Despite a few creepy
flourishes and the presence of horror-cinema icon John Carradine in a minor
role, Silent Night, Bloody Night is
more like a lump of coal than a brightly wrapped Christmas present. Not to be
confused with the slasher flick Silent
Night, Deadly Night (1984), which sparked controversy by featuring a
murderer in a Santa Claus costume, Silent
Night, Bloody Night is a discombobulated piece about tragedies occurring in
a Massachusetts home that once served as an insane asylum. (The title refers to a Christmas Eve murder spree.) Clearly cobbled together
during editing from scattershot footage, the picture uses the weak framing
device of Diane Adams (Mary Woronov) moping around the central location while
delivering somber voiceover about past events, thus triggering extensive
flashbacks. According to Diane, the trouble began in 1950 when a man named
Wilfred Butler died at the home. Amid questions about whether his demise was an
accident or suicide, survivors honored Wilfred’s wish that the house remain
abandoned. Thus, when Wilfred’s grandson Jeffrey (James Patterson) hires lawyer
John Carter (Patrick O’Neal) to arrange the sale of the house, those tampering
with Wilfred’s wishes meet the business end of an axe. Silent Night, Bloody Night takes quite a while to get going, and
long stretches of dull conversation elapse between fright scenes. Worse, the
slapped-together structure of the piece ensures confusion and tedium, problems
compounded by indifferent acting and muddy photography. Some minor historical
interest stems from the presence of actors with Andy Warhol associations
(including Woronov), while pretty starlets including Astrid Heeren provide eye
candy. However, if there’s anything genuinely interesting or unique about Silent Night, Bloody Night, it’s buried
beneath lots of superficial atmospherics, and obscured by needlessly befuddling
plot machinations.
Silent Night, Bloody Night: LAME
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