Showing posts with label jack frost. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jack frost. Show all posts

Thursday, 19 December 2024

THE CHRISTMAS HORROR ADVENT CALENDAR Door 19: The Naughty List


Now then, so far in this advent calendar we have looked at a wide range of different movies from many different decades and from all around the world. And all of them have been at least watchable. Yes, there have been a few with rough edges, such as The Dorm That Dripped Blood or To All A Goodnight, but they all have had at least some merit, or at the least, in the context of Christmas horror have some historical value. However, having reached the 1990s, we are well and truly into the age of straight-to-video movies, and an awful lot of rubbish has been inflicted on unsuspecting video rental customers over the years. And of course, there’s vast swathes of drivel sliding out of the various streaming services now too. 

Of course, among all this visual dreck, there are a whole slew of absolutely awful Christmas horror movies, and behind this door we will sample some of the denizens of the Naughty List of Christmas horror! 


One of the earliest and best known Christmas horror turkeys is a little movie called Elves. Now alleged this movie, written and directed by Jeffrey Mandel, had a small theatrical release back in 1989. However I have been able to find no evidence of that actually happening. But what we do know is that it was released on VHS on December 19th 1994 with very little fanfare. Now given its late ‘80s vintage and title, you could be forgiven for assuming that that Elves was some festively themed Gremlins rip-off. However the truth is far weirder! 

To briefly attempt to extract some sort of sense from the plot, basically a homeless man Mike, played by Dan Haggerty - yes, TV’s Grizzly Adams - has landed a gig as a department store Santa. This job has the added bonus giving him the chance to pilfer the store’s snacks after hours. Also working at the store is Kirsten, played by Julie Austin, who turns out to be the last of a specially bred line of Aryans created by a Nazi cult.  However if that wasn’t mad enough, in the film’s opening, while in the woods, she cuts herself which awakens an ancient demon elf. Anyhow before you know it the Nazi cult turns up and plans to breed the elf with Kirsten to create a new master race. And its down to Hobo Santa Mike to stop them. 

So then, let’s cut to the chase here - Elves is a bloody terrible movie. Badly shot, it looks awful, and there’s only one elf in the damn thing. And even then, the effects budget only stretched to a head and some claws. On the upside, the plot is truly demented, and has led to claims that this movie is “so bad, it’s good”, however like many of these lumps of cinematic coal, most viewers will find it’s just so bad, it’s bad. 

However, somewhat bizarrely, it gives us a second unexpected connection between Christmas horror and The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams - for the first Silent Night, Deadly Night film was directed by Charles E. Sellier Jnr. the man who created the fondly remembered TV series. 


But if you think Elves is deranged, it has nothing on a little seen Christmas horror called Bloodbeat. Written and directed by Fabrice-Ange Zaphiratos, although I’m not so sure about that “written” bit to be honest, Bloodbeat is odd to the point of incoherence. Filmed on a shoestring in Wisconsin, the plot, very roughly, goes like this…  A family is gathering for Christmas, and in a spare room, one of the visiting relatives discovers a suit of samurai armour and an ancient sword. Which comes to life and starts killing people. Two of the family turn out to be psychic, leading to outbreaks of poltergeist activity and a big fight with magic swords at the end. 

At least I think that’s what happened. I might have hallucinated the whole thing. Certainly many viewers have wondered if there was any sort of script when they started filming, and the director has later tried to claim he was making an arthouse film. I think the truth is, Bloodbeat is just incredibly inept. And while there is a certain charm to some bad movies, others are just interminable to sit through. So, do be warned - many of these terrible Christmas horror movies are not as entertaining as they sound. 


Of course there are movies that are setting out to be bad in the first place, which brings us to our next lump of coal - Feeders 2: Slay Bells. Now this movie was a sequel to a 1996 independent science fiction horror flick called - surprise, surprise - Feeders. This shot on a camcorder movie was made for just $500, and the sequel was made for even less! 

Both movies are the world of the Polonia brothers, who made a string of shot on video movies all for next to nothing. The Polonia charter was basically shoot quickly, shoot cheap, and make up for the complete lack of funds and resources by having ridiculous over-the-top plots. Hence while in the first Feeders we had aliens popping down to earth to snack on humans, in Feeders 2: Slay Bells when the little critters return, it’s down to a laser gun wielding Santa to repel them. The box blurb claims “it's a sci-fi adventure you won’t want to miss”  but most would violently disagree. No budget movies like this are definitely an acquired taste, but even so Feeders 2 is so lacking in anything resembling proper film making, it's a challenge for even bad movie devotees.


Also an absolute chore to watch and barely even qualifying as a movie is Santa Claws, released on October 22nd 1996. Starring cult actress Debbie Rochon in a very early role, Santa Claws is basically 83 minutes of your life you will never get back. Looking like it was shot on a camcorder bought in a fire sale, and shot in storerooms, Santa Claws is absolutely dire. There is a plot which has Debbie Rochon as a horror movie actress being stalked by a murderous fan who kills with a not very lethal looking gardening claw, but much of this alleged movie is padding featuring various other girls getting nude. For apparently this was made simultaneously with another straight-to-video tape Scream Queen Naked Christmas which is just girls getting them out. Sadly both of these dubious outings were helmed by John A. Russo, who co wrote Night of the Living Dead with George Romero, and although he later wrote the novel Return of the living Dead which became a classic zombie movie in its own right, here he appears to hit rock bottom. 

Also in the one to miss pile is Christmas Cruelty, a 2013 underground horror from Norway. Originally entitled O'Hellige Jul, which translates to O Holy Christmas, this movie details the rampages of a violent serial killer in very graphic detail. The movie opens with brutal scenes of our antihero butchering a family, but then we have an hour seeing both him, and a group of friends who will be his next victims, going about their business preparing for Christmas. And then in the last twenty or so minutes of the movie we get to watch him rape, torture and dismember them. Christmas Cruelty is a very obscure film, and probably rightly so, boasts a mere seven reviews on IMDB and the majority of those aren’t very positive about it either - it seems the movie is fairly interminable, but not because of the graphic and unpleasant content, but because of the dull day to day scenes, bad editing and highly annoying music which makes up the bulk of the film! 


Moving on to more salubrious but still obscure realms we have Two Front Teeth, a 2006 horror comedy, that like Christmas Cruelty would have languished in limbo if it had not been picked up by Unearthed Films who specialise in releasing highly obscure cult movies. The blurb promises “Rankin-Bass meet EC Comics”, and the plot outline certainly sounds in the right ballpark.  The brilliantly named Francis Johnny Wolf stars as Gabe Snow, a reporter who is obsessed with a mystery plane crash - Flight 1225 was brought down one foggy Christmas Eve, allegedly by a flying creature with a glowing nose. Unfortunately, he has stumbled on the truth and the culprit, a vampiric Santa dubbed Clausferatu, sends out monster elves to silence him. And if that wasn’t enough there’s also a lycanthropic Easter Bunny and a trio of ninja nuns, the Silent Knights. 

Well, you can’t fault the movie for a lack of imagination. Script writer and co-director Jaime Nash would go on to bigger and better things working on the V/H/S film series and scripting more serious horror fare such as Lovely Molly and Exists, directed by Eduardo Sánchez, plus wrote cult favourite the WNUF Halloween Special (2013). And you can see the promise here, however unfortunately though, Two Front Teeth is horribly filmed on video, which will put off most viewers and why this pretty home-made horror comedy doesn’t have a cult following. 


So then, moving on, next up we have a movie that does have something of a cult following, but perhaps doesn’t really deserve one. But at least, it’s a movie you might have heard - Jack Frost, released on 18th November 1997. Now this isn’t the family-friendly movie Jack Frost from 1998, with Michael Keaton coming back from the dead as a snowman. This is the distinctly not family-friendly movie from a year earlier which features a serial killer coming back from the dead as a killer snowman. I imagine there have been many traumatising mix-ups in video rental stores over the years. 

Written and directed by Michael Cooney, Jack Frost stars Scott MacDonald and Christopher Allport, and features the first screen appearance of Shannon Elizabeth. Originally it was intended to be a bigger, more serious movie, with a killer who could morph into snow and ice just like the T1000 in Terminator 2. However instead we got a comedy snowman outfit and a cheap movie knocked out in just eighteen days. Filmed in January 1994, the production very quickly ran into trouble when the director saw the snowman outfits and ended up hastily rewriting the script as a comedy. Then when out shooting on location, all the winter snows unexpectedly melted early, leaving the production with a freak heatwave. And if that wasn’t enough, the production company Prism went under, and seeing the finished cut, banker Lou Horowitz who was in charge of the financial wreckage, deemed it unreleasable and shelved it. And so the film was unreleased for several years until it was picked up by A-Pix Entertainment  who released it  on home video in 1997.     

And unfortunately all of these problems are readily apparent in Jack Frost. And while some of the humour does save certain scenes, and there are some fun festive kills which are suitably silly, mostly the movie is, well, just a bit of a mess. However it gained enough of a reputation as a good bad movie to spawn a sequel, Jack Frost 2: Revenge of the Mutant Killer Snowman in 2000. But unfortunately this flick chose to relocate the action to a tropical island which rather lost all the seasonal silliness of the first movie. 


However, after this naughty list of low and no budget Christmas horrors that are shockers for all the wrong reasons, I will round off with a surprise gift, and proof that inexpensive indie fright flicks don’t have to be awful! So then folks, let’s sample A Cadaver Christmas

Released 2nd April 2011, A Cadaver Christmas is a horror comedy directed by Joseph Zerull, which first appeared at film festivals, and was released on DVD later that year. Since then it has had television screenings and more recently had a Blu-ray release and appeared on various streaming platforms. The plot is as follows… 

A janitor is working late at a university on Christmas Eve, and discovers the cadavers in the path lab have come to life. He escapes to a nearby bar and assembles a motley band of very unlikely heroes to attempt to contain the risen dead.

Written by Joe Zerull with Daniel Rairdin-Hale and Hanlon Smith-Dorsey, who also star as our janitor hero and barfly Tom, A Cadaver Christmas is a fun little zom com done on a tiny budget. However, quite cannily, they chose to shoot it so it looks and sounds like an older movie, the kind of cheap flick that played in grindhouse cinemas or turned up in video rental stores back in the day. Hence there’s scratches and dirt on the film, the colours are weirdly saturated, but also the script and performances very much lean deliberately into that bad exploitation film aesthetic. 

Now how well A Cadaver Christmas plays for you will depend on whether the style of comedy is to your taste or not. If it doesn’t, you will think it’s just another lump of cinematic coal, but if you are on the same humorous wavelength, this is a fun little movie. Now I must admit, when I sat down to watch this little flick, I was expecting another terrible no budget, no talent production, but I instantly recognised the style of exploitation movie they were spoofing and a couple of early lines got surprisingly big laughs on our sofa. And after that, we were onboard for the ride. Yes, it is very cheap and somewhat quirky, but it is fairly well made. In fact, it's a great example of tailoring your script to the resources you have. And what’s more, it was clearly made with a lot of love and passion. And if the style of humour works for you, A Cadaver Christmas will deliver plenty of laughs, some suitably silly gore, and has a nice festive theme running through it. And certainly, as the rest of this naughty list has proved, you could do a whole lot worse! 


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Sunday, 10 December 2017

HYPNOGORIA 78 - Jack Frost Commentary



This week Mr Jim Moon wonders why in the name of Santa's beard did he think it was a good idea to do a commentary track for notorious Christmas schlock horror Jack Frost... However he has a cunning plan to get through it... 


DIRECT DOWNLOADHYPNOGORIA 78 - Jack Frost Commentary

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Friday, 1 December 2017

HYPNOGORIA 77- In Search of Jack Frost




In the first of our festive offerings, Mr Jim Moon goes in search of that merry wintry rogue, Jack Frost! Who is he and where did he come from? Is he just a winter's fairy tale? Do his origins lie in Norse mythology? And does he have any relation to Father Christmas? Wrap up warm, and come with me to find out! 



DIRECT DOWNLOAD - HYPNOGORIA 77- In Search of Jack Frost 

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HYPNOGORIA HOME DOMAIN - Full archive, RSS feed and other useful links

HYPNOGORIA on iTunes

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Friday, 4 December 2015

FOLKLORE ON FRIDAY - Jack Frost Revisited

Jack Frost by Arthur Rackham

Winter is here and old Jack Frost is back up to his old tricks, a-nipping at our nose once again. But what do we actually know about this frosty sprite? For despite Jack Frost being a familiar figure in the popular imagination, he is something of a mystery. Consider for example, why do we have no clear image for him? Sometimes he's depicted as an old man, sometimes as a boy, and sometimes as some species of icy goblin!

Now if you were to do some causal digging here and there, you will find the popular wisdom on the subject is that the figure of Jack Frost is derived from Norse mythology. From a minor demi-god named Jokul Frosti, whose name means literally "icicle frost", and was reputed to be a son of Kari, god of the wind to be precise. However there are a few small problems with this theory. Firstly there is no "Jokul Frosti" to be found in Scandinavian mythology - there is a Jokul who was the son of a wind deity, but he bears no resemblance to the Jack Frost of popular lore, possessing no special powers or supernatural duties, and what is more appears to have been just an ordinary man and is barely mentioned in the old sagas and tales. Closer to the mark there was a Frost Giant named Frosti, but details about him are even scarcer, and this wintry titan had no special duties regarding winter weather either.

Jack Frost by Eric Kincaid

Of course we should also note that the Vikings didn't have any glass windows on which famously Jack Frost paints his marvelous icy arabesques, which rather deprives our wintry sprite of his most famous activity. Hence given the lack of any mythological mention of him or anyone like him, we should rightly discount these dubious claims of Norse origins and move along before we catch a chill!

So where does Jack come from? Well Jack Frost first appeared in artwork on October 5th, 1861. It is a cartoon by Thomas Nast, which appeared Harper's Weekly. It has the caption - OUR NEW MAJOR-GENERAL, and refers to a speech made by Major-General Benjamin F. Butler, who stated "Our faithful old Ally of the North, GENERAL JACK FROST, shall come and clear away the Malaria of the South, and we shall march Southward from this place, and there shall be no footsteps backward until this Rebellion is crushed out of this Union." At the time in the Civil War, there had been outbreaks of cholera, and it was hoped the coming freezing winter weather would kills of the infections hindering the war effort. 


However later, much like that other winter icon Santa Claus who Nast also first drew in a satirical cartoon, would later draw another less bellicose version of Jack in a non-political context.  In the illustration Central Park Winter published in 1864, Jack Frost appears as the genial fellow presiding over the scenes of wintry fun presented. However you wouldn't necessarily recognise them as the same fellow - indeed if it weren't for the caption, the Central Park Jack you might very well  take to be another Nast version of Santa. 


Also in the 19th century, poet Hannah F. Gould penned a much anthologised poem named Jack Frost and these verses presents the essence of the character we know today, a supernatural character who is responsible for freezing weather, who paints frost patterns, and displays a sense of mischief too - 

JACK FROST
by Hannah F. Gould

The Frost looked forth, one still, clear night,
    And whispered, "Now I shall be out of sight;
    So through the valley and over the height,
      In silence I'll take my way:
    I will not go on with that blustering train,
    The wind and the snow, the hail and the rain,
    Who make so much bustle and noise in vain,
      But I'll be as busy as they."

    Then he flew to the mountain and powdered its crest;
    He lit on the trees, and their boughs he dressed
    In diamond beads - and over the breast
      Of the quivering lake he spread
    A coat of mail, that it need not fear
    The downward point of many a spear
    That hung on its margin far and near,
      Where a rock could rear its head.

    He went to the windows of those who slept,
    And over each pane, like a fairy, crept;
    Wherever he breathed, wherever he slept,
      By the light of the moon were seen
    Most beautiful things - there were flowers and trees;
    There were bevies of birds and swarms of bees;
    There were cities with temples and towers, and these
      All pictured in silver sheen!

    But he did one thing that was hardly fair;
    He peeped in the cupboard, and finding there
    That all had forgotten for him to prepare -
     "Now just to set them a-thinking,
    I'll bite this basket of fruit," said he,
   "This costly pitcher I'll burst in three,
    And the glass of water they've left for me
      Shall 'tchich!' to tell them I'm drinking."


Indeed this early literary appearance, he's not actually mentioned by name, and very tellingly up until the 1920s the poem was often printed under the alternative title of Freaks of the Frost - which rather suggests the phrase 'Jack Frost' might not have spread into common enough usage to make sense as a title for audiences everywhere.

In a similar vein, Charles Sangster penned a verse for children entitled Little Jack Frost which appeared in New York magazine The Aldine (Vol.7, No.16, 1875).  While Gould's verse has something of the flavour of folk tales to it, Sangster's poem is more a modern nursery rhyme, with younger children in mind. And not too long after Jack would begin appearing in children's fiction -  in 1902 turning up as a character in Frank L. Baum's book The Life and Adventures of Santa Claus. And from then on Jack becomes linked with both magical stories and Christmas, and has appearing in all manner of books, comics and movies. 



But what of his origins? Well consulting the archives of the Oxford English Dictionary, we discover that the first written reference to Jack Frost they cite comes not  from some Viking saga, or even Merrie Olde English folk tales, but surprisingly late in the day, in 1826 to be precise. And rather than being in a tome on legends or folklore, it actually appears in the pages of a British journal, The Sporting Magazine when it was reported that "Jack Frost, however, put a veto on our morning's sport".

However purely by chance while researching another famous wintry figure, old Father Christmas, I discovered an earlier reference to Mr Frost. I was consulting an ancient tome - believed to have been published around 1730 and penned by that ever prolific scribe Anonymous.  The book is called Round About Our Coal Fire, or Christmas Entertainments with the added subtitle - "Together with some curious Memoirs of Old Father Christmas; Shewing what Hospitality was in former Times, and how little there remains of it at present."

Now in the first chapter in which our unknown author details the reminiscences of Christmases past alluded to in the subtitle, he remarks -
This Time of Year being cold and frosty generally speaking, or when Jack Frost commonly takes us by the Nose, the Diversions are within Doors, either in Exercise or by the Fire Side
So then Jack has been dancing merrily through our winters for a good hundred years earlier than I had previously reckoned! Or rather, perhaps I should say, he has been dancing through our language since at least the 1730s - the causal way our mystery writer drops in the reference to him makes it plain he expected his audience to know exactly what he was talking about. But all the same, I suspect Jack Frost has a linguistic, rather than a mythological basis.

In England from around the 1500s onwards, "Jack" was a common slang term for a man, usually a funny or clever fellow. And this is not only the origin of words like "jackanapes" (a chap who's a cheeky monkey), "jack-o-lantern" (a fellow who held a light), and sailors being 'jack tars', but it is also the origin of all the various Jacks in fairy tales, nursery rhymes and folk tales. In addition, people have always enjoyed playfully personifying various objects and abstracts, and hence in England, where we famously love to talk about the weather, inclement winter weather would naturally be personified in this way. Hence the winter elements that doodles on your window, creates slippery slides out of pathways and seemingly to nips at your nose, would of course be given the name of a cheeky chappie - and hence Jack Frost springs to life.

So then, it would appear that our wintry sprite emerges not from ancient legend, but from a simple turn of phrase. He first bounds into our language and then as literature written specifically for children begins to emerge in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Jack dances into our imaginations. However that is not to say that in the lands of myth and legend, there are not figures who personify winter and cold weather, but they are tales for another day...

Jack Frost by Arthur Rackham
   

Friday, 14 November 2014

FOLKLORE ON FRIDAY - Jack Frost Nipping At Your Nose

Jack Frost by Arthur Rackham

Winter is here once more and old Jack Frost is back up to his old tricks, a-nipping at our nose once again. But what actually do we really know about this frosty sprite? For despite Jack Frost being a familiar figure in the popular imagination, he is something of a mystery. Consider for example, why do we have no clear image for him? Sometimes he's an old man, sometimes a boy and sometimes some species of icy goblin!

Now if you were to do some causal digging here and there, you will find the popular wisdom on the subject is that the figure of Jack Frost is derived from Norse mythology. From a minor demi-god named Jokul Frosti, son of Kari god of the wind to be precise, and whose name means literally "icicle frost". However there are a few small problems with this theory. Firstly there is no "Jokul Frosti" to be found in Scandinavian mythology. There is indeed Jokul who was the son of a wind deity, but he bears no resemblance to the Jack Frost of popular lore. Closer to the mark there was a Frost Giant named Frosti but details about him are scant, and this wintry titan had no special duties regarding winter weather either.

Jack Frost by Eric Kincaid

Of course we should also note that the Vikings didn't have any ruddy glass windows on which famously Jack Frost paints his marvelous icy arabesques! Hence we should rightly discount this dubious Norse origin claims and move along before we catch a chill!

So where does Jack come from? Well Jack Frost first appeared in artwork on October 5th, 1861. It is a cartoon by Thomas Nast, which appeared Harper's Weekly. It has the caption - OUR NEW MAJOR-GENERAL, and refers to a speech made by Major-General Benjamin F. Butler, who stated "Our faithful old Ally of the North, GENERAL JACK FROST, shall come and clear away the Malaria of the South, and we shall march Southward from this place, and there shall be no footsteps backward until this Rebellion is crushed out of this Union." At the time in the Civil War, there had been outbreaks of cholera, and it was hoped the coming freezing winter weather would kills of the infections hindering the war effort. 


However later, much like that other other winter icon Santa Claus whose popular image he helped create, Nast would later draw another less bellicose version of Jack in non political contexts, such as the genial wintry fellow presiding over the scenes presented in the illustration Central Park Winter in 1864. However you wouldn't necessarily recognise them as the same fellow. Indeed Central Park Jack, if it weren't for the caption you very well might take for another Nast version of Santa. 


Also in the 19th century, poet Hannah F. Gould penned a much anthologised poem named Jack Frost and these verses presents the essence of the character we know today, a supernatural character who is responsible for freezing weather, who paints frost patterns, and displays a sense of mischief too - 

JACK FROST
by Hannah F. Gould

The Frost looked forth, one still, clear night,
    And whispered, "Now I shall be out of sight;
    So through the valley and over the height,
      In silence I'll take my way:
    I will not go on with that blustering train,
    The wind and the snow, the hail and the rain,
    Who make so much bustle and noise in vain,
      But I'll be as busy as they."

    Then he flew to the mountain and powdered its crest;
    He lit on the trees, and their boughs he dressed
    In diamond beads - and over the breast
      Of the quivering lake he spread
    A coat of mail, that it need not fear
    The downward point of many a spear
    That hung on its margin far and near,
      Where a rock could rear its head.

    He went to the windows of those who slept,
    And over each pane, like a fairy, crept;
    Wherever he breathed, wherever he slept,
      By the light of the moon were seen
    Most beautiful things - there were flowers and trees;
    There were bevies of birds and swarms of bees;
    There were cities with temples and towers, and these
      All pictured in silver sheen!

    But he did one thing that was hardly fair;
    He peeped in the cupboard, and finding there
    That all had forgotten for him to prepare -
     "Now just to set them a-thinking,
    I'll bite this basket of fruit," said he,
   "This costly pitcher I'll burst in three,
    And the glass of water they've left for me
      Shall 'tchich!' to tell them I'm drinking."

In a similar vein, Charles Sangster penned a verse for children entitled Little Jack Frost which appeared in New York magazine The Aldine (Vol.7, No.16, 1875).  While Gould's verse has something of the flavour of folk tales to it, Sangster's poem is more a modern nursery rhyme, with younger children in mind. And not too long after Jack would begin appearing in children's fiction -  in 1902 turning up as a character in Frank L. Baum's book The Life and Adventures of Santa Claus. And from then on Jack becomes linked with both magical stories and Christmas, and has appearing in all manner of books, comics and movies. 



But what of his origins? Well consulting the archives of the Oxford English Dictionary, we discover that the first written reference to Jack Frost comes not  from some Viking saga, or even Merrie Olde English folk tales, but surprising late in the day, in 1826 to be precise. And rather than being in a tome on legends or folklore, it actually appears in the pages of a British journal, The Sporting Magazine when it was reported that "Jack Frost, however, put a veto on our morning's sport". 

Now people have always enjoyed playfully personifying various objects and abstracts, and in England from around the 1500s, "Jack" was a common slang term for a man, usually a funny or clever fellow. And this is not only the origin of words like "jackanapes" (a chap who's a cheeky monkey) and "jack-o-lantern" (a fellow who held a light), but also all the various Jacks in fairy tales, nursery rhymes and folk tales. Also in England, we famously love to talk about the weather and so naturally (perhaps inevitably!) inclement winter weather getting in the way of your day-to-day activities would be talked of as that Jack Frost being up to no good. 

Indeed his first literary appearance, the Gould poem mentioned above, he's not actually mentioned by name, and very tellingly up until the 1920s the poem was often printed under the alternative title of Freaks of the Frost - which rather suggests the phrase 'Jack Frost' might not have spread into common enough usage to make sense as a title for audiences everywhere. So then, it would appear that our wintry sprite emerges not from ancient legend, but from a simple turn of phrase. Now that is not to say that in the lands of myth and legend, there aren't figures who personify winter, but they are tales for another day...

Jack Frost by Arthur Rackham
   

Sunday, 16 December 2012

HYPNOBOBS 103 - Festive Favourites


It's nearly Christmas and so Mr Jim Moon is drinking too much port (oh yes he is!) and rambling on about  favourite festive viewing! We discuss what makes a good Christmassy watch, and you can find out who's naughty or nice from this random stocking-full of festive features - The Snow Queen (2005), Jack Frost (1996), Santa Claus Conquers The Martians (1964), Miracle on 34th Street (1947) and Stalking Santa (2006).


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