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Here is is, Christmas again, and the very air is full of Peace on Earth and Good Will Toward Men. Not even a mention of zombies or neck-biting or rotting corpses or even a little friendly furry lycanthropy. So what's a horror film fan to do? Don't despair, boils and ghouls...there are actually more than a few "Christmas" movies that are more about "slay belles" than sleigh bells. In order to make it easy to select the right "scary Christmas" flick this holiday season, herein we present...
By ADAM GROVES (Once again, its our putrid pleasure to welcome a new writer to the "ranks" of HORROR-WOOD. Adam Groves describes himself as one who "has lived 33 years and been an unrepentant film fanatic for most of them." His places of residence have included Southern California, Washington State and British Columbia, where he attended the Vancouver Film School and scripted the award winning feature film The Laypersons Guide to Modern Living. Hes also worked as a graphic artist, internet entrepreneur, film soundman, documentary editor, movie theater projectionist, Halloween monster, wedding videographer, bookstore clerk, TV production assistant and bad actor. Adams reviews, reflections and ramblings can be found in Fright.com, Shock Cinema, Gauntlet, The Keeler News, Reflections, cult45.fsbusiness.co.uk and Wild About Harry.) Its Christmastime once again. This means greater traffic, longer checkout lines, old ladies trampled in department stores, a deadly flu virus, a load of carjackings, increased suicides, an influx of pukey "holiday" Muzak and countless children eagerly awaiting the arrival of a guy who doesnt exist. If you ask me, its a perfect time for some horror movies...some very special horror movies!
You probably recall the flap over the R-rated Miramax comedy Bad Santa, in theaters now and receiving all manner of bad press calling for it to be censored immediately. Fine, but first Id suggest theyand youcheck out some, if not all, of the following movies, most of them available on video and/or DVD (in the US, at least). Their quality varies, but all prove that holiday fare is far more varied than Bad Santas detractors could possibly imagine...and, more importantly, that Christmas and horror make a great combo! Because lets face it: that Santa Claus is pretty damn scary...
Ill start with the oldest movie on the list, the 1959 Mexican-made Santa Claus. This colorful film displays a worshipful, nauseatingly sugary attitude to its hero that viewers of mainstream holiday fare like Miracle On 34th Street, The Nightmare Before Christmas, and Dr. Seusss How The Grinch Stole Blah-Blah-Blah will recognize, but its far weirder than any of those movies. Foremost among its charms are the wacky, near surreal art direction and unbelievable sight of Santa battling Satan(!), who cavorts in a skin tight red leotard, sends bad dreams to innocent children and inspires them to break windows and steal toys. Director Rene Cardona also made Wrestling Women Vs. The Aztec Mummy, and Night Of The Bloody Apes, films that have much in common with this one.
The 1972 British anthology film, Tales From The Crypt, is notable for featuring the screens premiere evil Santa. In the first of the films five segments, Joan Collins finds herself terrorized by a maniac dressed as Santa Claus, a particularly unfortunate development considering shes just murdered her husband. It seems Joan might have the upper hand on Santa...until her young daughter screws things up by inviting him into the house! A good, tight little story thats far and away the best part of the film. It was remade years later as an episode of the cult HBO series of the same name. In 1973s Silent Night Bloody Night, an old man haunts the secluded mansion where he witnessed the murder of his family by a band of maniacs years earlier. The place used to be an insane asylum, you see, and the disturbed protagonist unwittingly let the inmates loose. The creepy and atmospheric sequence depicting the events outlined above is the only reason to watch Silent Night Bloody Night, the remainder of which is an erratically paced, poorly lit flatline. Worst of all, the Christmas season is incidental to the story, which might as well take place on Easter.
Bob Clarkes 1974 classic Black Christmas remains the prototype of the modern-day slasher movie; watch it back to back with John Carpenters Halloween and youll see what I mean. The only thing is, this film is set during Christmastime, with a masked maniac loose in a girls sorority house who makes creepy phone calls (meaning that in addition to the aforementioned Carpenter film its also a forerunner to 1979s When A Stranger Calls) and then murders the inhabitants. Its an extremely well made film that utilizes repetitive Christmas carols to superbly unnerving effect. Director Bob Clark was a talented horrormeister back in the Seventies with this film, Deathdream, and Children Shouldnt Play With Dead Things to his credit. Interestingly enough, Clarks next holiday-related foray was 1983s A Christmas Story, a far cry from the darkness of Black Christmas.
Taking a step downway downwe arrive at To All A Good Night (1980), a terminally uninspired slasher movie about a Santa-clad nut loose in a girls boarding school. The direction by David Hess (better known as Krug in Last House On The Left) is so listless I wonder if he was even awake. The body count is high (a reported fifteen), but the lighting is so dark its often difficult to make out whats going on and anyway, Im having difficulty remembering what happened in this filmor maybe I just dont care. Lewis Jacksons Christmas Evil (a.k.a. You Better Watch Out; 1980), on the other hand, is a bonafide holiday classic. Quite controversial in its day, it stars Brandon Maggart (Fiona Apples dad!) as a toy factory worker who likes to spy on kids and make lists as to which ones are naughty or nice, then break into the houses of the naughty kids and leave bad presents. Maggart really goes over the edge when his superiors dont show his favorite time of year the proper respect and so embarks on a killing spree.
Christmas Evil is far from great, but it does contain a good deal of fun non-Holiday friendly sleaze, and the much-contested final scene, a warped variant on the image of Santa in his sleigh, is a real show-stopper. The 1984 British sleazer Dont Open 'Till Christmas presents a novel twist on the seasonal slasher formula: this time around its people dressed as Santa who receive the brunt of the abuse. The culprit is a freak who as a kid walked in on his "mum" getting boned by a guy in a Santa suit. The film overall is pretty bland and the gore FX quite cheesy, but there are some memorable bits, including a Saint Nick attired prostitute being felt up under her costume and a guy who gets his wang severed while taking a piss!
No Yuletide horror movie list is complete without a mention of 1984s immortal Slayride...or, as its now known, Silent Night, Deadly Night. This one starts out with a kid witnessing his parents killed by a criminal dressed as Santa Claus; the scumbag not only cuts the throat of the kids mom, but also rips her top off to expose her breasts. This effects the kid later in life when, after being raised in a corrupt Catholic orphanage, he goes to work as a toy store Santa and spies two of his coworkers getting it on. This causes him to snap and kill pretty much everyone in sight in a variety of ways: a guy gets strangled by Christmas tree lights, a kid gets beheaded with an axe, a woman (played by scream queen Linnea Quigley) gets impaled on deer horns and a friendly Santa finds himself in the wrong place and gets shot to death by cops.
Silent Night, Deadly Night is cheap and tacky throughout, but what it has in its favor is a cheerful willingness on the part of director Charles E. Selleir, Jr. (who now says he regrets making the film) to always go that extra mile to appall. It shouldnt surprise anyone that the film was heavily protested; the "ladies with pink hair" (to borrow an expression from Joe Bob Briggs) actually got it banned in several states. Thats doubtless a large part of what made it such a success...and why it spawned a whopping four sequels. Of them Ive only seen Part 2 (1987), a completely underwhelming effort that consists largely of footage recycled from the first film.
The PG-rated Gremlins (1984) may seem like an odd choice, but it remains one of the most gleefully subversive holiday movies ever (regardless of the fact that it was originally released in the summer). It was produced by Steven Spielberg around the same time he made Indiana Jones And The Temple Of Doom, easily the darkest of the Indiana Jones flicks, and directed by Joe Dante, who up to then was best known for straightforward horror fare like Piranha and The Howling. The result is a deliciously mean spirited deconstruction of the "spirit of Christmas," with cutencuddly creatures turning into ugly, murderous monstrosities. Polly Hollidays kitchen gremlin massacre is simply great, as is Phoebe Cates legendary "Why I hate Christmas" monologue. Back in 1984, Gremlins was almost as controversial as Silent Night, Deadly Night and it aint hard to discern why.
Moving into the Nineties, we come to Jack Frost (1996), a wannabe franchise starter about Jack Frost, a serial killer who gets his molecules scrambled and becomes a killer snowman. He decapitates a kid with a sled, strangles a dude with Christmas tree lights, turns a young womans bath water to snow, stabs a cop with an icicle, etc. Jack makes lame wisecracks throughout (an obvious attempt at emulating Freddy Krueger) and the ending hints at a sequel. Sure enough, a Part 2 followed in 2000, and it was a disaster through and through; somehow I dont think well be seeing too many more Jack Frost movies! A far more effective nineties holiday horror fest is the Spanish Day Of The Beast (Dia De La Bestia; 1995), a nutty romp by director Elroy De La Iglesia (Accion Mutante, Perdida Durango), who blends slapstick and splatter like no one else. In this film, a priest decides to summon and take on the Devil...by committing all the evil he can during the holiday season! Action packed, gory, darkly comedic fun thats every bit as outrageous as it sounds; any movie that has a row of street corner Santas mowed down by machine gun fire gets my vote!
Other recommendations? The opening minutes of The City Of Lost Children (La Cite Des Enfants Perdus; 1995) consist of a singularly horrific dream sequence with a child terrorized by a mutating Santa (the rest of the film aint too shabby, either!). The Grither segment of Steven Spielbergs anthology program Amazing Stories has the parents of two impressionable kids trying to scare em with a story about The Grither, a big green monster who flies around on Christmas Eve as a rival to Santa Claus; in the nasty ending, we discover this monstrous creation is far more real than anyone suspected.
Equally noteworthy is Harlan Ellisons Nackles, which sadly exists only in teleplay form. It was nearly filmed back in 1985 as a segment of CBSs short-lived New Twilight Zone, but got axed by network censors. Like The Grither, its about an evil, seemingly made-up alternative to Santa Claus that becomes terrifyingly real for a bigoted welfare officer trapped in the bowels of a big city tenement. Published in the February 1987 issue of The Twilight Zone Magazine, one can only imagine how this unforgettably caustic script might have transferred to television. So there you have it: Christmas and horror, a match made in movie heaven! If you hate Christmas, just kind of like it or simply want a change of pace from the usual holiday movie BS, the above films should more than satisfy.
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