Noelle
Photograph: Disney
Photograph: Disney

The best Disney Christmas movies to watch for a touch of magic this season

Mickey, Goofy, Jack Skellington and Santa himself are on hand for the holidays.

Matthew Singer
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You’d think it would be easy to throw together a list of Disney’s greatest Christmas movies. After all, this is the company that built an empire on magic, mirth and childhood dreams. Surely its vaults must be positively bursting with yuletide cheer. But think about it: how many House of Mouse classics can you actually name? Sure, scroll through Disney+ and you’ll find heavy-hitters like Home Alone and Jingle All the Way, but those movies were acquired from other companies and stuffed under the extremely wide Disney umbrella.

As for actual Disney-branded Christmas gems, you’ve got to dig fairly far ‘neath the proverbial tree. You’re in luck, though. ‘Tis the season for giving, so we’ve gone through the studio’s expansive catalogue and excavated the movies most likely to make your heart swell with cheer. Some are familiar; others are truly hidden chestnuts. All of them are guaranteed to get you in the Christmas spirit.

Recommended:

🎅 The 50 best Christmas movies of all-time
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✍ The best animated Christmas movies for the whole family
🏰 The best Christmas movies on Disney+
🐭 The 50 best Disney movies for family night

Disney Christmas movies

1. Tim Burton's The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993)

Tim Burton and Henry Selick’s stop-motion musical is more of a Halloween movie than a Christmas movie – you see its iconography everywhere in the month of October, and its core audience is Disney goths who keep their homes decorated in fake cobwebs and plastic skeletons all year long. But that doesn’t mean it doesn’t work as a shot of yuletide cheer. In fact, in telling the story of a weary skeleton who hatches an ill-fated plan to bring the joy of snow and Santa back to his home of Halloweentown, it says more about the magic of the season than just about anything else the House of Mouse has produced. Rated PG.

2. The Muppet Christmas Carol (1992)

A good reminder that everything is better with Muppets, this is comfortably the best screen adaptation of Charles Dickens’ immortal tale of spiritual redemption. Kermit the Frog is Bob Cratchit, Miss Piggy is his wife (‘natch), while Gonzo portrays the author himself. But who, pray tell, is Ebenezer Scrooge? In a true stroke of genius, the miserly crank is played by Michael Caine, who takes the role as seriously as he would if he were acting alongside actual humans. Honestly, more movies should take the same approach – you know Conclave would be improved if Ralph Fiennes’ co-stars were made of feltRated G. 

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3. The Santa Clause (1994)

It’s the jolliest film franchise ever launched by the accidental death of Santa Claus! After inadvertently causing the big man to tumble off his roof on Christmas Eve, a divorced dad (Tim Allen) is forced by mystical decree to succeed him – red suit, unshaveable beard, permanently expanded waistline and all. It’s a bit of an odd premise for a family comedy, yet it spawned multiple sequels and a Disney+ series, all of which stretched the concept much farther than it was meant to go. The original, though, exudes genuine warmth, and produces a few solid laughs along the way. Rated PG. 

4. Noelle (2019)

Quickly forgotten after Disney+’s launch, this slight but lovely comedy stars Anna Kendrick as the daughter of St Nick, who seeks to make an impact on the season while toiling in the shadow of her brother/heir apparent Nick (Bill Hader). It’s an all-star affair – Billy Eichner, Shirley MaClaine and Julie Hagerty further populate the North Pole – and the kind of old-school Christmas comedy they simply don’t make anymore. Rated PG.

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5. Disney's A Christmas Carol (2009)

Although the stop-motion animation now looks rather antiquated, Charles Dickens’s classic tale of a rich curmudgeon being taught the true meaning of Christmas by divine force is timeless. Robert Zemeckis’s interpretation gets a significant boost from Jim Carrey, who not only voices cantankerous old Scrooge but all three ghosts who visit him in the night to show him why the holiday matters. Speaking of those ghosts – they look pretty dang scary for what’s ostensibly a kids film. So parents of very young children, be forewarned. Rated PG. 

6. Prep & Landing (2009)

This delightful holiday special – which spawned its own micro-series of adventures – reimagines Santa’s elves as a magical covert squad akin to the IMF, giving us the action-packed Christmas-themed Mission: Impossible parody we never knew we needed. As a bonus, Betty White is on hand to voice Mrs Claus, while Oscar-winning Pixar composer Michael Giacchino is pulling the strings with the orchestra. Rated G.

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7. Olaf's Frozen Adventure (2017)

Frozen is more wintry than Christmassy, and while we’re well aware that’s a losing argument against watching it for the 400th time, maybe consider a double-feature with this more directly holiday-themed spinoff. With Elsa and Anna having no traditions of their own, wisecracking snowman Olaf (voiced by Josh Gad) sets off across Arendelle to discover how others celebrate the season, investigating not just Christmas but Hanukkah and Winter Solstice, too. It also has four new original songs, which may grant you a brief respite from ‘Let It Go’... maybe. Rated G. 

8. Mickey's Christmas Carol (1983)

Many children of the ’80s were introduced to Charles Dickens and A Christmas Carol via this animated short, which finally casts Scrooge McDuck as his miserly namesake and Mickey Mouse as poor Bob Cratchit, with several other familiar faces from across the Mouskeverse filling out the main roles. While exceedingly faithful to the original story, it’s one of the better adaptations ever brought to screen. Add the 1999 anthology Mickey’s Once Upon a Christmas to really make a night of it. Rated G. 

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9. I’ll Be Home for Christmas (1998)

What Disney roundup would be complete without a little appearance from then-teen heartthrob Jonathan Taylor Thomas? In this film, ’90s kids will swoon as JTT plays a college student named Jake who is lured home for Christmas with the promise of an awfully nice sports car. How’s that for a present? Will he be able to snag the keys when troublemakers on the football team desert him in a Santa suit sans wallet? His promised Porsche isn’t the only thing he'll have to worry about – looks like his main squeeze is cozying up to his rival as this holiday debacle unfolds. Rated PG. 

  • Film
  • Animation

If you ask us, any movie that takes place on or around Christmas qualifies as a ‘Christmas movie,’ and this foundational Disney classic is bookended by scenes of adorable puppies scampering around a twinkling tree the morning of December 25. So, it counts. Plus, its message is all about togetherness and family, so it fits the themes of the season, too. Got a problem with its inclusion here? Take it up with Jesus. Rated G

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11. One Magic Christmas (1985)

Ginny (Mary Steenburgen) thinks she and her husband have it rough finanically. As a result, they're not too keen on festive Christmas celebrations. However, when their daughter goes to mail her wishlist to the man in the red suit, she meets an angel who’s willing to help rekindle that Christmas cheer. The beats here are familiar in this ‘true meaning of Christmas’ yarn. But this is the only version that features the great Harry Dean Stanton as an angel. Rated G. 

12.ʉ۪Twas the Night (2001)

There's nothing quite like a kid who's about ready to drive. But what happens when one young fella and his uncle decide to go for a test drive with Santa's sleigh instead of a car? Shenanigans, that’s what. And yes, that's future Walter White Bryan Cranston pulling the reins. Don’t worry, this is long before he landed on the (very) 'Naughty’ list. Not rated. 

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13. Winnie the Pooh: A Very Merry Pooh Year (2002) 

The Hundred Acre Wood becomes a winter wonderland in this delightfully straightforward Christmas treat, which packs more joy into Pooh’s quest to set up his Christmas tree than the live-action Christopher Robin could muster across its entire drab runtime. The gang’s all here, and there are few characters better suited for the holidays than Piglet, Tigger and Owl. Except maybe Eeyore… somebody get that donkey some nog, stat. Rated G. 

14. Beauty and the Beast: The Enchanted Christmas (1997)

Ah, Disney and the cash-grab direct-to-video sequel: truly, a tale as old as time. Not so much a follow-up to the studio’s Renaissance Era classic as a delightful addendum, the movie flashes back to the first Christmas Belle and her hairy paramour spent together, when he was still more monster than man and she his prisoner, telling the story of the misunderstanding that nearly split them up for good. Angela Lansbury and Jerry Orbach return as Mrs Potts and Lumière, while Paul Reubens and Tim Curry voice two crucial new characters – a powerhouse cast, all things considered. Rated G. 

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15. The Christmas Star (1986)

One con man (the great Ed Asner) has a great idea: To channel his inner Saint Nick and dress up like the man in the red suit himself. That way, he'll be able to bust out of the slammer and reclaim the goods he belives to be his. But what's going to happen when two little ones mistake him for the real Santa Claus? Why, he discovers the true meaning of Christmas, of course. Rated G. 

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