This Christmas play from early cinema magician Georges Méliès is a far more polished offering than was an earlier Christmas film of his, "The Christmas Dream" (Le rêve de Noël) (1900). Whereas that 1900 film lacked a cohesive narrative and was more of just a series of Christmas images, this 1904 film has a firm, even clichéd, melodramatic plot. In its seven tableaux, a girl's parents, apparently, send her out into the cold, snowy winter to beg to help pay their creditor and help with the mother's illness. The child's attempts at collecting alms are thwarted by "professional" beggars and a storefront offers no relief, either. Eventually, nearing death, the kid is rescued by a generous wealthy couple who shower the poor family with gifts. A superimposed Christmas angel examines the scene.
"The Christmas Angel" is nothing exceptional, but at least it has a structure and a simple, if vapid, moral in the short runtime of nine to ten minutes. It's a mostly polished production for its time, with some good artificial snow and decent stage designs, including the home with snow coming in through the roof and a cutout missing wall for the storefront to allow for a lot of street-scene actions simultaneously. In one scene, a stop substitution was used to place painted simulated diegetic light on the set. On the other hand, it's a heavily theatrical and primitive melodrama, and both dissolves and direct cuts were used incongruously as scene transitions.