Silent Night backdrop
Silent Night poster

SILENT NIGHT

2012 • CA HMDB
November 30, 2012

As their small Midwestern town prepares for its annual Christmas Eve parade, a sheriff and his deputy discover that a maniac in a Santa suit is murdering those he judges as naughty.

Cast

👍 👎 🔥 🧻 👑

Comments

Comments (0)

Crew

Production: Thomas M. Kastelz (Executive Producer)Edward Mokhtarian (Executive Producer)Steve Ruff (Executive Producer)James Gibb (Executive Producer)John Carbone (Executive Producer)Edmund Mokhtarian (Executive Producer)Richard Saperstein (Producer)Mark Sanders (Executive Producer)John G. Carbone (Executive Producer)Jayson Rothwell (Executive Producer)Aaron L. Gilbert (Executive Producer)Adam Goldworm (Executive Producer)Sean E. DeMott (Executive Producer)Shara Kay (Producer)Kevin Kasha (Executive Producer)Phyllis Laing (Producer)Vincent J. Guastini (Executive Producer)Brian Witten (Producer)
Music: Kevin Riepl (Original Music Composer)
Cinematography: Joseph White (Director of Photography)

REVIEWS (1)

Roberto Giacomelli •
It is Christmas Eve in Cryer, Wisconsin, and preparations are underway for the traditional Santa Claus parade that will take place in the evening. But there is a problem: a psychopath dressed as Santa Claus and wearing a mask is reaping victims. The only motive driving the killer is to eliminate people who have behaved badly in some way during the year. Sheriff Cooper and his deputy, Aubrey Bradimore, are on the trail of the killer Santa Claus. With "Silent Night" by Steven C. Miller, we are in the realm of "remake-only-in-name". But first a bit of history. The year was 1984 and the unknown Charles E. Sellier Jr. directed "Silent Night, Deadly Night", also known in Italy as "Natale di sangue", a slasher film with a killer Santa Claus that owes much of its fame to the iconic figure of the assassin rather than the actual qualitative scope of the film. The fact is that "Silent Night, Deadly Night" had a moderate success, a wave of controversies, and a group of fans who made this film the forerunner of a saga, which in less than ten years reached five chapters, of which only the first three were dedicated to the psychopathic Santa Claus and one was even directed by Brian Yuzna. As if that were not enough, "Silent Night, Deadly Night" introduced the figure of the evil Santa Claus, which over the years has been reproduced in a considerable number of films, transforming one of the icons of Christmas and the positive figure par excellence into a reason to fear December 25. But as the recent tradition of American horror cinema dictates, even "Silent Night, Deadly Night", like most of the cult films of this genre, MUST have a remake/reboot and, having shortened the title to a simpler and more immediate "Silent Night", the 2012 version of the killer Santa Claus arrives punctually. But just as the title has been simplified, it has been decided to go for the simplification of any element in this remake, which is such only in name since it has really little or nothing to do with the 1984 film. The figure of the killer Santa Claus remains, the action is set on December 24, and the murder of the woman who is impaled on the decorative deer antlers is reprised (which there was the scream queen Linnea Quigley, here the blonde Courtney-Jane White)... for the rest, two completely different films. There is no longer the interesting point of view of the assassin with a traumatic past, but rather a thriller-slasher structure in which the protagonist is the canonical tormented policewoman who is hard to kill and the killer has a mysterious identity hidden behind a mask (and alas, the revelation of the identity and motive of the assassin will disappoint many). "Silent Night" has been very much about subtraction with a "basic" slasher structure in which for 95 minutes we see nothing but the succession of murders of strangers who arrive on the scene specifically to be slaughtered. There are no lack of original and very bloody deaths (notable is the long sequence with the pin-up Cortney Palm in topless who ends up shredded), which in the end is the primary thing that the slasher-fan asks of this film, but the "Friday the 13th" setting does not help a sterile and overly simplistic film to arouse emotions, resulting mostly repetitive and a bit boring. The director is the young Steven C. Miller, who came to international attention with the bad 2006 zombie-movie "Automaton Transfusion". In the cast, Malcolm McDowell stands out, now indispensable in horror genre B-movies, who here plays the role of Sheriff Cooper, and the excellent Jaime King, already seen in "San Valentino di sangue", "The Tripper" and "Sin City", who is the deputy. Definitely spot-on the look of the killer and really varied his arsenal, which ranges from the classic axe and the tempting scythe to the flamethrower. In short, "Silent Night" is the classic "little movie" for a carefree viewing that leaves time for what it is, a slasher similar to too many others that is remembered just for the Christmas setting and a couple of creative murders. Maybe this time it would have been better if they had adhered more closely to the subject of the original film. In DVD and Blu-ray Disc from Koch Media.
👍 👎 🔥 🧻 👑

Comments

Comments (0)

Where to Watch

Rent

Amazon Video Amazon Video
Google Play Movies Google Play Movies
Chili Chili

Buy

Amazon Video Amazon Video
Google Play Movies Google Play Movies
Chili Chili

COMMUNITY REVIEWS (1)

Wuchak

Wuchak

7 /10

Santa with an ax …and a flamethrower

When a series of shocking murders occur on Christmas Eve in a town in Wisconsin, the Deputy (Jaime King) and Sheriff (Malcolm McDowell) must track down the culprit, hopefully before the big parade.

"Silent Night" (2012) is the sixth and most recent installment in the “Silent Night, Deadly Night” series that started in 1984. Unlike the original infamous flick, this one came and went without any outrage. Debuting 28 years after the original (and 21 years after the previous installment) it’s fittingly an all-around improvement.

This is not a remake, as some have believed, despite two scenes being homages to the original film. It’s a completely different story, completely different characters and completely different location. There’s also a link to the real-life Covina Massacre, which took place on Christmas Eve in 2008 wherein 45-year-old Bruce Jeffrey Pardo, dressed as Santa, killed 9 people by gunshot or arson at a holiday party in a Los Angeles suburb.

All the staples you would want in a slasher are present: a mysterious masked killer; brutal killings; a compelling story; a sympathetic female protagonist, i.e. the “final girl”; black humor that goes over the heads of some viewers; and stunning women (e.g. Courtney-Jane White, with a nod to Cortney Palm).

It doesn’t reinvent the wheel; it just does what it does well, including being noticeably better than the original. Not to mention it features powerhouse Malcolm McDowell.

The film runs 1 hour, 34 minutes, and was shot in Selkirk & Stonewall, Manitoba, just north of Winnipeg.

GRADE: B+

Reviews provided by TMDB