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Black Christmas

  • 2006
  • 16
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
4.7/10
32K
YOUR RATING
Lacey Chabert and Kristen Cloke in Black Christmas (2006)
Theatrical Trailer from Weinstein Co.
Play trailer2:06
1 Video
99+ Photos
Dark ComedySlasher HorrorTeen HorrorHolidayHorror

On Christmas Eve, an escaped maniac returns to his childhood home, which is now a sorority house, and begins to murder the sorority sisters one by one.On Christmas Eve, an escaped maniac returns to his childhood home, which is now a sorority house, and begins to murder the sorority sisters one by one.On Christmas Eve, an escaped maniac returns to his childhood home, which is now a sorority house, and begins to murder the sorority sisters one by one.

  • Director
    • Glen Morgan
  • Writers
    • Glen Morgan
    • Roy Moore
  • Stars
    • Michelle Trachtenberg
    • Mary Elizabeth Winstead
    • Lacey Chabert
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.7/10
    32K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Glen Morgan
    • Writers
      • Glen Morgan
      • Roy Moore
    • Stars
      • Michelle Trachtenberg
      • Mary Elizabeth Winstead
      • Lacey Chabert
    • 371User reviews
    • 204Critic reviews
    • 22Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    Black Christmas
    Trailer 2:06
    Black Christmas

    Photos232

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    Top cast36

    Edit
    Michelle Trachtenberg
    Michelle Trachtenberg
    • Melissa
    Mary Elizabeth Winstead
    Mary Elizabeth Winstead
    • Heather Fitzgerald
    Lacey Chabert
    Lacey Chabert
    • Dana
    Katie Cassidy
    Katie Cassidy
    • Kelli Presley
    • (as Katie Cassidy)
    Kristen Cloke
    Kristen Cloke
    • Leigh Colvin
    Andrea Martin
    Andrea Martin
    • Barbara 'Ms. Mac' MacHenry
    Yan-Kay Crystal Lowe
    Yan-Kay Crystal Lowe
    • Lauren Hannon
    • (as Crystal Lowe)
    Oliver Hudson
    Oliver Hudson
    • Kyle Autry
    Karin Konoval
    Karin Konoval
    • Billy's Mother
    Dean Friss
    • Agnes - 16 & 22 Years
    Robert Mann
    Robert Mann
    • Billy Lenz - 20 & 35 Years
    Jessica Harmon
    Jessica Harmon
    • Megan Helms
    Leela Savasta
    Leela Savasta
    • Clair Crosby
    Kathleen Kole
    • Eve Agnew
    Cainan Wiebe
    Cainan Wiebe
    • Billy Lenz - 5 & 12 Years
    Christina Crivici
    Christina Crivici
    • Agnes - 8 Years
    Howard Siegel
    • Lover…
    Peter Wilds
    • Frank Lenz
    • Director
      • Glen Morgan
    • Writers
      • Glen Morgan
      • Roy Moore
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews371

    4.732.3K
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    Featured reviews

    7meganmarie-19902

    Have Yourself A Very Merry Black Christmas

    In 1974, Bob Clarke's Black Xmas kick-started the teenage slasher sub-genre. The seasonal slasher went on to leave an impression on John Carpenter, who years later gave us Halloween. So, do I expect to be disappointed with a remake of such an iconic cult classic? It is hard to get excited over teenage slasher films these days, but Glen Morgan reinstalled that excitement. Billy Lenz has just been released from a mental institution and is looking to find his childhood home where he was abused by his mother. However, the house is now occupied by the sorority sisters. With the students unaware of the troubled history of the house and a deranged killer seeking revenge, it's a race against time for the college girls to survive. An aspect of this movie that makes it stand out is that it delves into Billy's backstory and it gives the film more depth. The sorority sisters each have something different to bring to the table, this makes it easier to get a bond with the characters. As the producers were responsible for films such as Final Destination, I was hoping for gory scenes and I received them. Overall, yes, it is predictable at times, but it is worth the watch and has a decent twist at the end.
    4juliamacon

    Colorful and Silly Christmas Slasher

    If Black Christmas gets anything right, it's the colorful Christmas inspired lighting and photography. It's hard not to feel a little festive as the camera moves in and around the hallways of this sorority house covered with all sorts of colored lights as jaunty Christmas music plays in the distant background. It's only a shame this well crafted atmosphere isn't in service of a better movie.

    Black Christmas is a remake of the 1974 film of the same name that involves a psychotic killer sneaking into the attic of a sorority house over Christmas break and tormenting the inhabitants with obscene and terrifying phone calls before killing them one by one. This is, more or less, the same set up for this film except, where the original featured a cast of interesting and well developed (certainly by slasher standards) characters, this film features an attractive group of young women who mostly look so much alike that you can't remember who's dead and who's not.

    The killer, Billy, is unwisely brought out of the shadows and given a full sob story about an abusive mother who loved his sister more than she loved him, which caused him to go on a homicidal rampage many years prior. For some reason, he has a thing for plastic bags and ripping eyes out so, if you're into that, you're in luck - that's how he dispatches of pretty much every character in the film except for one death where a stray shard of ice does the dirty work for him.

    It's hard to figure out what the creators of this film had in mind. It's long been rumored to have had serious studio interference, but the tone is all over the place. Is this supposed to be quite so campy? In the end, it doesn't work as a slice of slasher cheese, a full blown comedy, or a serious horror film.
    5Jonny_Numb

    "I'm not dreaming of a Black Christmas..."

    Some movies are very confident in their ability to do many things right, thus ensuring an intriguing experience. A movie like "Black Christmas," however, is mostly confident in its ability to do many things wrong, yet still remain watchable on some bizarre level. Needless to say, it's an overhaul of the seminal 1974 slasher of the same name, in which a lonely sorority house is besieged by a killer making obscene phone-calls from the attic over the holidays. The 2006 version takes this premise and attempts to build a backstory around murderer Billy Lentz, who remained a shadowy specter throughout Bob Clark's film. I have to give writer-director Glen Morgan credit: while this bit of character development is wildly uneven (including giving Billy a sister-in-madness), it is consistent with the wildly inconsistent rest of the film. Morgan brought a strong sense of macabre humor and visual style (I dare call it "Burtonesuqe") to his exceptional remake of "Willard" (helped by Crispin Glover's delightfully wacky performance), but his stylistic leanings are simply the wrong match for a "Black Christmas" remake. There is not a single suspenseful scene to be found, and the violence is so exaggerated that it defuses any horrific effect (seriously, a killer who eats eyeballs?); additionally, the characters are so ill-defined that it's hard to keep track of who's who (had the number of girls been whittled down the point where they had actual personalities, we might have actually given a damn about them). And, for a slasher film coming in the wake of "Scream" and its kindred, "Black Christmas" just shows a general lack of common sense when an obvious threat is lurking (can you really feel sorry for a security guard who lingers in a maniac's room long enough to get knocked off?). But in an odd way, "Black Christmas" avoids the oblivion of crappy horror remakes due to Morgan's impassioned, assured sense of visual style–that being said, it's nowhere near as good as its predecessor.

    4.5 out of 10
    7kevin_crighton

    enjoy, but don't take seriously!

    Earlier this year, I tore the re-make of When A Stranger Calls apart, and said at the time, that if Hollywood won't bother making new horror movies, but instead simply re-make old or foreign ones, then just stop. I stand by that.

    However...

    Black Christmas actually surprised me. First, it was actually a lot more brutal and violent than I was expecting, considering it's 15 rating (UK). The other, was the way it re-worked the original.

    The original, which I haven't seen for awhile was as much a whodunit as anything else. Here we're spared that. We know pretty much from the start who is killing here.

    What the makers have done, is simply turn the story into a stalk and slash movie, which as I said is quite brutal in areas. For me a movie of this type stands or falls not on the killer or how they kill, but on the potential victims in the story. If you care about them, then you feel bad they are killed. If you don't, then give me an axe, I'll do it myself!! Black Christmas does enough to make you care about each character, by making each one a little different, but yet, having enough in character to make you believe they could get along normally. So when the killing starts, you do care about them, and begin to wonder who, or how many will make it to the end alive.

    The death scenes are well set up and done, which isn't surprising considering the makers also did Final Destination 1 & 3. If I have a problem with them is that the film is maybe a little over-edited so at times, you aren't sure if certain characters have been killed or not.

    This movie has been getting a critical mauling in certain areas. But I found on watching it, that it's fun, enjoyable, with a black(!) sense of humour, some very nice looking actresses in it!, and for it's (admittedly short) running time very entertaining. And when I go to see a movie like this, that's what I want.

    Enjoyable late-night fun.
    5alanmora

    Yet another VERY disappointing "Re-make"

    I had very high expectations for this film. I thought that this might be the one "Re-make" that is the exception because of the involvement of the original film maker, Bob Clark, serving as assistant producer. BOY was I wrong!!! There are some exceptional murder sequences in this flick but that is not enough. Once again, as is the case in so many "Re-makes" the storyline has been almost completely changed! The producers do not seem to realize the elements that made the original film scary in the first place which are now missing! Such as the fact that, in the original you were never quite sure who the killer was and they never revealed it. Now not only do they reveal it, but they add an entire background that is so laughably unbelievable that it dilutes the film's ability to frighten the viewer. The over-the-top gore sequences alone do not make for a frightening movie and the "twist" ending is quite laughable! What they add to the ending of this movie is utterly ridiculous and absolutely unnecessary! Aside from exceptional gore effects, the only other saving grace is the presence of Andrea Martin from the original film as Mrs. Mack but they should have really tried harder to make the characters from the original more like those in the original...and the phone calls, a crucial element to the terrifying experience of the original, are absolutely laughable! Skip this one and watch the original.

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    Horror

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Andrea Martin, who played Phyllis in Black Christmas (1974), said in an interview that she hadn't thought about "Black Christmas" for 32 years and it "came out of the blue" when Glen Morgan offered her the role as the house mother in the movie.
    • Goofs
      Melissa explains to Heather that Billy is not a serial killer because he didn't murder for sexual thrill and is instead a spree killer because he lost his mind. She's not entirely correct, the only difference between a spree killer and a serial killer is the lack of a "cool-off" time. A spree killer is someone who kills multiple people at one time or in quick succession while a serial killer is someone who kills multiple people in distinct incidents. Although Melissa is right that Billy is a spree killer, she doesn't have the correct reasoning.
    • Quotes

      Lauren Hanon: Christmas is more about warding off evil spirits than Halloween. What Christmas shit in this room resembles anything Christian, huh? It's all neo-pagan magic. Christmas tree, a magical rite ensuring the return of the crops. The mistletoe is nothing but a conception charm. Fifth century Christians jacked a Roman Winter Festival - twelve days in December when the nights were long and the Earth was ruled by the demons of chaos. And fucking Santa Claus? This fat voyeur that watches you all year long to make sure you live up to his standards of decency before breaking into your house. And that is different from what Billy did, how?

    • Crazy credits
      The final credits include the message "Goodbye, Shirley," in tribute to composer Shirley Walker, a frequent collaborator with director Glen Morgan. Walker passed away in November 2006, before "Black Christmas"' release.
    • Alternate versions
      The European version features different and more violent kills and the complete hospital showdown has been re-cut completely.
      • In the European version Billy dies on an operating table as doctors try unsuccessfully to revive him.
      • Leigh (Kristen Cloke) is taken to the morgue to ID Agnes and finds Clair's (Leela Savasta's) remains in the body bag marked for Agnes. Leigh returns to Kelli's ('Katie Cassidy''s) room to find Agnes hiding in the bed pretending to be her. Agnes attacks Leigh and snaps her neck. Kelli returns from getting X-rays done, is attacked by Agnes and kills her by shocking her to death with a defibrillator.
      • Kelli is picked up by her parents and leaves the hospital and the camera zooms in on a PEACE ON EARTH sign hanging on a door.
      • In the US version Billy drops down through a ceiling tile after Agnes is killed and chases after Kelli. Kelli breaks the window to her room and runs out into the hallway with Billy close behind. He fights with her before ending up falling over a railing and being impaled on the star on top of a Christmas tree in the lobby below.
    • Connections
      Edited into Black Christmas: Deleted Scenes (2006)
    • Soundtracks
      Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy
      (from "The Nutcracker")

      Music by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky (as Pyotr I. Tchaikovsky)

      Courtesy of 5 Alarm Music

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 25, 2006 (Canada)
    • Countries of origin
      • Canada
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Gritos en la oscuridad
    • Filming locations
      • Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
    • Production companies
      • Dimension Films
      • 2929 Productions
      • Adelstein-Parouse Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $9,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $16,273,581
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $3,723,364
      • Dec 31, 2006
    • Gross worldwide
      • $21,510,851
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 35m(95 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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