For every 'It's a Wonderful Life' or 'Bad Santa' there's a bona-fide Christmas turkey hoping its festive setting will distract from its lack of plot, characterisation or pulse. We take a look at some of cinema's more hapless Yuletide excursions, and throw in a couple of crackers for luck
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| Batman & Robin |
1.
Batman & Robin (Joel Schumacher, 1997)
Although references to the Holiday
Season in ‘Batman & Robin’ are fleeting at best, the film totally embodies that callously
measured annual capitalist jackboot to the teeth of some lesser,
nobler enterprise that no-doubt intends to use its precious screen-time to
unlace the subtle mysteries of the human soul instead of considering the best
ways to flog crap to children. Sounding like it was co-written by an assistant in Woolworths' toy department, every line in Joel
Schumacher’s soulless film feels like it could emanate from the mouth
of some string-activated talking action figure. The neon-lit art deco Gotham
skylines shoot for Fritz Lang’s ‘Metropolis’, but just about outshines Blackpool
in low season, and a stinky central performance from George Clooney as the Dark
Knight is so unthreatening they may as well have sprayed the corpse of Bing
Crosby with black latex and replaced the Batmobile with a crate of
tinsel-wrapped Advocaat.
Feature continues
2.
‘Tis The Season (Forbes Grimes, 1957)
When Tony Randall can't get home for Christmas, doting
wife Doris Day decides to bring it to his office, unaware that her philandering
spouse had intended to spend the holidays working on Pauline from accounts in this
bizarre Yuletide inversion of fireside family values. Meanwhile, bad weather
forces the firm’s crotchety old CEO Sir Denis (Featherington Bell) to land on
the building’s helipad, the company lush, Bones (Danny Kaye), emerges from the
mail room after a seventy-two-hour gin bender and Tony's brother is on his way
from Sing Sing. It’s all vaguely screwball until one of Randall’s
unsupervised children falls to his death down an elevator shaft and the tone
subtly shifts. The recriminations begin, the turkey is burned to a crisp, they
run out of liquor and nobody can find the exit – cue reminder that you can take
Christmas out of the traditional, but you can never take the tradition out of
Christmas.
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| Bell, Book and Candle |
3. Bell, Book and Candle (Richard
Quine, 1958)
Christmas in New York provides the setting for an
update on the Ondine myth, dropping the Christian shtick for
witchcraft, beat poetry and a maniacal, bongo-playing Jack Lemon. As a publishing
hot-shot in the last weeks of bachelorhood, James Stewart is too genial to cut
it as the lady-killer he’s made out to be but that doesn’t stop his new
Greenwich Village neighbour, the knock-out antique dealer (and witch) Kim
Novak, falling head over heels for his drawl and stutter. Having bewitched Jimmy into ditching his fiancée Novak
finds herself having to choose between immortality and magic and a mortal
lifetime of Stewpot love and remaindered books. Touching, yes, but this movie
is really about the heady aroma of pot and beret-wearing rebellion wafting out
of Greenwich Village. As a seasonal
rom-com, metaphor, and document of the birth of beat, this is a minor classic.
4. The Heroes of Telemark (Anthony
Mann, 1965)
Richard
Harris, Kirk Douglas and Michael Redgrave engage in wartime derring-do and
a lot of cross-country skiing to scupper
Germany’s atom bomb programme which has been hidden up a Norwegian
fjord. Harris and Douglas provide the mountain-guerilla buddy strand as they
cabin-up with Ulla Jacobsson for some Yuletide
bomb-making. Mann’s Panavision sweeps of the landscape make up for a glaring lack of characterisation, and the
finale on a doomed ferry packed with school children, puppies and dynamite
ratchets up the tension to a mild torpor. It’s interesting to note that on the
real-life mission the Heroes only met with the night
security guard who, naturally, couldn’t give a toss, blew-up their target
without firing a single shot, then repaired to their mountain lair where they
celebrated by eating some biscuits. Fact.
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| The Poseidon Adventure |
5. The Poseidon Adventure (Ronald
Neame, 1972)
An
ensemble of cheapskate bargain hunters
posing as classy cruise passengers find their holiday season turned
upside down
as a tidal wave capsizes the Poseidon, a Golden Age cruise liner
enjoying her
final voyage to the scrapyard. New Year's
Eve duly ruined, the survivors head
for the upturned hull where there is located (unwisely, budding naval
engineers
might think) a hatch that can be opened from the inside. Besides big-
(but not big enough) hearted
Shelley Winters as an ageing champion swimmer, there’s a middlebrow
sacred/profane battle between Gene Hackman’s firebrand preacher and
Ernest Borgnine as a vice cop burning with a secret shame.
Representing the working stiffs is
Roddy MacDowel's Acres, the sole surviving waiter
doomed to be par-boiled in the Poseidon’s surprisingly accessible
funnel.
6.
Jaws: The Revenge (Joseph Sargent, 1987)
After the July 4, Thanksgiving and Hanukkah settings of the first three 'Jaws' films, it was always on
the cards that the fourth instalment would continue its run
of marking public holidays by taking place at Christmas…in the Bahamas, of
course. When a distant relative of
Spielberg’s original shark takes a lump out of one of her endless stream of
disposable children,
Ellen Brody
gathers up her flock and flees for Crimbo on Michael Caine’s rusty tug
in the Caribbean. The great white bastard just
isn’t going let it lie, though. Utilising some form of sea-to-air sonar
unknown to marine biologists, the vengeful shark – which, fittingly,
looks like it fell out of a Christmas cracker – follows the Brodys’
plane to the Bahamas where it eats everything up to and including
Caine’s gleaming
signet ring, leaving only the Christmas pud floating amongst the
jetsam. You
can never find room for it, can you?
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| Eyes Wide Shut |
7.
Eyes Wide Shut (Stanley Kubrick, 1999)
Stanley Kubrick’s last roll of the dice
is a mad bongo flick that sends Tom Cruise on a Christmas Eve jaunt
around Pinewood’s
feeblest approximation of Manhattan when his wife (Nicole Kidman) drops
the sex-bomb that other blokes occasionally give her the horn. Cruise
spectacularly fails to pull the
trigger during an increasingly unlikely series of encounters with
hookers,
nymphos and Alan Cumming before stumbling
across a hugely decadent masked orgy in a country mansion where he
still can’t
close the deal, even when it is, quite literally, put on a plate for
him... That Kubrick – a notorious hermit – thought
a confused man wandering around on the holiday season was a subject
worth exploring suggests he may have been cooped
up a little too long.
8.
Mr Destiny (1990, James Orr)
Putting
the ‘dick’ firmly back into
Dickensian, Jim Belushi 'stars' in rehash of the traditional Christmas
'what if?' plotline. After corpulent salaryman Larry J. Burrows
drunkenly stacks his town car he wanders into a bar and starts
gabbing to the barkeep (Michael Caine) about
how meaningless his life is, and how it would all have been different
if he’d just made
that winning home run back in Little League. The magical barkeep (oh,
did I not mention that?) decides to whisk him off to an alternate
reality where he has a swimming pool full of silver dollars and is
married to the boss’s buxom
daughter. Of course the next thing he knows, Larry's down Wal-Mart with
his
freakish spawn spending his betting allowance on
Transformazoid dolls, then coming home to a burnt steak dinner and a
ritual
beating from his trophy wife. Larry soon arrives at the festive, but
distinctly un-American, moral
denouement that money isn’t everything – a notion that the producers of
this
film also had to confront.
9.
The Ref (Ted Demme, 1994)
For reasons that would make you
weep salty egg-nog, Leary’s sleazy cat-burglar Gus is
forced to hold bickering yuppie nightmare couple Kevin Spacey and
Judy Davis hostage in their own home over the festive season. Soon realising that not even the Shankhill
Butchers could adequately mediate between this pair of bile-spewing hate
mongrels, Leary sets about getting whacked-out on brandy-butter speedballs
before picking off the houseguests and bleating out a boorish version of ‘As
She Moved Through The Fair’. Den hams it up like an
overripe Judas in this Gethsemane of conspicuous consumerism. His betrayal, of
course, is also ours, and it is clear from the off that Kevin and Judy will
have to die on the cross of supply-side economics for all our sins.
10.
A Junky’s Christmas (Nick Donkin & Melodie McDaniel, 1993)
Well, we had to stick at least one decent
film on the list, so here it is, a heart-warming tale of a ex-con junkie
looking to get his hands on some heroin. Who’d have thunk that the hardboiled
smack rantings of William S. Burroughs would have gelled so perfectly with an
exquisitely wrought stop-motion Christmas special? Well, believe it or not,
they do. The story, narrated by Burroughs who
himself sounds like he’s in the latter stages of cold turkey, centres on Danny
the Car Wiper, a gargoyle-like claymation huckster who spends Christmas roaming around New York wondering how to get some dope. He
decides to make an unscheduled house-call to a local doctor who decides to help
out, only for Danny – in the spirit of Christmas – to pass on his hit to a kid with kidney stones. Aww. Brilliantly animated, brilliantly written, brilliantly narrated.
In a word, brilliant.