Natale di Sangue - Silent Night Deadly Night backdrop
Natale di Sangue - Silent Night Deadly Night poster

NATALE DI SANGUE - SILENT NIGHT DEADLY NIGHT

Silent Night, Deadly Night

1984 US HMDB
novembre 9, 1984

Uno psicopatico commette una serie di omicidi la vigilia di Natale. Poi si maschera di Babbo Natale e irrompe in un convento di suore e minaccia di fare una strage.

Cast

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Troupe

Produzione: Ira Barmak (Producer)
Sceneggiatura: Michael Hickey (Writer)
Musica: Perry Botkin Jr. (Original Music Composer)
Fotografia: Henning Schellerup (Director of Photography)

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Marco Castellini
Notte di Natale: un ladro senza scrupoli, travestito da Babbo Natale, irrompe in una casa e, davanti agli occhi del piccolo Billy, uccide i suoi genitori per poi dileguarsi nella notte con la refurtiva. Il bimbo passa un’infanzia infelice in un orfanotrofio e una volta adulto torna nella sua vecchia cittadina dove trova lavoro in un negozio di vestiti. Arriva Natale: il proprietario del negozio chiede a Billy di indossare un travestimento da Babbo Natale e la mente del giovane comincia ad essere assalita da funesti ricordi… Si tratta del primo capitolo (e a quanto ci risulta l’unico uscito in Italia) di una vera e propria “saga” slasher-horror americana, cha vanta al suo attivo ben cinque seguiti (il quarto diretto niente di meno che da Yuzna, che poi ha scritto e prodotto anche il quinto). Convincente l’idea dell’ambientazione natalizia della vicenda che crea un efficace contrasto tra l’orrore degli omicidi e l’aria gioiosa cha accompagna il Natale ma, a parte questo, il film non è che offra altri particolari elementi che lo rendano memorabile. Un discreto slasher-movie ingiustificatamente “celebre” oltre oceano. Praticamente assente dal circuito televisivo è però nuovamente reperibile per la vendita (edito dalla Avofilm).
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John Chard

John Chard

6 /10

The Original Bad Santa.

A cult horror classic, Silent Night, Deadly Night is something of a treat for the old school horror faithful. Plot has a young boy witness the slaying of his parents by a man dressed as Santa Claus. He grows up in an orphanage run by an over zealous Mother Superior, moves out when manhood beckons and gets a job in a department store. Come Christmas time he is coerced into being the store Santa and promptly cracks up, grabbing an axe and wreaking slasher hell on everyone who gets in his way.

That's pretty much it, the stalk and slash formula in all its bloody glory. It's done very well here, with invention, genuine shocks and it's all boosted by having the mad Santa as an angelic faced beefcake (Robert Brian Wilson). Of course any new-age horror film fan coming to it for the first time now will struggle to see what the appeal is? So listen to the staccato music, feel the nastiness - the humbug of it all, observe that the film makers don't use filler or padding - they get in for some short sharp shock, and it's deliberately icky to garner a reaction.

Masterpiece of horror cinema? No of course not, the acting is sub-standard, the ending rushed, but in the same year as Wes Craven unleashed one of cinema's ultimate bogeymen upon us, Charles E. Sellier Jr. and his writers offered us a reason to actually hope Santa Claus doesn't exist. 6.5/10

Wuchak

Wuchak

6 /10

Beware: An ax-wielding Santa

A traumatized boy grows up at a Catholic orphanage in a small Utah town near the mountains. Once he gets a job at a toy store at 18, havoc ensues.

"Silent Night, Deadly Night" (1984) is infamous for causing moral outrage when it was released, but I never understood the indignation. Not only is this a horror flick, it’s a slasher. Shock and grisly killings come with the territory. Aduh.

Consider clowns for a moment. They are whimsical & funny and yet no one had an issue when they were used for scares in “He Who Gets Slapped” (1924), “Terror on Tour” (1980) and “Poltergeist” (1982). How exactly is Santa off limits, especially since he was depicted as the killer twelve years earlier in “Tales from the Crypt” (1972), not to mention four years earlier in “Christmas Evil” (1980)?

Unlike many slashers, this one takes the time to establish why the killer does what he does. The tone is mostly serious, but there’s also a wink of humor or camp here and there. While it lacks the mood and artistry of “Silent Night, Bloody Night” (1972), it’s serviceable as a one-dimensional (and sometimes amusing) slasher. I appreciated the scenic mountain town locations.

Linnea Quigley is notable on the female front as Denise, as is winsome Toni Nero as Pamela. Both are shown top nude so, if that offends you, I suggest staying away.

The full version is succinct at 1 hour, 22 minutes (while the theatrical version is 3 minutes shorter). It was shot at Heber City & nearby Midway, Utah, which are both east of Salt Lake City on the other side of the mountain pass.

GRADE: B-

Recensioni fornite da TMDB