MOVIE
Violent Night
Director Tommy Wirkola
Review Ray Chan
If you know nothing about the movie, Violent Night sounds to be nothing more than just another lightweight comedy offering to cash in on the annual seasonal demand for yuletide yarns.
But that really cannot be further from the truth. So far removed from a soppy Hallmark special, this gory, edgy, and sarcastic action flick deserves to be afforded instant cult classic status.
The man in red is the central character, and we mean the real Father Christmas. Burnt out after having to deliver toys to kids every year, he prefers whisky instead of milk with his cookies, and finds that the magic is gone after so many years of the same old routine.
Soured old Saint Nick eventually finds himself in the wrong place at the wrong time when he visits a wealthy family’s compound on Christmas Eve, stuffing his face with cookies and milk while stumbling through like some thief in the night, only to be accidentally deserted by his herd of reindeer.
Santa meets Trudy, a young girl in the wealthy Lightstone family, who fully believes in him and the spirit of Noel, even if the others in her family are spoiled and entitled. Her parents, Jason and Linda, are estranged and all Trudy wants is for them to be together again. Her grandmother Gertrude leads the clan with an iron fist, making her kids fight not only for her love but for a piece of their wealthy corporation.
A gang of mercenaries duly breaks in and takes the Lightstones hostage. Armed with safecracking technology and an armoury of weapons, the bad guys plan to steal money stashed away in the family vaults.
But there’s a Christmas cracker in the works. Well-planned as they are, the crooks don’t envisage coping with a cross Kriss Kringle in the house, who, with his sack of tricks and encouraged by Trudy, is ready to put up a fight to save the day. He’s got a naughty list full of bad guys and they’re all due for lumps of coal in their stockings.
The screenplay, by Josh Miller and Patrick Casey, is a cheeky premise that works perfectly as a dark comedy, and director Tommy Wirkola successfully blends conventional festive movie clichés with straight-up action scenes.
There are obvious homages to other holiday classics like Home Alone, which is executed perhaps even better than the original as Trudy gets the better of a couple of pursuers.
While the supporting cast all have a natural talent for comedy, it truly is David Harbour who shines as bright as the Star of Bethlehem as he fully embraces the titular role.
He’s what makes the movie such a pleasure to watch, as he delivers corny catchphrases in his dulcet drawl. And while he doesn’t look like the archetypal jolly fat man, he still exudes an avuncular aura in his bearish physique, albeit more of a grizzly than a teddy.
The film earns its R-rating with plenty of bloody, creative kills that utilise everything from pointed decorations and tinsel to ice skates. And the film is replete with references to Christmas and puns aplenty (“Season’s beatings”). Even the names of the villains are on brand: the leader is named Scrooge, and some his minions are named Peppermint, Frosty, and Krampus.
Slightly holding back the manic momentum is the Lightstone family’s squabbling. The members are so unlikeable that there’s no reason to care about them and the danger they’re in, even if it’s all meant to underline how pure of heart Trudy is compared to them. Better are the moments when we learn more about Santa, his struggles with Mrs Claus, and Ragnarok-esque flashbacks to his past as a legendary Norse warrior.
Violent Night is a hoot for the adults, but certainly not suited for the youngsters. It’s packed with wanton murder, naughty language, and grisly shenanigans that won’t appeal to everyone, and there is a questionable conclusion in which most of the loathsome victims appear to escape unpunished for their acts of dishonesty.
This shouldn’t be the last we see of Harbour in this role. It’s a premise built for multiple sequels that could explore Santa’s dark past.
Hopefully, they make these an annual tradition and give us all something fresh to look forward to amid the jaded seasonal offerings.
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