Showing posts with label santa claus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label santa claus. Show all posts

Monday, May 29, 2017

What a doll

We're all about timeliness at the Umbrellahead Review; since today is a holiday (happy Memorial Day, everyone!), let's review two Santa-centric features, each with an adorable little tyke and her beloved dolly. 


Santa Claus (1959)

Grade: F

What else can one really say about one of IMDB's bottom 100 films of all time? Santa Claus is #87 as of this writing -- two spots below The Aztec Mummy Against the Humanoid Robot (1958), another K. Gordon Murray Mexican import redub special.

 
It's a bizarre offering, to be sure. Our man Santa lives in a crystal and gold palace in a galaxy far, far away (though simultaneously directly above the North Pole -- quite the astronomical feat!), and spends his free time playing a magical organ to accompany a flotilla of singing and dancing It's a Small World rejects.

Too racy for Disney, perhaps.
There's no Mrs. Claus in sight (hmm), but he does have a sweaty, hairy, shirtless blacksmith (double hmm) and Merlin the Wizard (yup) in residence to help him out with all the traditional accouterments necessary for Christmas Eve. 

This includes a giant key that opens every door on the planet, sleeping powder for the kiddies, and a massive collection of spy equipment focused squarely on Earth's children. 

This is naturally controlled by giant animatronic body parts.
Santa's particularly fixated on a handful of Mexican niños, among them adorable Lupita, a poor little mite who just wants a dolly for Christmas (plus one more to share with the baby Jesus, because she's just that good and pure).

Lupita really is a cute kid, we say without sarcasm -- we'd love to know what happened to her
Meanwhile, back on Earth (or maybe Pluto or something, since if Toyland is in outer space, why not Hell?), Satan interrupts a demonic dance party to summon his minion Pitch, who's tasked with leading the children of Earth astray (coincidentally, those same Mexican kids!) in order to defeat Santa Claus. 


OK, we'll buy that -- Mexico has its traditional devil-vs-the-shepherds pastorelas, so this modernized, kid-friendly version isn't completely out of left field. What follows is an often strange, yet ultimately harmless baturrillo of devilish trickery, strange ballets, and parents presented in rather coffin-like oversized gift boxes. 

Besides its seemingly interminable length, we count three factors that turn what could have otherwise been a so-bizarre-it's-wonderful surrealistic romp into a ¡dios-mío!-please-let-it-be-over slog.

 

First is K. Gordon Murray himself, who not only bastardized the original Mexican production (so say some sources -- we're not keen on doing a detailed compare/contrast ourselves), but lent his own voice as the omnipresent narrator, who just goes on and on and ON in that very 1950's false-excited tone, without letting any of the (dubbed) dialogue or action just, you know, speak for itself. 

LET ME TELL YOU ALL ABOUT WHAT IS HAPPENING!
The second is a sort of claustrophobic dinginess that infuses all the scenes, both indoors and out. The Eastmancolor film process probably plays a factor, but no doubt a low budget and poor production values didn't help. 


Even the Toyland scenes, with their over-the-top set pieces and giant key-shaped door openings, have a closed-in, suffocating feeling (bad lighting? poor camera angles?), and this ends up sucking all the brightness and life out of the action.


Finally, the absolute worst thing about the film (in our humble Umbrellahead opinion) is the eye-rolling, ear-gouging, almost physically painful repetition of Jingle Bells -- never a verse, always just the chorus, over and over and over again, whenever a musical cue was deemed necessary (which was often).

 
Whatever its other memorable bits -- I mean, a wizard in a Christmas movie? -- Santa Claus will forever be known to us as "that awful Mexican Jingle Bells thing." Sorry, little Lupita.





Christmas Evil (1980)
(aka You Better Watch Out)

Grade: D



Christmas Evil certainly had the potential for something greater than just seasonally mitigated obscurity. The film stars Harry Stadling (Brandon Maggart), a sad sack middle manager at the Jolly Dream toy factory whose fixation with Christmas stems from a traumatizing moment when he saw his mother in flagrante delicto with his Santa suit-clad father. 

Reminds us of (the later) Don't Open Till Christmas; however, unlike the murderer in that film, the experience doesn't make Harry want to kill Santa -- it makes him want to be Santa. 

Paging Dr. Freud...
From the rooftop of his modest apartment (filled with Santa kitsch -- posters, dolls, the works) Harry spies on the neighborhood children, recording their every act in a custom-embossed pair of leatherbound tomes of, yes, Good Boys & Girls (including little Susy Lovett and her doll -- "just a darling") and the corresponding Bad ones. 

His bookshelf shows volumes labeled '78 through '80 -- where did one have books like that produced in 1980? The local Kinkos? Mail order?
OK, a bit sad and more than a little odd, but so far nothing overtly sinister. What follows is Harry's transition from neighborhood creeper to holiday killer.

Here's why Christmas Evil had potential: its murderer is not, for once, a comprehensively psychotic yet remarkably clever and capable mastermind, able to carefully plan the minutest details of complex crimes and cooly elude capture, all while being completely batshit crazy. 

Hello? Is this every modern crime show on TV?
Rather, this is the slow burn of a sad, unbalanced man being gradually pushed over the edge by the thousand small cuts of an uncivil society: his boorish bullying co-worker; a snotty little boy ogling Penthouse (whose mother happens to be played by Mrs. Tim "The Tool Man" Taylor, Patricia Richardson); the greedy corporate bosses who value profit over charity.

Fed up with the injustice (and unwholesomeness) of it all, Harry focuses on transforming into the jolly elf himself -- the perfectly-padded suit, well-glued facial hair, fancifully painted van-turned-sleigh -- to put right all the perceived wrongs. 

That he goes on to commit murder is only a byproduct of this strange, misguided, rather bumbling quest to restore Christmas cheer to his small slice of the dirty, cruel world.

Where the film fails is not in the premise, but the writing and direction (both by Lewis Jackson). It sort of wants to be a black comedy -- and it probably would have made a great one! -- but is neither black nor comedic enough to pull it off. 

There are a few exceptions.
It really wants to be a slasher flick, but lacks the punch, suspense, and shock factor of even the more mediocre ones (not to mention that the body count is rather low). 


Key scenes are poorly shot and end up murky and hard to follow; the film's timeline isn't well defined (though we figured it out on second viewing), which also adds further confusion. 

It follows a pattern we've often seen in underwhelming films -- an intriguing premise, a middle third that drags, and a rushed finale that doesn't really fulfill the promise of the beginning. Brandon Maggart was well cast and did his best, but ultimately, Christmas Evil belongs on the Bad list.


Wednesday, October 26, 2016

Hope everybody's ringing on their own bell this fine morning

Hope everyone's connected to that long distance phone, just like all these characters in this so-late-let's-just-consider it-early holiday twin pack.



Don't Open Till Christmas (1984)

Grade: C-



Typical '80s slasher that would likely be utterly forgotten were it not for the Christmas motif. Substitute the ten slain Santas with any other category of person -- taxi drivers, clowns, bucktoothed gingers (this is British, after all) -- and it would essentially be the same exact movie, albeit with a lot less cheap red velour.



But, since the theme guarantees it a spot on everyone's IMDB list of "101 Xmas horror films" (good thing they put "Christmas" in the title -- 1984 and already thinking about SEO), at least a few people will likely screen it each December as part of a holiday movie marathon (ahem).


Festive!

As for horror, there's the typical blood and gore -- nothing terribly exotic, but extra credit for the wide variety of methods, including car battery electrocution, shoe knife to the groin, and spear through the head.

Though sometimes nothing beats a good ol' fashioned bullet in the mouth.

The killer isn't revealed until about 3/4 of the way through, and there's a weak attempt to keep the audience guessing among the various suspects, be it the not-all-that-mysterious Inspector, or the kind-of-a-huge-jerk fiance — who not only tries to coerce his girl to pose nude for his photographer friend, but also has her hold out the hat as he busks with his flute in the street. His flute!

Ian would approve.

And of course, it's inevitably revealed that the murderer was scarred for life and driven to kill by something witnessed in childhood.

Which involves sex, natch.

So, besides that silly flute, what does set this film apart? Nothing much, except for what seems like a serious telephone fetish. Phones in booths, phones in hallways, on coffee tables, in dramatic close-up -- it's all about the rotary dial.

All dressed up and nowhere to go.

In particular, two fetching models in red and white play a star role in the "experience booth" scenes.


Hey, she's not bad!

The propmasters must have liked them so much, they show up again in the interrogation room.

(Wait, aren't those . . .)

And AGAIN in the detective's office. He mostly uses the black one . . .

(Why don't you like us? We're just trying to be good phones.)

. . . but occasionally picks up the red one if he's feeling particularly merry, or presidential.

(YAAAAAY!)

Bottom line, nothing much to see here folks. Well, unless you're lonely on Christmas Eve, and might like to fantasize about what could have happened had peep show Santa coughed up that extra fiver before being so rudely interrupted.

If you go that route, just make sure to stop playback before 1:05:00



New Year's Evil (1980)

Grade: C-


(YAAAAAY!)

Another movie whose title gives the impression that the filmmakers had residuals on the brain; what better way to get trotted out annually than to use the one play on words that makes any sense for this holiday?


(OK guys, just tossin' these out there: Boo Year's Eve? New Year's Eerie? Fine, I'd like to see you do better.)

Though unlike the last one, New Year's Evil depends on the festivities for its schtick to make sense. The hours leading to midnight are a metronome by which our villain commits his murders -- or attempts to, at least.


A major redeeming factor for this movie is that the murderer himself has a few unplanned oh-shit-oh-shit-oh-shit moments that are rather refreshing in this age of Criminal Minds and the insane-yet-completely-omniscient unsub.


True, a countdown-to-zero series of slashings could happen on some other not-as-special night, but then you wouldn't have an aging Pinky Tuscadero ticking off the year's greatest hits and serving as New Wave Casey Kasem on Hollywood Hotline, an LA punk concert cum call-in show.

(Wasn't I already too old for this in Happy Days?)

Yup, I said call-in. The phones are out in force again right from the get-go.

White phones.


Black phones.


Nostalgic phones.

That TV is dead now.

Suicidal phones.



Phones disappointed that the murderer-protagonist misses the obvious opportunity for a Superman nod.



Besides the calling, there's a bit of chasing, a bit of killing, and a bit of blood -- unfortunately, not really enough of any of those last three to really satisfy a true horror aficionado. The music's OK -- a mix of horror-synthesizer and punky stuff -- but nothing lastingly memorable.



Bottom line, nothing much to see here folks. Well, unless you're lonely on New Year's Eve, and might like to fantasize about what could have happened had drive-in dude gotten to third base before being so rudely interrupted.



Eh, no thanks. We're cool.


proving that the blood is strong