The Flight Before Christmas

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

The Flight Before Christmas is a Finnish-Danish-Irish-German computer animated feature film first released in 2008. It is different from most computer animated films that mostly rely on pop culture references and silly characters (Pixar films are the exception) by focusing on the story that is filled with exciting adventure and heart-warming scenes. It's more in the tradition of The Land Before Time than Shrek. The film was written by Finnish screenwriter Hannu Tuomainen and directed by Kari Juusonen from Finland and Michael Hegner from Denmark.

The film is a holiday movie about a young boy reindeer named Niko, who believes his father (whom he doesn't know) is one of Santa Claus's flying reindeer. Niko lives in the wilderness of Northern Finland with his single mother Oona and his adult friend/surrogate father Julius the flying squirrel. Niko wants to become just likes his father and tries to learn how to fly, much to the scorn of other reindeer in his herd. One day, returning from his flying practice, Niko unknowingly leads a pack of wolves to the herd, forcing them to flee from their safe Home Valley to the snowy tundra, where the food is scarce. Niko is blamed for what has happened and he runs away from home to find his real father from Santa's headquarters in the North Pole. He is accompanied by Julius, who wants to protect Niko as he is the only person he cares about, and Wilma, a musical weasel the two meet on their journey. After an eventful journey, the three of them arrive at the North Pole, where Niko will finally find out if his dreams of his father come true or not.

The film was released theatrically in several European countries, but in the US it was released Direct to Video and broadcast on TV by CBS around holiday season. It was marketed as a Christmas Special (and with terrible cover art, ECCH!), which was just wrong. Firstly it was an understatement of the film, and secondly the film featured some scary parts and adultish subject matter, that many American viewers couldn't take in a Christmas Special (Resulting in a tsunami of negative reviews because of that).

Not to be confused with the 2015 live-action movie of the same name.

Tropes used in The Flight Before Christmas include:
  • Big No: Julius after he thinks that Niko has fallen down a waterfall.
  • Black Eyes of Crazy: The villain of the film, Black Wolf, has black sclerae and an insatiable appetite for flying reindeer.
  • Carnivore Confusion: Regarding the previous one, Black Wolf and the rest of his pack have an evil plan of eating Santa's flying reindeer to gain their magical power of flight, then to eat Santa, and then to wreak havoc across the world!
  • Covers Always Lie: According to the cover of the American DVD the film is about "Santa's little helpers", which is hardly the case.
  • Disappeared Dad
  • Expy: Quite a few from The Lion King:
    • Niko - Simba
    • Saga - Nala
    • Julius - Zazu
    • Wilma - Timon/Pumbaa
    • The Black Wolf - Scar
    • The wolves - The hyenas
  • Glorified Sperm Donor: Niko idolizes his father, despite not even knowing his name.
  • Lineage Comes From the Father: The Flying Forces say that flight can only be passed from father to son; taken literally this seems to indicate that only males can fly at all.
  • Market-Based Title: The film was released as The Flight Before Christmas in the US, but as Niko & The Way to the Stars elsewhere in the English speaking world. Further confusing the people, the film was called just The Way to the Stars before it was released.
  • Meaningful Name: The name "Black Wolf" really doesn't make you want to try to make friends.
  • Parental Substitute: Julius to Niko, as becomes increasingly apparent as the movie goes on.
  • Redubbing: The voices for Julius (Norm Macdonald) and Wilma (Emma Thompson) were redubbed in the American version of the of the film. In the original English dub, released in the UK and Ireland, Julius was played by Morgan Jones and Wilma was played by Aileen Mythen.
  • Tell Me About My Father: This film is all about this trope.
  • Weasel Mascot: Wilma.