Welcome to CollegeHighway.com
MyReminderService
Search CollegeHighway.com

Main Menu
  • Home

  • Event Calendar

  • College Critic

  • College Essays

  • New Music

  • News Topics

  • ProfessorRating

  • Recommend Us

  • Submit News

  • Top 10

  • My Account

  • FAQ


  • CollegeHighway.com Login
    Nickname

    Password

    Don't have an account yet? You can create one. As registered user you have some advantages like theme manager, comments configuration and post comments with your name.

    Free CollegeHighway WebMail
    Username:
    Password:


    Use Frames:
    Yes No

    Forgot Password URL
    Signup URL
    Help Section URL

    Toy Stores
    Looking for toy stores that sell every toy you could possibly want to buy? Check out this online toy store for cool toys like radio control cars, electric rc helicopters, and Hydro-Foam.

    Trippin?

    Book your flights and hotels online NOW!

    Check Yourself

    Aptitude, Entrepreneurship and Personality tests

    Ephemerids
    One Day like Today...


    Welcome
    You are Anonymous user. You can register for free by clicking here.

     
    Home / College Guide / â€˜Black Christmas’ Review: A Slasher Film for the Age of Woke Feminism – Va
     Posted on Friday, December 13 @ 00:00:18 PST
    College

    Sophia Takal With: Imogen Poots, Aleyse Shannon, Lily Donoghue, Brittany O’Grady, Caleb Eberhardt, Cary Elwes, Simon Mead, Madeleine Adams, Ben Black. Release Date: Official Site: https://www.universalpictures.com/movies/black-christmas “ Black Christmas ,” a low-budget Canadian horror movie released in 1974, was a slasher thriller with a difference: It was the very first one! Okay, there were more than a few precedents, from “Psycho” (the great-granddaddy of the genre) to “The Last House on the Left” and “The Texas Chain Saw Massacre” to Mario Bava’s “A Bay of Blood.” But “ Black Christmas ,” directed by the not so horror-minded Bob Clark (who went on to make “Porky’s” and “A Christmas Story”), may have been the first movie to draw the slasher components together, almost by happenstance, into a mythological commercial template: the plot that ritualistically knocks off one pretty young thing after the next; the dark-side-of-a-holiday title; the ending that suggests that the evil will just go on. (You could argue that the entire ethos of franchise culture was born, four years later, in the look-we’ll-do-anything-to-spawn-a-sequel! final shot of “Halloween.

    ”) That, however, was a thousand slasher movies ago. “Black Christmas,” the new remake of the 1974 film (there was another remake in 2006), is also a slasher thriller with a difference, in this case the novelty being that the movie, in its deviously sensational psycho-with-a-longbow way, is actually rooted in something relevant and interesting. Once again, a group of sorority sisters are stalked in their group home by a mysterious killer (or, in this case, killers). But the women in the new “Black Christmas” are more than victims; they have agency — and personality. They’re seniors at Hawthorne University who are spending the last night of fall semester on campus before the holidays, and what’s on their minds are the interlocking ways that men — in frat houses, in classrooms, and through the ages — have built an entire system out of pushing them around. Imogen Poots , who has always been such a compelling actress, brings a pensive heart and seen-it-all delicacy to the role of Riley, who three years ago was sexually assaulted at a frat party after she had passed out. The film tackles the aspect of frat culture that slides, behaviorally and ideologically, into rape culture: the ritualistic devotion to binge partying where young men try to break down women’s resistance by encouraging them to drink as much as possible, so that — in the minds of the men, at least — the issue of consent is left in the dust.

    Three years ago, when Riley accused Brian (Ryan McIntyre) of raping her, the system of justice didn’t believe her story — but that’s because of how the system, at college, is built (in reality, if unofficially) around a certain what-happens-at-the-frat-bash-stays-at-the-frat-bash cult of animal-house hedonism. “Bad” behavior, and that includes the crime of rape, gets swept under the beer-soaked carpet. It’s Riley’s buddy, Kris (Aleyse Shannon), who brings these issues to the fore. Kris is a college activist who’s crusading against “the white-supremacist patriarchy.” She’s got a petition going to fire Professor Gelson, an English teacher played with sly-dog unctuousness by Cary Elwes, who’s got a canonical chip on his shoulder that turns, on occasion, into fits of classroom rage. It’s easy, and tempting, to imagine a movie that offered a subtler dissection of these issues — like, say, a gender-based variation on “Dear White People.” Yet the elemental women-v.-men aggression of “Black Christmas” meshes well with the film’s landscape of heightened horror. Riley, Kris, and several of their M U Kappa sisters show up at the Founders’ fraternity in holiday elf suits to perform a song-and-dance number, only to turn it into a holly jolly Christmas-carol call-out of rape culture entitled “Up On the Frat House” (“Ho, ho, ho! I didn’t know!” ).

    “Black Christmas” may be the first film outside of Takashi Miike’s “Audition” to offer a fusion of woke sociology and vengeful violence, and the result is an innovative if at times crudely diverting fright flick in which the heroines, and the villains as well, are all playing their part in a larger scheme. The slasher madness arrives as payback for that accusatory song performance, which Riley sings while staring into Brian’s eyes. (Does he feel guilty? No, he winks .) But the frat already has its male-supremacist insanity thing going. It has updated the hazing rites for the age of #MeToo, so that in a hidden room, we observe slivers of a ceremony in which the pledges wear medieval robes and masks like the ones in “Eyes Wide Shut,” standing before a bust of the college’s founder that literally cries tears of black blood. These dudes are operating out of a belief system — their conviction that the rise of feminine power is phasing them out. “Black Christmas,” in its way, gives hyperbolic vent to a certain 21st-century male paranoia. Especially when the hooded figures start to show up in the shadows of the sorority, like Death from “The Seventh Seal” with better weapons.

    People begin to die, but the movie, directed and co-written with utilitarian urgency by Sophia Takal, keeps the women alive as characters. It’s not just that they want to escape. They want to find out who’s doing this to them and why, and when they go back to the frat house to unmask their tormentors, “Black Christmas” turns into an entertainingly over-the-top face-off. You can’t take a movie like this too seriously, but it’s still one of the rare slasher films that offers a holiday from bloodshed for its own sake. Black Christmas: Film Review Reviewed at AMC Lincoln Square, New York, Dec. 11, 2019. MPAA Rating: PG-13. Running time: 92 MIN. Production : A Universal Pictures release of a Blumhouse Productions, Divide/Conquer production. Producers: Jason Blum, Ben Cosgrove, Adam Hendricks. Executive producers: Greg Gilreath, Adam Hendricks, Zac Locke. Crew : Director: Sophia Takal. Screenplay: Sophia Takal, April Wolfe. Camera (color, widescreen): Mark Schwartzbard. Editor: Jeff Betancourt. Music: Brooke Blair, Will Blair. With : Imogen Poots, Aleyse Shannon, Lily Donoghue, Brittany O’Grady, Caleb Eberhardt, Cary Elwes, Simon Mead, Madeleine Adams, Ben Black.

     
    Related Links
  • Travel
  • Party Supplies
  • Food
  • Legal Help
  • Night Life
  • Fashion
  • Academics
  • Automotive
  • Entertainment
  • Real Estate
  • Relocation
  • More about College Guide
  • News by webhose


    Most read story about College Guide:
    A palette of school spirit


    Last news about College Guide:


    Printer Friendly Page  Send this Story to a Friend



  • All logos and trademarks in this site are property of their respective owner. The comments are property of their posters, all the rest © 2001 by CollegeHighway.com