Bad
Santa Movie Review:
In a
world that has embraced the putrid “Elf,” one
of the single worst Christmas films ever to see the light
of day, it would figure that I would in turn fall madly
in love with what may be the most vile and grossly disgusting
Christmas comedy of all time. But whereas the simple-minded
aliment of Will Ferrell’s hit comedy has discovered
mass appeal, I’m not about to even hint that Terry
Zwigoff’s “Bad Santa” will do the same.
If anything this dingy little piece of cinema will probably
come and go in a week, destined for the cult classic bin
at a local video store faster than you can say “happy
holidays.”
No
matter, I’ll take the acid-laced laughs featured here
any day. This is a down and dirty comedy rutted in the gutter.
While far from perfect and more than a tad disjointed, it’s
still got more belly laughs in its first ten minutes than
your typical comedy has in its entire run time. It is covered
in nicotine stains and reeks of alcohol, crude and crass
in the ways independent comedies are supposed to be but
so seldom are. The biggest surprise is that it was even
made, Miramax chief Harvey Weinstein willing to role the
dice on a movie honchos at Disney are sure to dislike. “Bad
Santa” is gutsy and not afraid to go for the jugular,
lacerated with the kind of wit, whimsy and, yes, wisdom
black comedies were born and bread for.
Billy
Bob Thornton stars as Willie T. Stokes, a washed-up safecracker
who masquerades each Christmas as a department store Santa
Claus. Along with his midget partner-in-crime Marcus (Tony
Cox), the duo spend a month dealing with the children of
the world as Kris Kringle and his diminutive elf, only to
rob the mall’s safe after closing on Christmas Eve.
It’s a lucrative way to make a living, the two stealing
more than enough in this one yearly heist to last them for
the next 11 calendar months.
Willie’s
a wreck, though. Each year he becomes more pathetically
slovenly, chain-smoking and binge-drinking his way through
the holiday with profanity-filled flare. It’s starting
to wear thin on Marcus. The real mastermind of these heists,
the minute part of this team is starting to think their
current stint taking a Phoenix department store is going
to be their last gig. Not that Willie really cares. He’s
so caught up in his own self-loathing he hardly has the
time to notice his cohort's growing hatred.
That
slowly starts to change when the faux Santa meets “The
Kid” (Brett Kelly), an eight year-old overweight misfit
who decides – for no apparent reason – that
Willie is that actual jolly man of the North Pole. No matter
that he drinks like a fish, spouts swear words as if he’s
writing a thesis on them and admits to having a rear-ended
affair with Mrs. Claus’ sister, to The Kid, Willie
is Santa, and the nefarious criminal just might as well
get used to it.
I know
what you’re thinking. The Kid ends up showing Willie
the true meaning of Christmas, this felonious reprobate
seeing the error of his ways and embraces the holiday spirit.
That’s how movies like this are supposed to go after
all, right? Not in the world created by director Zwigoff
and writer’s Glann Ficarra and John Requa. If there
is redemption, it’s a blood-splattered one chased
with a tequila shooter, the movie refusing to lose its dark
moral compass for anyone. Opening with Santa vomiting in
an alley of lily white snow and closing out with sights
of Kringle no child would ever recover from, “Bad
Santa” is a litany of bad taste coated with enough
arsenic to silence a choir of diamond-winged angels.
Credit
goes to all involved to have the guts to take this beautifully
badass movie to its wondrously putrid extremes. It is easy
to see what executive producers Joel and Ethan Cohen (the
brothers reportedly re-wrote the script during filming with
the director, making it even more surreally unsettling)
saw in the screenplay. This movie fits right into their
oft-kilter oeuvre, a view of the world that’s just
this side of crooked. Same goes for Zwigoff, whose last
film “Ghost World” was one of the most perfectly
realized dark comedies of the past decade. He brings that
same, fancifully twisted touch that graced that film, only
this time turning on the screws even tighter creating a
land where even the most loathsome can almost be loved just
for being who they really are.
The
acting by all is quite fine. Thornton can play a character
like Willie in his sleep, but that doesn’t mean he
isn’t fun to watch. Just the opposite, the actor makes
this nimble-fingered and mumble-mouthed maroon a sight to
see, and Thornton elevates profanity-driven ranting to a
level all its own. Even better is Cox. A veteran of over
50 films including “Friday” and “Beetlejuice,”
this is a juicy, full-throttled role actors of Cox’s
stature just do not get, and he more than makes the most
of it. It’s one of the most lucidly self-assured supporting
turns of the year. But in a movie this brutal and unforgivingly
dank there isn’t a soul in Hollywood that’s
going to remember it, which isn’t just a shame –
it’s an out-and-out travesty.
The rest of the cast is nearly as accomplished. Bernie Mac
is in fine fettle form as the mall’s chief of security,
while Lauren Graham of “Gilmore Girls” takes
part in a scene of front seat procreation that’s sure
to live on in cult-film eternity, her chants of “f**k
me Santa” sending me into fits of delirious giggles
I still haven’t gotten over. Then there are the wonderful
talents of John Ritter. The late television icon makes his
final appearance here, showcasing his great gift for the
last time. His mall manager is a revelation, Ritter’s
few scenes filled with a tight-assed insecurity that’s
unrepentantly ridiculous.
Not
all of it works. “Bad Santa” does tend to move
in fits and starts, and the last ten minutes or so drag
on far longer than needed. What more, Zwigoff completely
wastes the great Cloris Leachman, allowing her nothing to
do other than look like a haggard, pathetic mess. And, as
often as the movie hits the mark, it does have its share
of moments where it goes so far past the line of good taste
the film becomes borderline reprehensible.
You know what,
though? I really don’t care. “Bad Santa”
takes political correctness and gives it such a flagrantly
prominent middle finger that I can’t help but stand
up and applaud. The entire company involved with making
this should take a bow. There hasn’t been a holiday
film this tart-tongued since Dennis Leary tried to save
Judy Davis and Kevin Spacey’s marriage in “The
Ref.” Like that film, “Bad Santa” is destined
for tar and feathers in the present only to be revered down
the line. Until that happens, let me be one of the first
to say this bilge pile of Christmas pathos is a movie to
not only embrace, but to love.
Rating:
3 (out of 4)
Sara
M. Fetters
Wille
(Thornton) and Marcus (Cox) pulled off the perfect heist
every festive season. Each year they gets jobs as the store
Santa and his Elf, work for the holiday season and then
steal all of the Christmas takings from the department store
on Christmas Eve. The problem is that every year Willie
becomes more and more of a drunk and coupled with the fact
that he actually hates kids, the job isn’t getting
any easier. This time they choose Phoenix as their target
but what Willie and Marcus don’t count on is an overly
intuitive boss (Ritter), a store detective (Mac) who wants
in on the action and a kid (Kelly) who believes that Willie
is the real Santa and won’t leave him alone.
Christmas
movies are usually filled with joy and cheer and a spirit
that reflects this special holiday. This Xmas movie is as
far away from that as you could possibly get.
From
the director of cult indie hit ‘Ghost World’,
Terry Zwigoff brings us one of the most outrageous and downright
vulgar Christmas movies you will ever see and that is its
appeal. Festive Hollywood films always follow the same pattern
of overindulging on sugary sweetness and yuletide cheer
and throwing in a Christmas message to make you feel filled
with Xmas cheer, Bad Santa forgoes all of these clichés
and delivers a refreshing festive film that you will be
ho, ho, ho-ing to for a very long time.
Key
to the comedic success of the movie is the performances
of the three leads, Tony Cox, Brett Kelly and Billy Bob
Thornton. As Marcus, the Elf and mastermind behind the whole
scheme is brilliant played by little person actor Tony Cox.
This is a role that the actor excels in as he creates a
character that isn’t the brunt of all jokes, as someone
of his size so could have easily have been but instead he
becomes the initiator of most of the abuse and gags, which
are mostly aimed at Willie. Brett Kelly is perfect as the
annoying kid with the Santa fascination. He portrays a sweet
innocence child even when he is been bombarded with obscenities
by his idol at every opportunity. He has an awful lot of
lines to deliver, basically he keeps asking Willie questions
about Santa, but he does it really well. Kelly is also not
your usual cutesy, butter wouldn’t melt in their mouth
American child actor but a more honest look at the average
kid with personal and social problems.
The
movie is really a showcase for Billy Bob Thornton’s
comedic skills. As Willie he creates a character that optimises
everything that is wrong about Christmas and is the worst
store Santa you have ever seen. He uses foul and abusive
language in front of the children, he constantly drinks
and has a passion for the larger set women who frequent
the store. But it is the character’s safe cracking
skills that he brings to the table but this self abusive
life is starting to cloud even that. This is a tour-de-force
for Thornton, as it shows that he has a real acting gift
and can excel in any genre.
The
supporting cast is also good. In one of his last roles before
his untimely death, John Ritter excels and creates another
memorable character. As Mall manager Bob Chipeska, he plays
a man who just doesn’t want to get on the wrong side
of anyone and can’t help but keep putting his foot
in it. This is another showcase of Ritter’s comedic
prowess and reminds us that he will be sadly missed. Bernie
Mac is also good as the unscrupulous Gin, the Mall’s
store detective. This is an ideal role for Mac as he excels
as a man full of self-importance and delusions of grandeur.
Bad
Santa is the most different Christmas movie you will ever
see. Even though it does have a slight festive message,
nothing else conforms to your usual Holiday Season fare
but it is all the better for it. Those of you who hate the
excessive commercialism of the time of year will adore this
movie that it pokes full at the very thing that you despise
the most, Christmas Spirit.
Star
Rating = * * *
Jamie
Kelwick
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