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Sunday, December 25, 2016

Horror For the Holidays: The 12 Slays of Christmas

 
Out of all the many examples of holiday horror, Halloween and Christmas have cornered the market. Between the two, Christmas seems to have given the most gifts to horror fans for over four decades; not all of them are what you hoped for, but there's enough good fear for the cruel-tide tradition to continue for years to come. Below are a deadly dozen of creepy Christmas horrors and a couple of Bad Santa's thrown in for good measure. So gather around the tree and let's open some presents.

TALES FROM THE CRYPT (1972) 


Joan Collins has been a bad girl; so bad, in fact, that Santa pays her a personal visit to ensure she's never, ever naughty again. Joan knocks off her husband on Christmas Eve, and in between attempts at cleaning up the mess, hiding the corpse, and trying to keep her daughter in bed, an escaped maniac dressed in a Santa suit tries to come in 'cause 'baby, it's cold outside'

Adapted from its EC comics origins in Vault of Horror #35 from 1953, Britain's Amicus Studios brought good fear with the first ever Killer Kris Kringle in their 1972 anthology, TALES FROM THE CRYPT. Titled 'And All Through the House', director Freddie Francis perfectly captures the holiday spirit in the limited 15 minute running time of this segment (the first of four not counting the wraparound). Years later it would be remade as one of three inaugural stories chosen to launch the award winning HBO series, TALES FROM THE CRYPT, which ran for seven seasons from 1989 to 1996.

HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS (1972)

Oh, there's no place like Home For the Holidays
Through the storm no matter how far away you run
You pine for the comfort of a familiar gaze
For the holidays you pray to see the next day's sun.

A seasonal suspenser starring a young Sally Field as one of four daughters summoned to the home of their bed-ridden father who believes his younger wife is trying to kill him. Like any dutiful patriarch, he demands his daughters kill off their purportedly wicked step-mother. In between plot twists, a mysterious killer wearing a yellow rain coat begins bumping everyone off with a pitchfork.

Aaron Spelling exec produced this superb Made For TV thriller set on Christmas Eve during a massive downpour complete with thunder and lightning that lasts for 70 of the film's 74 minute running time. 

Written by Joseph Stefano, the writer of Hitchcock's PSYCHO (1960); handfuls of OUTER LIMITS episodes (both original and 90s versions); the TV monster flick SNOWBEAST (1977); and THE KINDRED (1987). Director John Llewellyn Moxey directed the fantastic THE CITY OF THE DEAD (1960) before nestling comfortably into the television medium; there he was the guiding force behind such TV terrors as THE HOUSE THAT WOULD NOT DIE (1970), A TASTE OF EVIL (1971), THE NIGHT STALKER (1972) and I, DESIRE (1982). Making its debut on Tuesday, November 28th, 1972, ABC repeated the airing the following year again on Tuesday, but this time on Christmas Day again as the Tuesday Night Movie.

SILENT NIGHT, BLOODY NIGHT (1972)

Silent Night
Unholy Night
All are dead
Off with your head
Round yon victims
Young and old
Lowly bodies so bloody and cold
Sleep in so many pieces
Sleep in so many pieces




Formerly an asylum for the criminally insane, the Butler House has been empty for years since the owner died in a mysterious fire. Left to the last living relative, the house is sold to the town council with the intention of tearing it down. However, an axe-wielding, black-gloved figure is stalking the halls of the Butler House with the intention of chopping up anyone who comes inside.

Before Golan and Globus turned it into the House of Bronson and Norris, Cannon was a company that produced a number of lower-tiered horror features including this underrated Christmas chiller; a proto-slasher resembling the sort of movie Hammer should've been making at this time. Aside from a molasses-like pace, you'll recognize traces of Bob Clark's supreme seasonal classic BLACK CHRISTMAS lurking about. Sort of an American Giallo akin to DON'T LOOK NOW (1973), without the artistic touches this would be a forgettable footnote lost in a sea of low budget obscurities. Co-produced by Lloyd Kaufman of Troma, both he and director Theodore Gershuny transplanted the artsy tendencies to the sexy exploitationer, SUGAR COOKIES, in 1973. Gershon Kingsley's ice-cold score is a highlight, particularly his haunting rendition of 'Silent Night'.


The first time I saw the picture was on ELVIRA'S MOVIE MACABRE in the mid 1980s on the late, great WGGT-TV channel 48 (the great entertainer!). It will try the patience of those expecting a linear bloodbath and entice the curiosity of those looking for something under the radar yet classy.

BLACK CHRISTMAS (1974)

'Twas the night before Black Christmas, when somewhere in the sorority house
a creature was stirring... and it wasn't a mouse.
The bodies were stacked upstairs with morbid care,
the sole survivor in hopes that help soon would be there.

A thoroughly nasty killer delivers threatening phone calls before stalking and murdering the girls in a sorority house over the Christmas holiday. Aside from its skin-crawling suspense, an unsettling score, and goosebump inducing obscene phone calls, the most sense-shattering shock comes upon the revelation that the killer has been phoning it in from inside the house the entire time. Fred Walton would port over this novel plot device for his WHEN A STRANGER CALLS in 1979. The late Bob Clark, who would deliver the ultimate Christmas gift in the form of the seasonal favorite A CHRISTMAS STORY (1983), produced a raunchy remake to BLACK CHRISTMAS in 2006.

BLACK CHRISTMAS (1974) was originally set to make its Network Television debut as STRANGER IN THE HOUSE on NBC on Saturday, January 28th, 1978 at 9pm. More or less at the last minute, NBC cancelled the airing because the film's plot was too similar to the then-current sorority house murders committed by Ted Bundy. BLACK CHRISTMAS finally premiered approximately 4 months later on NBC as the Sunday Late Movie on May 14th, 1978. Despite the change in airtime, Judith Crist's less than enthusiastic review remained unchanged.

CHRISTMAS EVIL (1980)


In 1947, Harry Stadling saw mommy kissing Santa Claus and grew up with a jolly old fat man fixation.... only Harry is seldom as jolly. Feeling an unhealthy amount of the Christmas spirit, he literally knows when you're sleeping; knows when you're awake; and knows if you've been bad or good... documenting this information to decide what he'll be bringing you on Christmas Eve. Both fascinating and frustrating, some fabulous photography keeps this minor cult item from being exiled to the island of Misfit Movies. The original title of YOU BETTER WATCH OUT is a better fit than CHRISTMAS EVIL.

Arguably the most poignant, character-heavy holiday horror featuring a psycho Santa. Of the more character-centric horrors of this time period, director Lewis Jackson's movie is the most tame; it's more DON'T GO IN THE HOUSE than MANIAC without the grim subject matter of the former and the extreme gore of the latter. For those expecting something a bit more cheerily bloody, it won't be chestnuts roasting on an open fire.... it's your patience. Often lumped in with slashers, it's more of a psychological thriller; so the film does have a few gifts under its tree. The finale finds the film either flying off into full-fledged fantasy, or just another example of the unhinged Kringler's dementia. Reportedly, 42nd street patrons threw things at the screen over the ending!

Bad Santa's: TO ALL A GOODNIGHT (1980)

The early 1980s had a surge in St. Nick horror; yet only one of them made an impression... and it wasn't this one. David Hess's Santa slasher TO ALL A GOOD NIGHT (1980) was the first feature-length Killer Claus movie, yet, sadly, it's nothing to 'Ho Ho Ho' about. Pre-dating FRIDAY THE 13TH by several months, it's more like a holiday version of PROM NIGHT (1979), and even less appealing than Paul Lynch's disco-infused slasher. The sole interest is in seeing what Krug from THE LAST HOUSE ON THE LEFT (1972) did in his lone directorial effort. Bloody, but bland, and boring on top of it, GOODNIGHT is made all the worse by an annoying music score and acting that will kill off your desire to remain awake.

Bad Santa's: DON'T OPEN TILL CHRISTMAS (1984)

Actor Edmund Purdom (PIECES) directed this second hand present to horror fans. It's a Dick Randall (PIECES again) production so that's a clue quality wasn't a top priority. What makes it unique is that this time Santa... actually a whole lotta Santa's, are the victims of a heavy-breathing slasher killer. Lots of boobs, blood, and a cameo by Caroline Munro doing a music video type sequence. When SILENT NIGHT, DEADLY NIGHT raised such a ruckus, Randall slipped his Santa slayathon in its place where it failed to get noticed. You'd think a movie with such a curious twist on familiar material would be more engrossing.... well, it's definitely gross at times. A large glass of liquored-up eggnog will help get you through this sordid, cold, movie.

GREMLINS (1984)

Joe Dante's darkly comedic, even gruesome, holiday horror-comedy combo about a young man receiving a most unusual Christmas gift was instrumental in the creation of the PG13 rating. Steven Spielberg, that purveyor of family entertainment, had, up to that point, gotten away with glaring scenes of questionable violence and gore in PG films that had his name attached in some capacity.

Filled with nods and send-ups to past movies, GREMLINS is that rare creature feature that is successful at being frightening and funny all at the same time. It's too bad we didn't get the original, darker version that featured gremlins with a taste for human (and canine) flesh and decapitating major characters.

Arguably the film's most (in)famous sequence doesn't even involve the title monsters. In it, Phoebe Cates discloses how her father died imitating Santa Claus, climbing down the chimney with so little care, breaking his neck in the process--to which she says, "that's how I found out there was no Santa Claus". I was in attendance opening weekend with my mother and at that moment there was this wave of gasps from the small fry in attendance; one kid even began to cry (I can imagine that kid's mom saying, "it's okay, the mean lady doesn't know what she's talking about"). I was 9 at the time and had been informed of Santa's true identity a couple years earlier; so I'm sitting there with this grin on my face amid the dozens of now horrified half-pints. I recall this speech caused quite the controversy at the time; only not the level of outrage of our next movie on the list....

SILENT NIGHT, DEADLY NIGHT (1984)


After little Billy witnesses his parents slaughtered by a killer Kris Kringle he grows up with a Santa-phobia and a twisted sense of discipline beat into him by a domineering Mother Superior. Now a grown-up, Billy goes off the deep-end after donning a Santa suit and carrying an axe that's quickly dripping velvet.

There had been many demented evocations of St. Nicolas in print and celluloid form in years prior but none were quite as mean-spirited as Charles E. Sellier, Jr's notorious seasonal slasher from 1984. Critically maligned for years, it's easily the most sadistic example of St. Nick horror. Like a dry turkey on Christmas morning, SILENT NIGHT, DEADLY NIGHT left a bad taste in a lot of people's mouths, leading to the film being pulled from release after just two weeks. Director Sellier showed nothing but disdain for his movie right up to his death in 2011. Outside of the protests and picketing parents, the film's other claim to infamy is a topless Linnea Quigley being impaled and hung on a pair of deer antlers.

THE CHILDREN (2008)

Two couples spend the Christmas holiday at a secluded country house where their children are exposed to some unknown virus that turns them into homicidal mini-maniacs.

This British chiller set during the Christmas holiday is the least overt in its nods to the season. An unacknowledged remake of the 1974 horror feature DEVIL TIMES FIVE, director Tom Shankland's movie differs by introducing a disease of some sort that infects the tykes as opposed to the kids of DEVILS being in a vehicle accident. Shankland's movie is also superior in every other way. The sharp editing and snowy, isolated locale are keys to the film's success. One of the darkest, most mean-spirited of the killer kid sub-genre.

KRAMPUS (2015)

 
If you're a Scrooge at Christmas time, it's very well likely you'll be visited by Krampus, a demonic anti-Claus. A suburban family essentially loses faith in the holiday, resulting in a nasty run-in with the nightmarish monster Santa of German folklore. 

Michael Dougherty, the director of the fabulous Halloween anthology TRICK R' TREAT (2005), tries for the same thing with a Christmas theme. In the vein of GREMLINS (1984) and, as unlikely as it seems, SANTA'S SLAY (2005), KRAMPUS is a 15 million mix of comedy and horror. Derivative but fun darkly comical extravaganza.

Krampus was the subject of a 2013 independent movie titled KRAMPUS: THE CHRISTMAS DEVIL. Aside from a few good scenes, there's nothing to recommend. Amazingly, a sequel, KRAMPUS 2: THE RETURN OF THE DEVIL, turned up in Wal Mart's across the country this past October. KRAMPUS: THE RECKONING (2015) is another in a growing list of cramp-inducing horrible movies. The Krampy creature likewise turned up in the omnibus holiday horror A CHRISTMAS HORROR STORY (2016).

ALL THROUGH THE HOUSE (2015)

 
The holiday terror torch is carried on by the makers of this unapologetic Santa slasher that tips its velvet hat to horrors of Christmas past and many others. The oldest house in a suburban neighborhood harbors a horrifying secret that's connected to a killer dressed as Santa Claus stalking the streets with a pair of garden shears.

The antithesis of KRAMPUS and big studio gloss, the cheapness of ALL THROUGH THE HOUSE is easily overlooked by the meticulous care and affection the filmmakers have for the material. There are numerous lower-than-low budget horror movies these days but few are as engaging as Todd Nunes' antidote for the current crap crop of throwback genre fare. Humor is thankfully minimal... and the horror is highly recommended.

And so this night of Christmas horror comes to an end
These twelve films we dutifully recommend
A dozen times of ghoulishly good fright
A happy, bloody Christmas to all... and to all a goodnight.

Wednesday, December 14, 2016

Santa's Slay: Looking Back At Silent Night, Deadly Night (1984)


 
SILENT NIGHT, DEADLY NIGHT 1984

Lilyan Chauvin (Mother Superior), Robert Brian Wilson (Billy), Gilmer McCormick (Sister Margaret), Britt Leach (Mr. Sims), Linnea Quigley (Denise), Will Hare (Grandpa), Charles Dierkop (Killer Santa)

Directed by Charles E. Sellier, Jr.

"Christmas Eve is the scariest damn night of the year! You see Santa Claus tonight you better run, boy! You better run FOR YOUR LIFE!"

The Short Version: Santa's got an ax to grind in one of the most notorious slashers of all time. Seldom spoken of with high praise, director Sellier--a filmmaker normally associated with wholesome, family entertainment--pushes buttons and envelopes in his yuletide tale of a psycho Saint Nick carving and chopping his way through the film's cast. Deserving of re-appraisal, it's just as sleazy now as it was then; if not more so considering the current trend towards safe-spaces and snowflakes. Its director disowned it, but horror fans embraced it. A seasonal favorite of Ho Ho Ho horror.

After his parents are brutally murdered by a psycho in a Santa Claus suit, young Billy and his baby brother Ricky are taken in at the St. Mary's Home For Orphaned Children. Stricken with fear over the image of Santa killing his parents, Billy finds it difficult adjusting to the strict behavioral tactics of the domineering Mother Superior. Years later the now 18 year old Billy is helped by the kindly Sister Margaret to get a job at a local toy store in the hopes he can fit into society. On Christmas Eve, Billy descends into madness when he's asked to don a Santa suit for kids coming into the store. After killing his co-workers, Billy goes on a killing spree, bringing death to random victims while making his way back to the orphanage for one final encounter with the Mother Superior.


The story goes that then major studio Tri-Star Pictures (before merging with Columbia Pictures and then Sony) wanted to jump into the slasher arena with a low budget winner akin to the likes of FRIDAY THE 13TH (1980) and others of that ilk. What they didn't count on was a tidal wave of public backlash. Instead of embracing the attention--negative as it was--the studio decided to pull their $750,000 investment from theaters, despite it quickly making its money back and then some. Loosely based on a short story by Paul Caimi, the reputation of a little movie called SILENT NIGHT, DEADLY NIGHT would only grow from there.

A great example of irony is that Charles E. Sellier, Jr., a producer of Bigfoot documentaries, nature films and family entertainment for Sunn Classics in the 1970s, would direct one of the most controversial movies of the 1980s. After Sunn was sold to Taft Broadcasting in the summer of 1980, an unhappy Sellier would eventually leave the company in 1982 before his contract was up. Tied up in lawsuits, he was later offered the job of directing SNDN, and allegedly took it on without pay--primarily to keep his crew working.


Shooting for 32 days and under the original title of 'Slayride', SILENT NIGHT was anything but quiet during its brief, two week run before public outrage forced its removal from theaters. Suffering embarrassment akin to Paramount's love-hate treatment of their FRIDAY THE 13TH franchise, Tri-Star lowered their heads in self-inflicted shame and reportedly claimed the film was pulled due to poor box-office. With the rights back in the hands of its producer, Ira Barmack, the film found a longer life on video and cable; and a re-release in the Spring of 1985 via exploitation kings at Aquarius Releasing.


Flash forward to 2016. In our current climate where virtually everything offends everybody, it's easy to look back at this 30+ year old movie and understand why it was so impactful, so offensive to some. SNDN took the image of Santa Claus, the bastion of childhood innocence, and desecrated it in the most spectacularly trashy way possible. It's logical and understandable that this movie would get people riled up. Kids should be allowed to be kids, enjoying those younger days before the hormones of the teen years and headaches of adulthood ruin it all.


Believing in Santa Claus was an aspect of adolescence that made being a kid so much fun... much like putting a tooth under your pillow to receive money from the Tooth Fairy; the Easter Bunny and his candy eggs; and Santa who brings toys to children. Back then, my mom's work would have a Christmas party; employees would bring their families to receive gifts from the company and, in the coup de grace, the seating atop Santa's lap by small fry both frightened and elated. Now, to young minds of the time, we never questioned why there were so many Santa's around--we just assumed the jolly old fat man could be anywhere at any given time.

A lot like Billy in the movie, us kids were always fearful if we didn't get home to bed in time; Santa might not come, and we'd miss out on a bounty of toys under the tree bearing our names. I remember one Christmas Eve, the local news was in on the gag--the weatherman reporting Santa sightings in my area. I remember throwing a fit for us to go home so I could get to sleep; my parents and grandparents just laughing as they knew better. In 1982, my mom told me there was no such thing as Santa Claus. I remember her breaking it to me rather gently, although I wasn't devastated by this news; so when SNDN came out, I was attracted to the movie because of the notoriety it garnered. It was a horror picture that was essentially forbidden fruit.

Nowadays, in stark contrast, there wouldn't be a fuss over a Santa Claus who kills people; only irate objection to seasonal iconography and, of all things, the utterance of "Merry Christmas". The image of an axe-wielding Santa killing people no longer offends; it is now the religious connotations the holiday represents that sends some reeling in horror as if a cross had just been raised to Dracula. Times have certainly changed.


In the 1980s, it was guys like Siskel and Ebert, Phil Donahue, and feminist groups who unwittingly brought a great deal of attention to films like SILENT NIGHT, DEADLY NIGHT (1984); successfully allowing such movies to become lucrative endeavors or enduring cult phenomenons. In these times, it all boils down to politics with an effete society conditioned to feel entitled; and dependency on something other than themselves. In today's "safe-space" environs, this psychopathic St. Nick would hardly raise an eyebrow... while the bulk of the offending celluloid would be the depiction of misogyny and that the strongest woman in the film is an ironclad abbess.


A killer Kris Kringle wasn't the only abrasive imagery seen in SSDN. Scenes of sinful, sex-having nuns and a deaf man dressed as Santa shot to death in the presence of children are two other examples. Elsewhere, some viewers won't be able to watch the movie without becoming alarmed over the fact that all the women are killed while their breasts are bared. By comparison, violence has dulled the senses these days, with little left to the imagination; some of the brutality in SNDN is still shocking mainly because women widely shown as helpless isn't as predominant as it once was. 


The main point of contention back then was primarily aimed at violence perpetrated by, and towards, the image of Santa Claus. Meanwhile, the filmmakers seemed more interested in detailing abuse in Catholic schools, using Billy's psycho Santa as a partial consequence of the strict discipline of the Mother Superior--villain-izing her character while attempting to create sympathy for the film's killer. The filmmakers partially succeed, if going well over the top in the process, shoveling as much sleaze onscreen as possible. In some ways, Sellier made the slasher equivalent of Ruggero Deodato's CANNIBAL HOLOCAUST (1980).

"You will learn what it is to be sorry."

Lilyan Chauvin is absolutely fantastic as the Mother Superior. She easily overshadows Robert Brian Wilson's disturbed Billy character. At times, her strict regimen of "punishment is good" borders on sadomasochism; otherwise, her methods are little more than rough disciplinary actions not too far removed from what a kid would receive from their parents or a paddling by the principal at school. The late veteran actress (she died in 2008) had great presence, and is one of the film's best assets.


Robert Brian Wilson was a good looking actor suited for the role, sadly, he isn't all that convincing. There are a few moments where his years of torment are visible in his acting, but much of the time his expression seldom changes. If he'd been behind a mask he'd of had a bit more menace. The murder of his parents remains the primary catalyst of what triggers his rage; the harshness of the Mother Superior's "Tough Love" merely an extension of it--taking her frequent diatribes on naughtiness to heart while on his Christmas Eve killing spree.

With SNDN being an R rated horror movie, there wasn't much danger of warping the minds of young children who couldn't get in to see it in the first place. Still, one must wonder what was going through the minds of the youngsters featured in the movie itself!

One person involved with the production who was mortified by the finished product was director Sellier. According to him, he wasn't in his right mind when he made the picture. Granted, he knew he was making a slasher movie, but apparently wasn't cognizant of exactly the level of repugnance he was delivering. Instead of receiving his newfound infamy with open arms, Sellier retreated from it, echoing the studio's sentiments. Claiming to have been deeply disturbed by having directed the movie (his first feature directorial gig), his self-proclaimed embarrassment only reinforces the film's attractiveness to the horror masses; it was this notoriety that sparked my interest in the picture in the first place....


I was nine years old when the movie was released in late 1984. I remember seeing the commercial and the televised onslaught of boycotts and protestations against the film and its content; this only made me want to see it more; and that poster... how could any self-respecting horror fan not be mesmerized by the sight of Santa brandishing an ax while descending a chimney to pass along good fear to an unsuspecting family sleeping soundly in their beds? It wouldn't have done me any good to alert my mother to my interest considering her impassioned reaction to my request to partake in a local viewing of PIECES (1983) released in my town the year prior. The videocassette release of SNDN was a much more likely method of viewing, although it would be over a year before that happened in early 1986, first by IVE, then again in October of that year via USA Home Video when you could own your own copy for a cool $79.95!

SNDN has aged rather gracefully. For years it didn't seem to be held in high regard; which was puzzling considering there's some genuinely tense moments and memorable death scenes. It's undeniably rough in spots, but overall, Sellier certainly knows how to sell his slasher product for 85 minutes.

SILENT NIGHT, DEADLY NIGHT best scenes:


As the film begins, little Billy and his family are visiting his crazy grandpa at the Utah Mental Health Facility. When they're all in the room together, the old man simply stares off into nothingness, not uttering a word. As soon as Billy's by himself, grandpa turns on the demented charm, delivering the most terrifying speech ever heard by cherubic ears.

Shortly after leaving the sanitarium, a gun-toting criminal in a Santa suit kills Billy's parents (one of whom is Tara Buckman, the buxom beauty paired with the equally busty Adrienne Barbeau in 1980s THE CANNONBALL RUN). Billy watches from the bushes while the maniac shouts, "where are you, you little bastard?!"; the screams of his baby brother slowly drowned out by a Christmas song playing on the soundtrack. These first 15 minutes are superb; only the film fumbles a bit here and there, failing to consistently maintain the momentum it begins with.


Linnea Quigley's death scene--in its uncut version--is still a powerful sequence, and arguably one of the horror genres best-remembered onscreen deaths. Naturally she's half-naked (bless you) during the whole of this sequence; ending up impaled on deer antlers after our Santa killer lifts her into the air, penetrating her onto the horns, leaving her hanging. A later scene where a sledder has his head chopped off while traversing a hill is equally memorable.

With SNDN's reputation it was a natural assumption a sequel would be produced. Arriving three years later, SILENT NIGHT, DEADLY NIGHT 2 (1987) had not only Billy's brother Ricky taking up the sick St. Nick mantle, but did so with the accompaniment of around 30 minutes of the original film's footage. Ricky returned in the horrible third picture (Bill Moseley replacing Eric Freeman) in 1989 subtitled YOU BETTER WATCH OUT. Two other sequels followed that had nothing to do with killer Santa's. In another instance of bizarre irony, Mickey Rooney, who famously remarked that the "scum who made that movie should be run out of town", ended up starring in the Santa-less fifth movie, SILENT NIGHT, DEADLY NIGHT 5: THE TOY MAKER (1991). SILENT NIGHT, an unremarkable pseudo-remake, surfaced in 2012.


A much better movie than its reputation suggests, SNDN is an unusually well-made slasher picture from a period where the sub-genre was killing itself from market saturation. Fortunately, the filmmakers had a novel idea and brought it to the screen with a level of professionalism not normally afforded these movies. Still, the film is haunted by an insalubrious atmosphere that, depending on one's interpretation, both helps and hinders the seriousness of the work. The late director may have wished he'd never made it, but for genre fans, there's a lot of toys and goodies to be had in this controversial Santa slay-fest.

This review/article is representative of the Anchor Bay/Starz bluray. Specs and Extras: 1080p 1.85:1 widescreen; new audio commentary track; audio interview with director Selliers; poster and still gallery; Santa's Stocking of Outrage; running time: 01:24:54