8/10
The best day to watch this: not Christmas Day, but garbage day.
9 December 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Sequel to the notorious killer-in-a-Santa-Claus-outfit horror movie is so ridiculous as to be utterly hilarious. Ricky, the surviving brother of the first movies' traumatized psycho, picks up where his dearly departed sibling left off. As the movie opens, he's obliged to spill his guts to a psychiatrist (James L. Newman), who is apparently his "last chance" what with all of the corpses Ricky's left in his own wake.

This basically allows the filmmakers to utilize a lot of footage from "Silent Night, Deadly Night"; most of the first half of the movie is made up of this footage. The whole purpose of Part 2 was to help the first movie gain a little more "shelf life", as it's been worded, anyway. One thing worth mentioning is that the movie that Ricky (Eric Freeman) and Jennifer (Elizabeth Kaitan) watch in the theatre *also* contains footage from SNDN 1. Now *that's* milking a movie for all that it's worth.

SNDN 2 does go in a decidedly different direction than its predecessor, which did have humour but that was mostly of the dark variety. SNDN 2 is theatre of the absurd from beginning to end. To start with, this movie cannot be discussed without bringing up the priceless performance by Freeman, who clearly understands that 70% of acting or better is all about optimal eyebrow movement. This guy is a riot. Just watch as he snipes at the psychiatrist (coming up with such witticisms as "Red car? Good point!" along the way) and laughs his way through his eventual murder spree.

There's of course the one scene we all remember from this movie that's been quoted time after time, but Ricky's dispatching of his other victims are all highlight moments as well - said victims include a lecherous creep, a loan shark, a heckler, his girls' annoying ex-boyfriend, etc. The death by umbrella is truly something special.

Newman does a decent job as the psychiatrist, and ultra sexy Kaitan is easy to watch; her final scene is definitely Looney Tunes type stuff as she gulps "Uh oh!" on camera. Unfortunately, the character of Mother Superior, so effectively played by Lilyan Chauvin the first time around, is reduced to something of an afterthought here, and the actress this time, Jean Miller, just can't compare to Ms. Chauvin. However, considering what happens to her here, fans will be happy to see her brought back.

Gore effects are either tacky or non-existent, which will certainly disappoint some viewers, and the director / editor Lee Harry (just one of the *four* story writers for this thing!) is a little too slick with his trimming of the nastiness from the archive footage.

Horror fans willing to accept a lot of silliness in what they watch, and who know to expect it going in, are sure to find this a deliciously daft movie.

Eight out of 10.
11 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed