Direct Dickens's ghost-book in your browser with Morphic's A Christmas Carol AI video generator. Generate A Christmas Carol scenes like the door-knocker shimmering into Marley's face, Marley wrapped in chains of cash-boxes, or the Cratchit family crowded around Tiny Tim, and pair them with the Speech and Music tools to layer narration over Fezziwig's fiddler. Stitch the five staves into a full Victorian Christmas ghost-story episode.

A Christmas Carol characters you can direct

A Christmas Carol scenes you can stage

The door-knocker turns into Marley

On a foggy London Christmas Eve at the front door of Scrooge's lodging, the brass lion-head knocker shimmers and resolves into the half-transparent face of Jacob Marley, eyes opening to look at Scrooge.

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The door-knocker turns into Marley

Marley's ghost in chains

In Scrooge's candle-lit bedchamber at midnight, Marley's ghost stands wrapped in a long chain of cash-boxes and ledgers, jaw bandaged in white linen, wailing as Scrooge cowers in the high four-poster bed.

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Marley's ghost in chains

Fezziwig's ball

In a candle-lit Fezziwig warehouse cleared for dancing, the great Mr. Fezziwig spins his wife at the head of a country dance while clerks and bakers and milkmaids whirl around the floor, fiddler at one end.

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Fezziwig's ball

The Cratchit Christmas dinner

In a small Camden Town parlour at firelight, the Cratchit family crowds around a small table set with a goose, a pudding, and Tiny Tim raised on a stool with his crutch beside him as Bob carves.

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The Cratchit Christmas dinner

Make A Christmas Carol videos in three steps

  1. 01

    Describe your A Christmas Carol scene

    Write the A Christmas Carol scene you want, including the moment, location, and camera direction.

  2. 02

    Generate the video

    Morphic generates a cinematic, frame-ready clip on your canvas in seconds, no editing software required.

  3. 03

    Refine your A Christmas Carol video

    Tweak the prompt, regenerate variations, then download or share the moment the shot lands.

Related workflows

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FAQs

Where can I make A Christmas Carol videos with AI?
You can create A Christmas Carol scenes directly in your browser on Morphic. Open the Text to Video tool, describe the moment you want, and Morphic produces the clip. No installs and no specialist software needed.
What kinds of A Christmas Carol scenes work best with AI video?
Single-shot moments tend to work best: the door-knocker turning into Marley, Marley's ghost in chains, Fezziwig's ball, the Cratchit Christmas dinner with Tiny Tim, the neglected grave under snow, the laughing Christmas-morning bedpost. Anchor each A Christmas Carol scene to a specific stave and a specific light source.
How do I keep A Christmas Carol characters consistent across scenes?
Use the Character Lineup workflow to lock Scrooge, Marley, the three spirits, Bob Cratchit, and Tiny Tim before producing scenes, then reference those character cards in every prompt. Morphic preserves the design across the five staves so an A Christmas Carol series feels continuous.
How do I make my A Christmas Carol videos feel like Dickens, not a Muppets adaptation?
Anchor your prompts to Dickens's actual settings: Scrooge's counting-house, Camden Town, Fezziwig's warehouse, the Cratchit parlour, the snowy churchyard. Reference the John Leech illustrations from the 1843 first edition as the visual anchor. Set the period in 1840s London with gas-lamps, fog, and snow. Avoid likeness language for any film performer.
Can I add narration and music to my A Christmas Carol videos?
Yes. The Speech tool generates a Dickensian-narrator voiceover from your script in the voice you choose, and the Music tool produces an original orchestral or carol-led soundtrack. Layer them onto your generated video to publish a complete A Christmas Carol episode.
What visual style works best for an A Christmas Carol video?
Three styles consistently land. Cinematic photoreal in the spirit of high-budget early-Victorian period drama delivers the prestige Dickens look. Painterly oil with chiaroscuro echoes the John Leech illustrations from the 1843 first edition. Stop-motion or storybook animation in the spirit of mid-century holiday specials can carry the lighter family-friendly tone. Name the style directly in the prompt.