Now then behind our last door we had two Christmas crackers, a pair of fantastically festive bad Santa movies. However true to form, 2011 was yet another fallow year. Was there some tradition or old charter that ruled you could only make Christmas horror movies every other year? It certainly seems like it!
However, since the new millennium, while we regularly had every other year lying fallow, the next year we’d get not one, but two new festive fright flicks. And so, 2012 would deliver two seasonal shockers. But as seems somewhat traditional too, at least one of them would be released at a stupidly unseasonal time. And such was the case with today’s first movie, ATM, which was released 6th April 2012.
Directed by David Brooks, this movie had a script by Chris Sparling, who had previously written Buried, the claustrophobic 2010 thriller starring Ryan Reynolds. Indeed it was the success of Buried that led to the spec script for ATM, which also features characters being confined and trapped, being scooped up. The premise is fairly straight-forward…
At a Christmas party, stockbroker Dave, played by Brian Geraghty, plucks up the courage to ask out co-worker Emily, played by Alice Eve. To his delight she agrees, and he offers to drive her home as it's a snowy night just before Christmas and cabs are thin on the ground. However he also ends up reluctantly agreeing to give his somewhat sozzled mate Corey, played by Josh Peck, a lift home too.
Not content with playing gooseberry, Cory asks if they can stop at an ATM so he can get some cash out to buy pizza. Now this is not a hole-in-the-wall style bank machine, this is a locked booth in a parking lot which you need a bank card to open. The worse for wear Corey ends up having trouble with the machines and David and Emily go in to help out. However, as they are about to leave, a mystery man, dressed in a large parka with the hood up completely obscuring his face, stands waiting outside…
And I will leave the plot summary there, as it would be unfair to let any spoilers slip for this little seen film. However suffice to say the mystery man is extremely dangerous and a battle of wits ensues to try and not just escape the booth, but survive the night.
Now I must admit I’d not heard about his movie before I started researching this advent calendar, and looking at the reviews I was expecting a fairly cheap run-of-the-mill slasher. However that isn’t what ATM is about at all. Rather it is a dark little tale of being trapped on a freezing winter’s night. And where the chills come in, is the fact that our hooded man isn’t just playing the usual cat-and-mouse slasher games. Now it’s not a hugely festive movie per se, but the isolation of the characters trapped in the booth is magnified by the fact that just beyond the deserted icy car park, you can see Christmas lights strung along the streets.
ATM presents us with a highly intriguing and increasingly unsettling situation, and I suspect its poor reviews are partly down to the fact that it does not deliver the expected slasher antics and goes down its own individual path instead. Plus I don’t think the unseasonal release date helped either, as this is certainly a movie to watch on the long dark nights before Christmas. It’s a very interesting little movie that’s stark, dark and icy cold, and it will certainly bring a chill to the Yuletide.
Now November 30th 2012 brought something of an early surprise Christmas present. Although perhaps it wasn’t anything that was high on anybody's Christmas lists! For all of a sudden, the Silent Night, Deadly Night franchise suddenly sprang back to life, with a remake of the original! Well, a sort of remake…
In the early 2000s, there had been a screening of the original Silent Night, Deadly Night and in attendance with none other than the original producer Scott Schneid, the man who started it all. And he suggested that perhaps the time was right for a remake. And his thoughts did not fall on deaf ears, for soon a script was in the works. Now screenwriter Jayson Rothwell apparently hadn't seen the original, and he started with his own impressions of Christmas horror movies, but also he took some inspiration from a real life case, the Covina Massacre. In this shocking case, on Christmas Eve in 2008, Bruce Jeffrey Pardo dressed up as Santa and attacked a Christmas Eve party at his ex wife's house, and set the place ablaze, killing nine and shooting himself afterwards. Hey, I told you it was a shocking case!
Thankfully the movie, directed by Steven C. Miller, and now with the shortened title of just Silent Night, is nowhere near as unpleasant. And while there are many differences to the original, it does centre around a killer dressed as Santa who is punishing those which he deems to be naughty. However this Santa Claus killer isn’t Billy or any of the multiple Rickys from the original series, rather it is an entirely new character with their own new backstory. Likewise, rather than going down the making of a maniac route of the original, Rothwell’s script goes back to slasher basics, and instead builds a fun mystery around who the masked Santa slayer is. But let’s have a plot outline before going any further…
In the opening scenes we see the arrival of our mystery maniac, and get straight to the first kill, death by Christmas lights! We learn that we are in the small snowy town of Cryer, Wisconsin, and investigating the gruesome events is Deputy Aubrey Bradimore, played by Jamie King, who soon begins to suspect they might be dealing with a bona fide serial killer. But her boss, Sheriff Cooper, played by Malcolm McDowell no less, is not entirely convinced. However our heroine is correct and the Santa Claus Killer begins working their way through the naughty list…
Now on its first release, Silent Night was met with somewhat mixed reviews, and there was a certain amount of grousing about its departures from the original. But as we have previously discussed in this advent calendar, the original Silent Night, Deadly Night is a somewhat uneven movie, and while it has a part of horror history, that has more to do with the controversy around it than the merits of the movie itself. Furthermore, carping about changes to the original are somewhat redundant as this film did put some distance between itself and the original by changing the name, and it was very much sold as being based on the first film, rather than a straight remake anyway.
And indeed once people got over the differences, there was a lot to enjoy here. There some ridiculously over the top set piece kills, a well realised snowy small town setting, and the decision to focus on the investigation of the killer made for a far more engaging plot line. Jaime King and Malcolm McDowell spark off each other nicely, and there are some very satisfying twists and turns to the plot as they slowly work out who the maniac in the Santa suit actually is, and why he has chosen the little town of Cryer. Is it the best in the series? Well, it is certainly the best made movie in the Silent Night, Deadly Night franchise, although I doubt anything will ever top Eric Freeman’s Ricky in Part 2. However, if you are in the market for a festively themed slasher, Silent Night will fit the bill, plus where else can you see Malcolm McDowell hamming it up in a Christmas movie?
However after 2012, it all went quiet on the Christmas horror front once again, with the festive fright flick taking a break for three long years. However as we will learn behind our final door, 2015 was a landmark year for seasonal shockers…
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