At the top of that list is It’s a Wonderful Life.
While it isn’t based on a true story, but it feels true in the ways that matter: the struggle, the grace, the community that shows up just when you’re convinced you are alone. It’s the cinematic equivalent of sitting around a fire with your loved ones.
Among my annual favorites is a holiday classic that is rooted in real experience. A film born from personal memories, embellished with humor, sharpened with nostalgia, and shaped into something that became part of American tradition thanks to marathon holiday re-showings on cable TV.
I’m talking about A Christmas Story.
The story behind how it became a film can teach us a valuable lesson about turning childhood memories into enduring movies.
And if you care about making your story resonate, whether you’re a public figure, an athlete, a leader, or simply someone who values the power of memory, this film offers a masterclass in how to transform lived experience into something lasting.
Because A Christmas Story didn’t begin as a screenplay. It began as a boy’s memory. It became a movie because a storyteller knew how to creatively embellish and share those memories with the world.
The Man Behind the Story: Jean Shepherd
Before it became a 1983 film, A Christmas Story lived inside the semi-autobiographical tales of writer and radio personality Jean Shepherd. He built a devoted following telling humorous stories about growing up in the Midwest during the 1930s and 40s—stories filled with petty rivalries, childhood obsessions, family quirks, and the exaggerated stakes that define the universe when you’re nine years old.
Listeners loved him because they recognized themselves in his stories. They had their own version of the kid who wanted something so badly that it felt like oxygen. They knew the overprotective parents, the neighborhood bullies, the frozen winters, the emotional intensity that turns small moments into defining memories.
Those stories eventually became collections like In God We Trust, All Others Pay Cash
and Wanda Hickey’s Night of Golden Memories, which would form the backbone of the film.
Director Bob Clark, a longtime fan of Shepherd’s radio work, approached him with the idea of using these tales to craft a movie. But it wasn’t as simple as adapting one story. The film we know today is stitched together from a constellation of memories—each reworked, exaggerated, and polished until the emotional truth shined brighter than the factual one.
That process of selectively heightening reality without losing authenticity is at the heart of entertaining true storytelling on screen.
The Art of Exaggeration & Embellishment
One of the biggest misconceptions about “true storytelling” is that it must stay small, literal, or restrained. But humor depends on exaggeration. Narrative depends on emphasis. And childhood, especially, is remembered through a lens that distorts scale, emotion, and consequence.
In real life, a boy might wish for a BB gun.
In Shepherd’s telling, it becomes an epic quest, complete with dire warnings: “You’ll shoot your eye out!”
In real life, a class dare might lead to a few laughs. In the film, Flick’s tongue freezes to the flagpole in a moment that every child secretly believes could absolutely happen.
In real life, your father might win a goofy prize. In the film, we get the leg lamp: a glowing, unforgettable symbol of adult absurdity.
Each of these moments is exaggerated, but not false. They reveal the emotional truth of childhood better than a strict retelling ever could. They show us how large the world feels before we grow into it. Embellishment makes it an entertaining story.
For storytellers, especially those drawing from personal experience, this is the lesson:
You do not have to choose between truth and storytelling. Exaggeration can be the vehicle that delivers emotional authenticity. It is emotionally true and universally relatable with smart embellishment.
When used intentionally, it brings the audience closer to the heart of the memory, not further from it.
Why A Christmas Story Endures
Millions of people watch A Christmas Story every year because it does something few films manage to accomplish.
It captures the universal in the specific.
Ralphie’s desperation for that Red Ryder BB gun is a stand-in for every childhood longing we’ve ever felt. The chaos of the Parker household mirrors every imperfect family gathering we’ve survived.
The Old Man’s muttering, the sibling bickering, the triumphs and disappointments—they’re not unique to Shepherd. They’re shared human experiences packaged with just enough comedic embellishment to make us nod and laugh at the same time.
The film endures because it mirrors what we remember about our own holidays, not literally, but emotionally.
And this is the core of great storytelling: Your audience is not looking for your exact life. They are looking for their own life and emotional truth inside your story.
The Power of Memory Crafted and Curated
The success of A Christmas Story didn’t happen by accident. It grew from:
- Captured memories:
Shepherd documented his experiences through radio monologues and written stories. Without that source material, there would be no film.
- Disciplined development:
Clark and Shepherd blended multiple storylines into one cohesive narrative. They shaped a childhood world, not a chronological biography.
- Emotional continuity:
The film’s tone—a delicate mix of warmth, humor, and nostalgia—became its unifying force.
Through my STORYSMART® lens, I see story development as the true power position in filmmaking.
Whether you’re shaping a memoir, a documentary, a series, or a brand narrative, it’s the development phase—the blending, refining, arching, and elevating—that turns real experience into an enduring story and valuable IP.
A memory alone is not a story. A story alone is not a film. It becomes a lasting work when someone takes the time to shape it into something that resonates deeply with audiences.
Other Holiday Films Rooted in True Stories
While A Christmas Story may be the best-known example, it’s far from the only holiday film shaped by real events or real creators’ lives.
Here are a dozen others:
1.Full-Court Miracle (2003) –
a popular Hanukkah movie inspired by the real life story of basketball player and coach Lamont Carr leading a Jewish Day School to a championship.
2.The Man Who Invented Christmas (2017) – Dickens wrestling with his own process as he created A Christmas Carol.
3. Joyeux Noël (2005) – The true Christmas truce of 1914 on the Western Frong during the first World War.
4. Yes, Virginia, There Is a Santa Claus (1974) –
Based on the famous 1897 editorial.
5. Unaccompanied Minors (2006) –
inspired by the true story from Susan Burton titled “In the Event of an Emergency, Put Your Sister in an Upright Position.”
6. Prancer (1989) – Loosely based on real stories of community-driven Christmas miracles.
7. The Christmas Chronicles (2018)
– Inspired by real children’s letters to Santa and folklore.
8. The Man Who Came to Dinner (1942)
– Not fully a Christmas film, but inspired by a real incident involving playwright Moss Hart.
9. Planes, Trains and Automobiles (1987)
– Largely based on writer and director John Hughes experience on a flight from New York to Chicago that was diverted to Wichita and it took him five days to get home.
10. 8-Bit Christmas (2021) – based on a book by Kevin Jakubowski where many of the events came from his childhood, while other parts were influenced by films.
11. Once Upon a Christmas Miracle (2018) – based on the real-life romance of couple: teacher Heather Krueger who is in need of a liver transplant, and Chris Dempsey, her perfect match, who strike up a friendship, followed by romance.
12. The Man Who Saved Christmas (2002)
– the true story of entrepreneur A.C. Gilbert who created the Erector set who figures out a way to keep Christmas alive after the war threatens to take it away.
These films show that the line between “true” and “inspired by truth” is wide and fertile ground for storytellers who know how to cultivate it.
What This Means for Your Story
As we head into the holiday season, I’m reminded of something fundamental: stories become traditions because someone cared enough to craft them.
Jean Shepherd took the time to turn lived experience into written material. Bob Clark took the time to shape that material into a narrative film. Audiences took the time to make the film part of their lives.
If you’re a public figure, an athlete, a family steward, or simply someone with a story worth preserving, remember this: Your memories matter, but your development process determines their impact.
The next classic isn’t created by nostalgia. It’s created by structure, clarity, tone, and ownership. This is the work we help people do every day.
A Question for You
What holiday film is part of your tradition?
And if you had to choose one childhood memory—humorous, heartfelt, exaggerated or not—which one would make a great Christmas movie?
I’d love to hear it.
If you're ready to explore how to shape your own story into something enduring, whether a book, a documentary, or a narrative film, I urge you to join our STORYSMART® community. You can learn more about taking control of your narrative at storysmart.net.
Happy holiday and happy storytelling.
About the Storytelling for ALL™ Newsletter
The Storytelling for ALL™ LinkedIn Newsletter is a guide to making the most of your true story. Twice a month, I'll share proven strategies, creative approaches, and industry-tested tools to help you take control of your narrative, protect your rights, and collaborate with great storytellers to bring your vision to life.
You’ll get practical, actionable insights to adapt your story into a book, film, documentary, or legacy preservation project — using the same approaches that top professionals rely on, now made accessible to you. Whether you’re an athlete, public figure, entrepreneur, or someone with a story worth telling, this is where you’ll learn to share it — on your terms.
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