending.
4 Stars A Pleasant Holiday Movie
The Family Holiday was an amusing, lighthearted family movie. I thought the children did a decent job; William Schultz especially stood out. Kevin Connell made an excellent villain. As far as TV Movies go, it was a decent one.
4 Stars Family Holiday
A delightful upbeat comedy which depicts how the joy of family can change a person’s lifestyle. In order to gain family inheritance a con man must have a wife and children. This is the story how this con man acquires a “famiy” and how they change his life for the better. A must see for anyone who has enjoyed true family love.
3 Stars Hectic movie
the family holiday was a silly, shallow, simile of a make believe family who in the end becomes a real family, I think…though marriage was never mentioned, and I believe all families should start with marriage…