Merry Christmas, everyone… or Happy Holidays, whichever one you prefer. I’ll announce now that there will be no review posted by me on Christmas itself. I’ll likely watch Die Hard but I already have three reviews of that posted on Letterboxd and a 4th isn’t really needed. I might also view other films that don’t need additional reviews either. However, I hadn’t seen the OG Black Christmas in years and I was happy to review this again-even if my opinions are the same as in the first review.
The film is still a Canuxploitation classic, a progenitor to the slasher genre, and a quality horror film all wrapped up w/ a bow on top. The film follows the members of a sorority in Canada who are not only harassed by an extremely creepy obscene phone caller who says the most vile comments that can’t be repeated here, a weirdo has entered and hides in their sorority house. For those that identify as female, if the idea of a gross man saying vile things to you on the phone isn’t blood-curdling, some man hiding in your house and committing murders will be.
What I seem to always forget about Black Christmas: how hilarious it can be. I’ll never forget Margot Kidder’s Barb, the blunt alcoholic who offered the film’s most hysterical moments. However, the house mother’s also an alcoholic and especially in the first half, I laughed often. There’s even a bumbling cop-insert your own pithy comment if you wish. That said, when there’s drama and horror, the film succeeds with the chilling atmosphere, the memorable characters, the brutal kills, the 70’s wood paneling, the measured pacing, the eerie score from Carl Zittrer.
Viewing this made me remember that I never tipped my cap to the late Olivia Hussey, who a few days from now passed away one year ago. While only a few of her movies have been tackled by me, I’ve never had a beef with her and she was arguably the highlight as the lead who not only had to deal with being terrorized, but she has a problem w/ her boyfriend Keir Dullea and isn’t afraid to stand up for her feminist rights. The rest of the cast is fine, including Art Hindle and the great John Saxon.
What is especially appreciated now when compared to modern films in general: the ambiguity, the plot points that aren’t fully explained. Those moments left a mystery arguably makes the picture more petrifying. The movie is a horror classic even if you divorce the impact Black Christmas had on the genre and only focus on the plot that unfurled on screen. The ending was a punch to the gut, in the best ways.
The 2006 remake and the 2019 remake are both bad films even if they would have had different names and no connection to the 1974 movie. The OG Black Christmas, on the other hand, I was happy to witness again-even if the picture isn’t a cheery, heartwarming affair full of mirth. Again, I’ll wish everyone a non-denominational Happy Holidays.