Saturday, December 11, 2010

The Secret Dead Blog Christmas Film Festival


If I were in charge of programming, say, a 10-movie Christmas movie marathon*, I'd fill it with lots of action, crime, noir, black comedy... and of course, some heart-warming classics. If I could program such a thing, here's what you'd be watching.

Opening Short: A Junky's Christmas (1993, directed by Nick Donkin and Melody McDaniel, produced by Francis Ford Coppola). William S. Burroughs and Christmas go together like Trent Reznor and... uh, Bing Crosby. Yes, this short is Claymation, which is pretty much the only traditional thing about this creepy-yet-oddly heartwarming short film. If your jaw hasn't dropped by the time our titular "junky" has opened the stolen suitcase, then you ain't human. (You can watch the whole thing on You Tube: Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3.)

After the jump, it's onto the main features, starting with a trip into the raunchy/noir savant mind of Scott Phillips...



The Ice Harvest (2005, Harold Ramis). Of course, the film is not as good as the book (that goes without saying, and if you haven't read the book, stop reading this blog and go buy/download/steal a copy immediately. It's essential.) But I first watched this at the original GoodisCon back in 2007, and every year since it's not Christmas unless I'm hanging out with John Cusack as he orders tropical drinks at a strip club, slips on freezing rain, and places the world's lamest Christmas presents ever under his ex-wife's tree.
 
Batman Returns (1991, Tim Burton). Yes, it was a big mainstream Hollywood superhero flick. But goddamn, what a weird movie. I mean, seriously. Deformed children sent to live in sewers. Intelligent packs of penguins. Starlets killed by bat swarms. Stuffed animals torn apart by garbage disposals. Toxic waste. Kentucky-Fried Christopher Walken. And Batman is hardly in the thing! I put this movie on a few weeks ago, and it made my seven-year-old daughter cry. Which reminded me how much I loved this flick.

Less Than Zero (1987, Marek Kanievska). Even Bret Easton Ellis has warmed up to this one. The whole "Brat Pack" thing (the early novels of Ellis, Jay McInerney, Tama Janowitz) caught me at an impressionable age: 15, and trying to figure out what college/adult life would be like. So I listened to the Bangles song ("Hazy Shade of Winter," which is still fantastic) and checked the novel out of the library and -- between Zero and The Rules of Attraction -- gave myself quite an education. And the movie, which I saw much later, takes me back to that time.

Which brings us to the centerpiece of the festival, and the most obvious selections: The John McClane Double Feature.


Die Hard (1988, John McTiernan). The Veuve Cliquot of 'splodey action movies: often imitated, never bettered. Every time I watch it, I catch new things to admire. Like the brief exchange between the flight attendant and John McClane as he's pulling a giant teddy bear down from the overhead bin. Not a word is spoken; the woman's eyes, and McClane's stunned reaction, say it all. Suddenly, we're crushing on him, too.

Die Hard 2: Die Harder (1990, Renny Harlin). Even my 17-year-old self rolled his eyes when I saw the preview where John McClane has just ejected himself out of an exploding plane, mugging for the camera the whole time. And of course it doesn't hold a flaming air traffic flare to the first movie. But so what. It's our last chance to spent another Christmas holiday with McClane, since the next two sequels ignore this vital ingredient of the Die Hard formula. (Yeah, yeah, Live Free or Die Hard takes place over the Fourth of July, blah blah blah. It ain't Christmas.)

While your ears are still recovering from the gunfire and explosions, it's time to give you a...

Blast of Silence (1960, Allen Baron). Ed Brubaker turned me on to this movie, one of the last of the original noir cycle, and I'll be forever thankful. If the idea of wandering around 1959 New York City (Rockefeller Center, the Village, Harlem, the Staten Island Ferry) during the holidays inside the mind of a hitman who's slowly losing his shit appeals to you in the slightest... track down a copy right now. The Criterion DVD has great bonus features, including a "then-and-now" style NYC tour from Allen Baron, who wrote, directed and starred.

The Thin Man (1934, W.S. Van Dyke). I try to re-read Hammett's Thin Man during the holidays, because the action takes place during that long, strange week between Christmas and New Year's. This classic adaptation transports you there, no matter the time of the year. Just skip past the opening chapters, because it's painfully slow and sets up a central mystery which nobody gives a crap about. The central activities here are wise-cracking and drinking, as it should be during the holidays. That's not to say that we're dealing with an dysfunctional alcoholic couple in Nick and Nora Charles. You'd marry either of them in a heartbeat, because it seems like so much fun.

And finally, we end with a triple blast of  Shane Black Holiday Features. Nobody, and I mean nobody, does a Christmas action flick like Shane Black. As violent as it may be, I want to live in a Shane Black Christmas Village, where the femme fatales wear slinky Santa suits, people are routinely tortured, and shit may blow up at any given moment.

Lethal Weapon (1987, Richard Donner). This would have been the ultimate Christmas action movie if that pesky Die Hard hadn't shown up a year later. I've never spent the holidays in L.A., but thanks to this flick, this is how I'll always imagine it: a barefoot, bare-chested Mel Gibson, running down Hollywood Boulevard, desperate to beat the piss out of Gary Busey on a wet lawn.


The Long Kiss Goodnight (1996, Renny Harlin). Criminally underrated. Funny, mean, frantic and features the best Samuel L. Jackson line ever: "No, no, I sock 'em in the jaw and yell pop goes the weasel." Which is just one of many, many fucked-up and memorable lines. This is probably the funniest Black script, next to...

Kiss Kiss Bang Bang (2004, Shane Black). Back when KKBB first appeared, everybody in my crime writing circle went apeshit over it, and with good reason: it's a brilliant send-up/celebration of 1950s pulp detective series (most notably, Brett Halliday's Mike Shayne mysteries), buddy action flicks, and of course, Shane Black Christmas movies.

Okay, so that's my list. What would be playing at your film festival?

RELATED: Just noticed that Vince Keenan posted his own favorites yesterday, and there's a lot of nice overlap. Swear to God, I wasn't peeking at his list when I compiled mine.

(*Big thanks to Elizabeth Amber and Anthony Schiavino for inspiring this post on a Twitter exchange.)

23 comments:

Kieran Shea said...

How about Levinson's "Diner"? Or "National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation"? I mean, that kooky Quaid business makes Randy's dickie-sporting role all the more awesome now.

http://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/features/2011/01/quaid-201101

AnswerGirl said...

Great list, thanks! Several here I haven't seen . . .

It may be so old it's a cliche, but "Gremlins" makes my list of favorite dark Christmas movies. The story of why Phoebe Cates' character hates Christmas? That's hardcore.

And I'm not ashamed of loving "Bad Santa," which features John Ritter in a fearless final performance.

Dan Fleming said...

This viewing list is way better than anything playing on television that day. Well worth it for Blast of Silence alone.

And like AnswerGirl, I'm going to add the "caper" flick, Bad Santa just because I cannot go a Christmas without watching it anymore.

Swierczy said...

Kieran: God, it's been ages since I've watched DINER. Need to fix that. (And I absolutely love VACATION; I just wanted to avoid to overtly Christmas movies for this list.)

Clair: Forgot about GREMLINS! Great pick. And I'm ashamed to say I've never watched BAD SANTA.

Dan: Okay, it's clear that I need to watch BAD SANTA immediately.

John Weagly said...

Last year we paired "The Ice Harvest" with "In Bruges" for our Christmas Noir Double Feature.

This year it's going to be "The Silent Partner" with "The Square." Neither one is 100% Christmas, but both have pivotal Christmas scenes and both are awesome.

StephenD said...

So glad you mentioned "Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang". That movie's great.

Gregg Swierczynski said...

Bill Murray's Scrooged !! I'd add that one bro. Not as violent as the above mentioned but has Bobcat Goldthwait, the Grim Reaper, Ghosts, bad 80's hair and a sweet message all rolled into one.

Swierczy said...

Gregg: Absolutely. I'd add SCROOGED to my list of full-on Christmas movies, along with VACATION, A CHRISTMAS STORY, even WHITE CHRISTMAS (with "Danny Fucking Kaye!").

Vince said...

A damn fine list. Shane Black owns this season as far as I'm concerned. An interesting recent addition to the holiday queue is 2009's The Merry Gentleman, about a suicidal hit man having a bad Christmas. Michael Keaton, who also directs, is in top form, so you can pair it with either Batman Returns or Blast of Silence.

planetofthecapes said...
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R.R.Went said...
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Swierczy said...

Vince: Thanks for that MERRY GENTLEMAN tip. Just ordered it. I'm a big Keaton fan (and can't believe I missed hearing about this).

Raphael Went said...

Bloody blogger/google accounts are so awkward at times. Let's try again.


When I was at Uni all those many years ago...okay, year before last, we made it a challenge to find and watch non-Christmas Christmas films. None of us were huge fans of Christmas, so we had choices such as you mentioned up there. DIE HARD, BATMAN RETURNS, LETHAL WEAPON and so on. The more tedious the link to Xmas the better.

Also on our list?

GREMLINS.
HUDSUCKER PROXY.
TRADING PLACES.
FRENCH CONNECTION.
FAST TIMES AT RIDGEMONT HIGH.
COBRA.

and BRAZIL!
Probably my favourite Xmas film of all. One of my favourite films period.

Of course, since we were Scriptwriting students at the time, we found any excuse to watch the brilliant IN THE SOUP. Will Patton sings "The Little Drummer Boy" in the creepy way only Will Patton can do. Hey, it's a Christmas song. It counts....

Swierczy said...

Raphael: I follow you on all of the Christmas content until I get to... COBRA. Really? It's been a while since I've seen it, but nothing would make me happier than to add a Stallone flick to the festival.

Pulp Tone said...

Rock on Duane. I think this needs to be tradition from here on out. Yeah Gremlins should get on there but it would be hard to pick which one it would replace. Plus it's outside the theme. I posted this around. Hope to bring some new readers here.

Swierczy said...

John: Completely forgot IN BRUGES! What a great film. And I haven't seen SILENT PARTNER or THE SQUARE yet. I'll add those to my must-watch list.

Anthony: Tradition, indeed. Maybe someday I convince a movie theater to do this for real... make a weekend of it.

le0pard13 said...

So glad you included some of my favorites, Duane. It's not Christmas without the original DIE HARD and LETHAL WEAPON duo, THE ICE HARVEST, KISS KISS BANG BANG. And I absolutely agree that THE LONG KISS GOODNIGHT is "criminally underrated".

Panned on its initial release by almost every critic who reviewed, it was just so far ahead of its time with its lethal female lead, outrageous action, and the most quotable stack of Shane Black dialogue around. Why they pulled its Blu-ray Disc release is beyond me.

Of course, in my household, we (as in the kids and I) cannot survive without watching and quoting Ralphie Parker and A CHRISTMAS STORY. My daughter's fav remains THE NIGHTMARE BEFORE CHRISTMAS. I'd also recommend THE REF. Dennis Leary and cast are frickin' hilarious! Thanks, Duane.

Raphael Went said...

In the opening scene of COBRA, which is a classic, there are "Season's Greetings" and "Happy Holidays" signs up in the window of the King Market, and they are selling Christmas trees outside.

It is indeed Christmassy.

Anonymous said...

This is a great list of Christmas movies from everybody (I particularly like "Kiss Kiss Bang Bang"). I'd add in a vote for "The Square" which I just saw for the first time a couple of weeks ago. It's a tough, intense uptick on films like "The Postman Always Rings Twice" & "Double Indemnity". It features a large cast that just unwinds itself all the way to a very bitter, bloody, body strewn, dead end. Just fantastic. The DVD also features the lethal "Spider" from the same filmmakers, which if you haven't seen should check out on youtube.

- Bob

Swierczy said...

Thanks for the tip, Bob. I've been hearing a lot of great things about THE SQUARE.

Paul Davis said...

I would add "On Her Majesty's Secret Service" to your list of Christmas movies.

Although I miss Sean Connery in the James Bond role, Lazenby is OK, all things considered, and I love the John Barry score.

I linked to Barry's music via the below link:

http://pauldavisoncrime.blogspot.com/2009/11/bringing-in-christmas-season-with-james.html

Scott Phillips said...

Thanks for the nod, chief....you need to watch "Bad Santa" and "The Silent Partner" posthaste.

Amber Love said...

I can't thank you enough for the movie recommendations. I really needed to see something new. I had never wanted to see Long Kiss Goodnight because the critics pounded it so badly; I finally see it.. and LOVE IT. Yeah.

Kiss Kiss Bang Bang was all kinds of awesome. Loved the quirky throwbacks to noir drama and the breaking of the 4th wall.