It’s an exciting day, folks! The first entry into my 100 Best Horror Movies Ever Challenge – and we’re starting with the classic slasher
(some might say The Classic Slasher), Black
Christmas. It’s the original “he’s calling from inside the house” movie, as
well as one of the first slashers. Yes, Black
Christmas is the awkward older sister of Halloween; it did much, influenced many, and yet gets so little
credit.
To be fair, this movie is missing most of the tension, and
the soundtrack, that makes Halloween
so memorable. On the other hand, Black
Christmas makes up for it with some seriously disturbing phone calls, some
good creepy moments, and some truly ahead of its time material. I was surprised and delighted that Olivia Hussey’s main “good girl”/final girl was a driven
woman who’d rather get an abortion than marry her weird, controlling boyfriend.
This is not because I love abortions – I mean, only so much as the next lady
who’s actively trying not to reproduce – but because that sort of character a) is
not that common even today, and b) totally subverts the idea that all final
girls are bookish, God-fearing virgins. The Blu-ray version of Black Christmas that I have includes interviews
with some of the cast, and Margot Kidder gave us this gem of a quote: “It was
the late 60s, early 70s, and we were saying and doing anything… these days, you
have all the damn Christians down your throat.”
And that about sums it up, doesn’t it? Dare I say movies,
like all art, could easily suffer a bit from our current preoccupation with
political correctness (Donald Trump, who is likely the backlash of this pro-PC movement incarnate, aside)? The horror genre, however, has
always thrived in the face of “decency” and “morality,” and continues to thrive
in adverse and frightening social conditions. And that’s why it’s great.
A few other points: Margot Kidder’s character. She’s never
onscreen without a cigarette or a cocktail! She also has a really dirty mouth
and a sense of humor (that fellatio joke fell flat for me, but it really worked
for those cops); she’s the one I’d hang out with in this sorority house. And
(spoiler alert for this 50-year-old movie) I appreciated that in her interview,
Olivia Hussey noted that it was kind of ridiculous that the police never
bothered to search the attic after her character bludgeoned Peter to death. There
are corpses stashed all over this house! People are still missing! And the cops
are just like, “Case closed, peace.”
...As am I, and thus ends the first
post of this challenge. One movie down, 99 to go. As always, you can follow my
antics (and occasional movie live tweets) on Twitter, under the hashtag #100BestHorrorMoviesEver. Next up: Repulsion.
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