Silent Night, Deadly Night

    Silent Night, Deadly Night
    1984

    Synopsis

    Billy Chapman, who was traumatized by his parents' Christmas Eve murder, then brutalized by sadistic orphanage nuns, grows up to dress as jolly St. Nick for a yuletide rampage to punish the naughty.

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    Cast

    • Lilyan ChauvinMother Superior
    • Gilmer McCormickSister Margaret
    • Toni NeroPamela
    • Robert Brian WilsonBilly at 18
    • Charles DierkopKiller Santa
    • Linnea QuigleyDenise
    • Randy StumpfAndy
    • Britt LeachMr. Sims
    • Tara BuckmanMother (Ellie)
    • Will HareGrandpa

    Recommendations

    • 50

      The A.V. Club

      In nearly every way, Silent Night, Deadly Night is as run-of-the-mill a slasher film as the ’80s produced, enjoyable today primarily for its kitsch value.
    • 50

      Slant Magazine

      Silent Night, Deadly Night brought the idea to new levels of cold sleaziness.
    • 40

      Washington Post

      Silent Night, Deadly Night takes off from the notion that Santa Claus is an ax murderer, but it never quite lives up to the delicious perversity of its premise. An idea this shocking has to be earned; instead, director Charles Sellier Jr. ("The Boogens") gives us another casually constructed splatter flick that has more to do with morbid arithmetic (the body count continues!) than movies.
    • 25

      TV Guide Magazine

      As slasher films go, this is about average. The sets are cheap, with most of the budget seemingly going to the gore effects.
    • 20

      Los Angeles Times

      It's fairly safe to predict that Silent Night, Deadly Night will start making "Worst Movies of All Time" lists almost immediately. It has all the prerequisites. A roaringly bad idea. Derivative scriptwriting. Tastelessness. Naked opportunism. A cast full of actors who mug, gesticulate and savor every rotten line. A general "we're only in this for the money" attitude, visible in every sloppy frame. And, to top it off, that most crucial quality: enough conscious or unconscious humor to keep you watching, and insulting, it. [11 March 1986, p.C5]