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Black Christmas (1974) [Special Edition]

Posted By: Someonelse
Black Christmas (1974) [Special Edition]

Black Christmas (1974) [Special Edition]
DVD9 | VIDEO_TS | NTSC 16:9 | Cover | 01:37:43 | 7,11 Gb
Audio: English AC3 5.1/2.0 @ 448/192 Kbps; French AC3 2.0 @ 192 Kbps | Subs: None
Genre: Horror, Mystery

The college town of Bedford is receiving an unwelcome guest this Christmas. As the residents of sorority house Pi Kappa Sig prepare for the festive season, a demonic stranger begins to stalk the house. A series of grisly obscene phone-calls start to plague the residents of the sorority and soon they will each meet their fate at the hands of the psychotic intruder. As the Police try to trace the phone calls, they discover that nothing is as it seems during this BLACK CHRISTMAS.
Bob Clark's Black Christmas predate Halloween by 4 years and is now widely acknowledged as the inventor of the modern slasher film.

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Has any director in recent memory had a stranger career trajectory than Bob Clark? This is, after all, a man who got started making innovative low-budget horror movies in the early 1970s, then graduated to studio-financed animal comedy with Porky’s (1982) and Porky’s II (1983) in the early 1980s, made a perennial Christmas classic in 1983’s beloved A Christmas Story, then settled into a series of increasingly formulaic and forgettable studio and made-for-TV movies before finally bottoming out on the atrocity that is Baby Geniuses (1999) and its 2004 sequel. And, if that weren’t weird enough, Clark appears to be coming full circle as he is currently in production on a remake of his first horror film, 1972’s Children Shouldn’t Play With Dead Things.

Black Christmas (1974) [Special Edition]

Along with Children, Clark directed two other significant horror films in the early 1970s: Deathdream (a.k.a., Dead of Night, 1974) and Black Christmas (1974). Both films were part of a wave of gritty horror fare that followed in the wake of the cult success of George A. Romero’s Night of the Living Dead (1968) and Tobe Hooper’s The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1973). Like those films, Clark’s work betrayed a fierce intelligence and willingness to experiment both visually and thematically, virtues that are all-too-often lacking in the horror genre, where quickie knock-offs and inspid sequels are frequently the order of the day.

Black Christmas (1974) [Special Edition]

While the contemporary slasher movie is often traced back to John Carpenter’s Halloween (1978), it is really Clark’s Black Christmas that helped establish the fundamental elements of the genre. Given what the slasher movie became in the 1980s, this could sound like damning praise, but the wake of copycats shouldn’t take away from what Clark accomplished with a minimal budget and a simple idea.

Black Christmas (1974) [Special Edition]

Working from a screenplay by Canadian writer Roy Moore, who was inspired by a series of murders that had taken place in Montreal, Clark envisioned a murder-mystery in which you never see the killer. Granted, Alfred Hitchcock had done something similar in Psycho (1960), but where Hitch had used shadows and angles and fast cutting to obscure the true identity of his killer, Clark decided to rely almost entirely on the point-of-view shot, which at the time was relatively new and decidedly unsettling.

Black Christmas (1974) [Special Edition]

The story takes place during the Christmas holidays on an unnamed college campus. The few sisters of Pi Kappa Sig who are staying on campus begin receiving a series of increasingly graphic and disturbing phone calls, after which they fall victim to an unseen stalker who takes up residence in the attic of the sorority house. The main character is Jess (Olivia Hussey), who is inexplicably British, but more importantly, is pregnant by her driven musician boyfriend (Keir Dullea). While she wants to abort the baby, he wants to get married, which creates a rift between them that allows for the possibility that he might be the killer (Dullea, who was so purposefully bland in Stanley Kubrick’s 2001 six years early, hits just the right notes of potentially homicidal jealousy). The narrative also works in several subplots, including the involvement of the distraught father (James Edmond) of the killer’s first victim and the attempts by the local police (headed by John Saxon’s Lieutenant Fuller) to trace the origin of the mysterious phone calls using some seriously antiquated methods that should make one appreciate the existence of Caller ID all the more.

Black Christmas (1974) [Special Edition]

Despite this monumentally simple set-up, Clark avoids some of the more obvious approaches to the material, relying instead on mystery and atmosphere to sell the horror, rather than graphic violence and nudity. In fact, Black Christmas is quite notable for its restraint, especially given the fact that Clark had successfully used graphic make-up special effects in his earlier horror outings (Deathdream featured early work by soon-to-be legendary FX master Tom Savini).

Black Christmas (1974) [Special Edition]

The relentless use of point-of-view shots gives the film a queasy tension that is underscored by a first-rate score by Carl Zittrer (who also mixed the creepy phone calls) and punctuated by a few well-timed fragmentary glimpses of the killer (the pièce de résistance is a creepy view of the killer’s eye looking through a cracked door). Clark and cinematographer Reginald H. Morris (who shot most of Clark’s subsequent films) also supply a series of memorable images and compositions, including the now-iconic shot of the first victim, her face still wrapped in the plastic that suffocated her, rocking silently in the attic.

Black Christmas (1974) [Special Edition]

They also give us an abstract, artsy murder sequence in which the stabbing of Margot Kidder, fresh off of Brian De Palma’s Hitchcock-inspired Sisters (1973), with a glass unicorn statue is violently intercut with close-ups of Christmas carolers. This deliberately abstract montage reminds us of how much Black Christmas has in common with European art films, particularly its refusal to satisfy the audience with easy answers at the end. In fact, the film leaves its conclusion deliberately vague, offering one answer to the mystery that is quickly undermined with more questions.

Black Christmas (1974) [Special Edition]

Viewed today, Black Christmas is an easy film to overlook if only because so much it now plays like cliché–from its sorority house setting, to its incompetent police officers, to its use of a well-worn urban legend to provide a twisty shock. However, this is largely because so many lesser movies have trod so clumsily in its footsteps over the past three decades. It is by no means a masterpiece of the horror genre, but what it does it does extremely well, and, for better or worse, it became the primal scene from which so many other stalk-and-slash thrillers were born.
Black Christmas (1974) [Special Edition]

Special Features:
- Digitally re-mastered anamorphic Video and newly created 5:1 Surround Stereo Audio
- Two original scenes with a new vocal sountrack that were recently uncovered
- "The 12 Days of Black Christmas", an all-new documentary featuring current interviews with Art Hindle, Doug McGrath and Lynne Griffin among others
- Separate interview segments with Olivia Hussey and Margot Kidder
- Midnight Screening Q & A session with John Saxon, Bob Clark and Carl Sitter

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