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Black Christmas (1974 film)

Black Christmas (originally titled Silent Night, Evil Night in the United States and retitled Stranger in the House on television screenings) is a 1974 Canadian slasher film produced and directed by Bob Clark, and written by A. Roy Moore. It stars Olivia Hussey, Keir Dullea, Margot Kidder, Andrea Martin, Lynne Griffin and John Saxon. The story follows a group of sorority sisters who receive threatening phone calls and are eventually stalked and murdered by a deranged killer during the Christmas season.

Black Christmas
Original Canadian one-sheet poster
Directed byBob Clark
Written byA. Roy Moore
Produced byBob Clark
Starring
CinematographyReginald H. Morris
Edited byStan Cole
Music byCarl Zittrer
Production
companies
Distributed by
  • Ambassador Film Distributors (Canada)
  • Warner Bros. (US/international)
Release date
  • October 11, 1974 (1974-10-11) (Toronto)
Running time
98 minutes[1][2]
CountryCanada
LanguageEnglish
Budget$686,000
Box office$1.3 million (Canada)

Inspired by the urban legend "the babysitter and the man upstairs" and a series of murders that took place in the Westmount neighbourhood of Montreal, Quebec, Moore wrote the screenplay under the title Stop Me. The filmmakers made numerous alterations to the script, primarily the shifting to a university setting with young adult characters. It was shot in Toronto in 1974 on an estimated budget of $686,000, and was distributed by Warner Bros. in North America.

Upon its release, Black Christmas received mixed reviews, but it has since received critical re-appraisal, with film historians noting it for being one of the earliest slasher films.[3] It is also praised for its influence on John Carpenter's Halloween (1978). Aside from its earning a cult following[4] since its release, a novelization written by Lee Hays was published in 1976. It is the first film in the Black Christmas series, being followed by two remakes in 2006 and 2019. The film has since received retroactive recognition and has been regarded as one of the greatest horror films ever made.[5][6]

Plot

An unseen man climbs the exterior of a sorority house, where a Christmas party is being held, and enters the attic. The house phone rings, and Jess Bradford answers to discover it is an obscene phone call from a person who has called before, known as "The Moaner". Jess and the other sorority girls listen as the caller rants, moans, and screams in strange voices. Barb, an inebriated student, antagonizes the caller, who in turn threatens to kill her in a sudden low tone. A younger student, Clare Harrison, suggests that the caller could be a rapist before returning to her bedroom to pack her suitcase. Shortly thereafter, Mrs. MacHenry, the housemother, arrives. As Clare packs her things upstairs, she fails to notice the intruder hiding behind a plastic dress bag. Clare hears Mrs. MacHenry's cat, Claude, meowing from the closet and slowly approaches it, only to be suffocated with the plastic dress bag. As the party wraps up, the killer carries Clare's body into the attic and places her into a rocking chair by the attic window.

The following morning, Clare's father arrives to take her home for Christmas break, but she fails to show up. Mrs. MacHenry assumes Clare went to the fraternity house for a party, and helps Mr. Harrison look for her. Later that day, Jess informs her boyfriend, Peter, that she is pregnant and plans to undergo an abortion. Angered, Peter insists they continue this discussion later that night. In town, Mr. Harrison, Barb, and Phyl attempt to report Clare as missing to Sergeant Nash, who does not take them seriously until Chris Hayden, Clare's boyfriend, barges in angrily later that night and demands something be done about Clare's disappearance. At the police station, they learn that a high school girl, Janice Quaife, has also vanished.

After putting a drunken Barb to bed, Mr. Harrison, Chris, Jess, and Phyl help search for Janice. Meanwhile, Mrs. MacHenry discovers Clare's body before the killer releases a crane hook that impales and kills her. In the park, Janice's disfigured body is found by the police. Jess answers another obscene phone call and decides to file a report with the police, only for Peter to surprise her. He attempts to persuade her into marriage, but she refuses and reaffirms her decision to have an abortion. As Peter leaves angrily, Lieutenant Fuller arrives with a telephone lineman to tap the phone.

Jess hears Barb having an asthma attack and rushes to her room; Barb claims that she had a nightmare that a man walked into her room. After calming her down, Jess hears Christmas Carolers at the front door and leaves Barb unattended. The killer walks into Barb's room and stabs her to death with a glass unicorn figurine; her cries for help are drowned out by the caroling. Jess experiences another unnerving phone call, in which the caller emulates her argument with Peter. Lieutenant Fuller calls her to say the attempt to trace the call failed, and theorizes that Peter could be responsible, but Jess doubts this. After Jess and Phyl are spooked by a couple of search party members, they set out and lock up every door and window in the house. Phyl sees Barb's door close, and goes to check in on her, only for her to be killed off-screen.

Jess receives one final phone call in which the killer alludes to some sort of transgression between two children named Agnes and Billy. The call is long enough to be traced, and Sergeant Nash instructs Jess to leave the house immediately, as the calls are coming from within the house. Concerned for Barb and Phyl, she ventures upstairs, where she discovers their bodies. Jess sees the killer's eye through a door crack as he slowly begins to close it on her; she slams the door against him and runs downstairs, not before the killer grabs Jess by her long hair in which she screams out, and flees into the basement and locks it shut as the killer bangs on it. She then hears footsteps walking away and (presumably) the front door opening. However, when she walks downstairs into the basement, Jess sees Peter peek through a window and call her name; he breaks a window and enters the basement as he calls her name worriedly. Once Peter finds her, he begins to approach her as she backs away and clutches the fire poker.

The police arrive and hear Jess screaming; they discover her barely conscious in the basement with Peter's bloody body next to her. Believing that Peter was the killer, they put Jess to bed, sedated, in her room and leave her alone in the house, with a police officer standing outside. The killer's voice is heard from the attic, and a shadow is seen descending the attic's ladder, implying that he is still alive. The still-undiscovered bodies of Clare and Mrs. MacHenry are seen through the attic window before the house's telephone begins to ring.

Cast

Production

Development

Black Christmas was initially developed by Canadian screenwriter Roy Moore, who wrote the screenplay under the title Stop Me.[11] Inspirations for the film came from the urban legend known as "The Babysitter and the Man Upstairs",[12] which had become widespread during the 1970s.[13][14] Moore also claimed to have been inspired by a series of murders that occurred during the holiday season in the Westmount area of Montreal.[15][16] As noted in an article for The Telegraph, the murders, which occurred in 1943, were perpetrated by a fourteen-year-old boy who bludgeoned several of his family members to death.[8] Film producers Harvey Sherman and Richard Schouten had Timothy Bond rewrite the script to give it a university setting.[12][17] Clark, who had felt the original script was too much of a straightforward slasher film, made several alterations in dialogue,[12] and also incorporated humorous elements into the film, particularly the drunkenness of Barb, and Mrs. Mac, who Clark based on his aunt.[11] Clark felt that college and high school students had not been depicted with "any sense of reality" in American film, and that he intended to capture the "astuteness" of young adults: "College students—even in 1974—are astute people. They're not fools. It's not all 'bikinis, beach blankets, [and] bingo'".[11]

Casting

 
The central cast of Black Christmas (clockwise from left to right): Olivia Hussey, Keir Dullea, John Saxon, and Margot Kidder.

Olivia Hussey, who had previously garnered international fame for her role as Juliet in Franco Zeffirelli's Romeo and Juliet (1968), signed on to appear in the film after being told by a psychic that she would "make a film in Canada that would earn a great deal of money".[11] Clark sought Keir Dullea to play the role of Peter based on his performance as Dave Bowman in 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968).[11] The role of Mrs. Mac was offered to Bette Davis,[12] who declined the part.[11] Margot Kidder was cast in the role of Barb, and said she had been attracted to the character "because she was wild and out of control", and not a "conventional leading" part.[11] For the role of Clare Harrison, whose murder jump-starts the film's plot, Toronto native Lynne Griffin was cast after her mother, who was also her casting agent at the time, got her an audition. Griffin would later go on to star in Curtains (1983), and in the acclaimed television series Wind at My Back (1996–2001).[18]

Gilda Radner was offered the role of Phyllis Carlson. She accepted the part, but dropped out one month before filming began owing to Saturday Night Live commitments, and was replaced by Andrea Martin.[12][11] The role of Lieutenant Fuller was originally given to Edmond O'Brien. Upon his arrival to the set, however, the producers realized he would be unable to fulfill the duties required of the part due to his failing health (stemming from Alzheimer's disease).[9] John Saxon, who had read the script prior, was called by the producers who offered him the role. He accepted, and had to arrive in Toronto from New York City within two days to begin shooting.[11] For the role of the film's antagonist, Italian-Canadian actor Nick Mancuso was cast as one of the main voices in the phone call sequences. When auditioning for the role, director Clark had Mancuso sit in a chair facing away from him, so as not to see the actor's face. Clark then had Mancuso experiment with different voices in order to come up with one that was right for the character, with Clark later offering him the part.[8]

John Saxon had appeared in the first giallo.[19]

Filming

 
Soldiers' Tower at the University of Toronto is featured in the film.

The film was shot from 25 March to 11 May 1974, at a cost of $686,000 (equivalent to $3,707,542 in 2021), with $200,000 coming from the Canadian Film Development Corporation.[20] The house featured in the film had been discovered by Clark while scouting for locations, and its owners agreed to lease the home for the production.[11] Additional photography was completed on the University of Toronto campus.[11] According to John Saxon, Clark had meticulously drawn out storyboards with key shots, which he brought to the film set each day: "I could understand exactly what I thought he needed, and the scene needed".[11] Scenes in the film involving POV shot of Billy scaling the house was accomplished through the use of a rig designed by camera operator Bert Dunk, which was attached to Dunk's head as he climbed up the side of the house.[10] Griffin's death scene, which was shot with a handheld camera in a real closet, was accomplished in only a couple of takes. According to Griffin, her character's surprise as the killer lunges from the closet was genuine as the actress later recalled: "It was a total shock because I didn't really know when to expect him to jump out!" Shots of Clare's corpse in the rocking chair required the actress to wear an actual plastic bag over her head for extended periods of time. Griffin would also state that these scenes came relatively easy for her: "I was actually, and still am, a fairly good swimmer so I could hold my breath for a long time. And I could also keep my eyes open for a long time without blinking".[18]

Margot Kidder remembered shooting the film as being "fun. I really bonded with Andrea Martin, filming in Toronto and Ontario. Olivia Hussey was a bit of an odd one. She was obsessed with the idea of falling in love with Paul McCartney through her psychic. We were a little hard on her for things like that".[21]

Post-production

The composer of the film's score, Carl Zittrer, stated in an interview that he created the film's mysterious music by tying forks, combs, and knives onto the strings of the piano to warp the sound of the keys.[9] Zittrer also stated that he would distort the sound further by recording its sound onto an audiotape and make the sound slower.[9] The audio for the disturbing phone calls was performed by multiple actors including Mancuso[12][8] and director Bob Clark.[9] Mancuso stated in an interview that he stood on his head during the recording sessions to compress his thorax and make his voice sound more demented.[7] Mancuso spent only three days recording dialogue for the character, later recalling the experience as being very "avant-garde", with Clark encouraging him to improvise with the character's voice.[8]

During preparation in 1975 for the film's American release, Warner Bros. studio executives asked Clark to change the concluding scene to show Clare's boyfriend, Chris, appear in front of Jess and say, "Agnes, don't tell them what we did" before killing her. However, Clark insisted on keeping the ending ambiguous. The original title of the film was initially planned to be Stop Me.[12] Clark has stated in an interview that he came up with the film's official title, saying that he enjoyed the irony of a dark event occurring during a festive holiday. According to Clark as well, Warner Bros. changed the title to Silent Night, Evil Night for the United States theatrical release.[9]

Release

Theatrical distribution

Black Christmas was distributed in Canada by Ambassador Film Distributors and released in Toronto on 11 October 1974.[22][20] The film grossed $143,000 from nine theatres in Toronto in its first two weeks and earned $1.3 million during its theatrical run in Canada. Warner Bros. believed that the film would earn at least $7 million in the United States. The film was released on 20 December, but only earned $284,345 during its theatrical run due to competition from The Godfather Part II and The Man with the Golden Gun.[23] For its American release the film was retitled to Silent Night, Evil Night due to fears that the original title would mislead audiences into believing the film was a blaxploitation movie. They retracted the title after the initial release, restoring it to Black Christmas for subsequent screenings.[11]

Warner Bros. rereleased the film in Los Angeles in August 1975, and it earned $86,340 in one week. Its theatrical run was extended to nineteen theatres. The film's successful run in Los Angeles and Chicago resulted in Warner Bros. expanding the film to seventy theatres for Halloween. However, the film only made $354,990 from those theatres, worth $700 per theatre per day, causing fifty-eight of the locations to cancel their bookings. The film ended its theatrical run in December after making less than $1 million that year.[24]

The film was the third-highest-grossing Canadian film of all time in Canada with a gross of $2 million, behind The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz (1974) and the French language Deux femmes en or (1970), directed by Claude Fournier.[25][26]

Television premiere controversy

The film, under the title Stranger in the House, was set to make its network television premiere on Saturday night, January 28, 1978, on NBC's weekly "Saturday Night at the Movies". Two weeks prior to its premiere, the Chi Omega sorority house on the campus of Florida State University in Tallahassee was the scene of a double murder in which two Chi Omega sisters, asleep in their beds, were bludgeoned to death. The killer then went to a nearby room in the sorority house and violently attacked two more sleeping co-eds, who survived. The killer was later identified as Ted Bundy, who was executed for this and other homicides on January 24, 1989.[27]

A few days before the film was set to premiere on network television Florida's then-Governor Reubin Askew contacted NBC President Robert Mullholland to request the movie not be shown due to its all-too-similar theme as the murders of sorority sisters by an unknown madman at the Chi Omega Sorority House. On Tuesday, January 24, NBC-TV gave several of its affiliates in Florida, Georgia, and Alabama, the option of showing an alternate film, Doc Savage: The Man of Bronze, in place of Stranger in the House.[27]

The report revealed that "the network said in a statement issued yesterday in New York City that it was responding to concern voiced by the affiliates because of the murder of two coeds this month in a sorority house at Florida State University in Tallahassee".[27]

Critical response

During its initial release, the film had garnered mixed reviews. A. H. Weiler of The New York Times called it "a whodunit that raises the question as to why was it made".[28] Variety called the film "a bloody, senseless kill-for-kicks feature, [that] exploits unnecessary violence in a university sorority house operated by an implausibly alcoholic ex-hoofer. Its slow-paced, murky tale involves an obscene telephone caller who apparently delights in killing the girls off one by one, even the hapless house-mother".[29] Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune gave the film 1.5 stars out of 4 and called it a "routine shocker" that "is notable only for indicating the kind of junk roles that talented actresses are forced to play in the movies".[30] Kevin Thomas of the Los Angeles Times wrote: "Before it maddeningly overreaches in a gratuitously evasive ending, Black Christmas (opening today at selected theaters) is a smart, stylish Canadian-made little horror picture that is completely diverting ... It may well be that its makers simply couldn't figure out how to end it".[31]

Later reviews have been more positive. On Rotten Tomatoes, Black Christmas holds an approval rating of 72% based on 36 reviews, with an average rating of 6.4/10. The website's critics consensus reads: "The rare slasher with enough intelligence to wind up the tension between bloody outbursts, Black Christmas offers fiendishly enjoyable holiday viewing for genre fans".[32] On Metacritic the film has a weighted average score of 65 out of 100, based on nine critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[33]

Heidi Martinuzzi of Film Threat called the film "innovative" and praised the leading actresses, Olivia Hussey and Margot Kidder.[34] TV Guide awarded the film three out of four stars, writing: "Although strictly standard fare, the material is elevated somewhat through Clark's skillful handling of such plot devices as obscene phone calls from the killer to the girls via the upstairs phone and a nicely handled twist ending, which provides a genuine shock".[35] Author and film critic Leonard Maltin gave the film two and a half out of four stars calling it "bizarre" but also praised Kidder's performance as a standout.[36] The Time Out film guide noted that the film "manages a good slice of old-fashioned suspense".[37]

Home media

Black Christmas has been released on DVD several times in North America. A 25th Anniversary edition was released in Canada on November 6, 2001 by Critical Mass.[38] This edition only contains the theatrical trailer as a bonus feature.[39] The following year, on December 3, 2002, Critical Mass released a Collector's Edition of the film on DVD with making-of documentaries, two audio commentary tracks, and reversible English and French cover artwork.[40]

On December 5, 2006, Critical Mass released a third "Special Edition" DVD with a newly remastered transfer, two original scenes with newly-uncovered vocal tracks, a new documentary on the making of the film, and cast and crew interviews.[41] This edition was later released on Blu-ray on November 11, 2008.[42]

Anchor Bay released a Blu-ray and DVD in Canada, titled the "Season's Grievings Edition". It contains the same transfer of the film as the "Special Edition" release and all previous bonus content, plus the addition of a new documentary ("Black Christmas Legacy"), a 40th-anniversary panel from Fan Expo 2014, a new commentary track featuring Nick Mancuso as the character "Billy", a new retrospective booklet written by Rue Morgue Magazine, and new packaging art by Gary Pullin (art director of Rue Morgue Magazine). This new edition was released on Blu-ray and DVD on November 24, 2015.[43]

In the United States, Scream Factory released the film in a collector's edition Blu-ray on December 13, 2016, with a new transfer and new extras.[44] The Scream Factory release collates all of the bonus materials from the previous releases by Critical Mass and Anchor Bay, and also features the 2006 Critical Mass restoration of the film in the bonus materials.[44] Scream Factory also released the film in a collector's edition 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray on December 6, 2022.[45] Unlike the previous home media releases and like the 1986 U.S. VHS release from Warner Home Video, the collector's edition 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray release (Disc 1 and 2) featured the Warner Bros. logo at the beginning and end of the film.

Accolades

Saturn Award-Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films

  • 1976: Nominated, Best Horror Film[46]

Canadian Film Awards

Edgar Allan Poe Awards

  • 1976: Nominated, Best Motion Picture – A. Roy Moore[50]

Legacy

Black Christmas eventually gained a cult following, and is notable for being one of the earliest slasher films. It went on to inspire other slasher films, the biggest one of all being John Carpenter's Halloween (which was apparently inspired by Clark suggesting what a Black Christmas sequel would be like).[51][11][52]

Black Christmas has been included in multiple lists in various media outlets as one of the greatest horror films ever made. The film ranked No. 87 on Bravo's The 100 Scariest Movie Moments.[53] It was ranked at No. 67 in IndieWire's The 100 Best Horror Movies of All Time, its entry stating that "the plot sounds formulaic, but Black Christmas remains timeless thanks to its terrifying and elusive killer, 'Billy', whose backstory is never revealed, as well as a foreboding ending that doesn't offer much hope for the film's Final Girl".[5] Thrillist's Scott Weinberg, in his article The 75 Best Horror Movies of All Time, ranked the film at No. 48.[6] Paul Schrodt of Esquire placed the film at No. 23 in his list of the 50 Best Horror Films of All Time.[54] In 2017, Complex magazine named Black Christmas the 2nd-best slasher film of all time.[55] The following year, Paste listed it the 3rd-best slasher film of all time,[56] while also placing the character Jess Bradford at #1 in their list of "20 Best 'Final Girls' in Horror Movie History".[57] While director Clark maintained he did not intend for the film to have political leanings, critics have noted Black Christmas is nonetheless a feminist film for its treatment of female characters—particularly Jess having agency and making the choice to have an abortion—and its portrayal of casual misogyny (as when the police initially fail to take the sorority's concerns about the phone calls and Clare's absence seriously).[58][59][60] Film critic Tim Dirks of the film-review website Filmsite.org added the film to his list of films featuring the "Greatest Film Plot Twists, Film Spoilers and Surprise Endings", based on the film's major plot twists – the revelation that the real killer was hidden inside the unsearched attic, and Jess' implied murder.[61]

Olivia Hussey told Bravo during an interview about their 100 Scariest Movie Moments series, that when she met Steve Martin for the first time, he told her that she starred in one of his favorite films of all time. Hussey initially thought he was referring to Romeo and Juliet, but was surprised when Martin said it was Black Christmas and that he had seen the film 27 times.[62]

Related works

Novelization

A novelization of the film written by Lee Hays was published in 1976 by Popular Library.[63][64] The book follows roughly the same plot, but sticks with Roy Moore's original script. Because of this, the novel ends up fleshing out the characters more, adding scenes and lines of dialogue that were initially cut from the film's final script, and giving the Pi Kappa Sigma property more backstory.[65]

It's Me Billy: Black Christmas Revisited

A book chronicling the behind the scenes making of the original film (as well as time given to the remakes), was made available in 2022. The book features new interviews with original cast members and more, and was written by author Paul Downey of Bloody-Flicks and filmmaker Dave Hastings.[66]

Remakes

Black Christmas has been remade on two separate occasions, with the films differing significantly from the original.

The first remake was directed by Glen Morgan and was released on December 25, 2006. It is loosely based on the original film, containing more graphic content and a focus into the past of Billy. Andrea Martin was the only original cast member to appear in the film, and Bob Clark served as an executive producer.[67]

The second remake was made by Blumhouse Productions, directed and written by Sophia Takal, co-written by April Wolfe and produced by Jason Blum.[68][69][70] Starring Imogen Poots and Cary Elwes, the film was released on December 13, 2019.[71]

It's Me, Billy: A Black Christmas Fan Film

A short fan film funded through an Indiegogo campaign was released on YouTube and Vimeo with the title It's Me, Billy, in May 2021. It is billed as an "unofficial sequel" to the original film and picks up the story 50 years later, following the granddaughter of Jess Bradford. The film was written, produced, and directed by Dave McRae and Bruce Dale and acts as a concept for a feature film as well as the first part of a two-part story. The film is available for free. It's Me, Billy was nominated for Best Cinematography in the Dramatic Short category at the 65th annual CSC (Canadian Society of Cinematographers) awards.[72][73][74]

See also

References

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  57. ^ Vorel, Jim (October 4, 2016). "The 20 Best "Final Girls" in Horror Movie History". PasteMagazine.com. Paste Magazine. Retrieved March 19, 2020.
  58. ^ Monagle, Matthew (December 13, 2019). "The Politics of Slasher Black Christmas". Austin Chronicle. Retrieved November 17, 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  59. ^ Romano, Aja (December 19, 2017). "Skip Die Hard this year. Black Christmas is the cynical 2017 holiday movie alternative". Vox. Retrieved November 17, 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  60. ^ Moon, Robin (December 21, 2020). "Slay, Girls: The Sliding Scale of Feminism in the Black Christmas Films". HorrorObsessive.com. 25YL Media. Retrieved November 17, 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
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  65. ^ "A Slasher Classic in Print: Unwrapping the 'Black Christmas' Novelization". December 17, 2020.
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  72. ^ Squires, John (March 29, 2021). "Black Christmas' Fan Film 'It's Me, Billy' Tells the Story of Jess Bradford's Granddaughter". Bloody Disgusting. Retrieved March 29, 2021.
  73. ^ Squires, John (December 20, 2020). "Fan Film 'It's Me, Billy' Takes Place 50 Years After the Original 'Black Christmas". Bloody Disgusting. Retrieved December 20, 2020.
  74. ^ Harding, Bradley (July 9, 2020). "Black Christmas: How The Original Ending Is Explored In A Fan-Made Sequel". Screen Rant. Retrieved July 9, 2020.

Works cited

External links

black, christmas, 1974, film, black, christmas, originally, titled, silent, night, evil, night, united, states, retitled, stranger, house, television, screenings, 1974, canadian, slasher, film, produced, directed, clark, written, moore, stars, olivia, hussey, . Black Christmas originally titled Silent Night Evil Night in the United States and retitled Stranger in the House on television screenings is a 1974 Canadian slasher film produced and directed by Bob Clark and written by A Roy Moore It stars Olivia Hussey Keir Dullea Margot Kidder Andrea Martin Lynne Griffin and John Saxon The story follows a group of sorority sisters who receive threatening phone calls and are eventually stalked and murdered by a deranged killer during the Christmas season Black ChristmasOriginal Canadian one sheet posterDirected byBob ClarkWritten byA Roy MooreProduced byBob ClarkStarringOlivia Hussey Keir Dullea Margot Kidder John SaxonCinematographyReginald H MorrisEdited byStan ColeMusic byCarl ZittrerProductioncompaniesFilm Funding Ltd Vision IV Canadian Film Development Corporation Famous PlayersDistributed byAmbassador Film Distributors Canada Warner Bros US international Release dateOctober 11 1974 1974 10 11 Toronto Running time98 minutes 1 2 CountryCanadaLanguageEnglishBudget 686 000Box office 1 3 million Canada Inspired by the urban legend the babysitter and the man upstairs and a series of murders that took place in the Westmount neighbourhood of Montreal Quebec Moore wrote the screenplay under the title Stop Me The filmmakers made numerous alterations to the script primarily the shifting to a university setting with young adult characters It was shot in Toronto in 1974 on an estimated budget of 686 000 and was distributed by Warner Bros in North America Upon its release Black Christmas received mixed reviews but it has since received critical re appraisal with film historians noting it for being one of the earliest slasher films 3 It is also praised for its influence on John Carpenter s Halloween 1978 Aside from its earning a cult following 4 since its release a novelization written by Lee Hays was published in 1976 It is the first film in the Black Christmas series being followed by two remakes in 2006 and 2019 The film has since received retroactive recognition and has been regarded as one of the greatest horror films ever made 5 6 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 3 1 Development 3 2 Casting 3 3 Filming 3 4 Post production 4 Release 4 1 Theatrical distribution 4 2 Television premiere controversy 4 3 Critical response 4 4 Home media 5 Accolades 6 Legacy 7 Related works 7 1 Novelization 7 2 It s Me Billy Black Christmas Revisited 7 3 Remakes 7 4 It s Me Billy A Black Christmas Fan Film 8 See also 9 References 10 Works cited 11 External linksPlot EditThis film s plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed Please help improve it by removing unnecessary details and making it more concise December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message An unseen man climbs the exterior of a sorority house where a Christmas party is being held and enters the attic The house phone rings and Jess Bradford answers to discover it is an obscene phone call from a person who has called before known as The Moaner Jess and the other sorority girls listen as the caller rants moans and screams in strange voices Barb an inebriated student antagonizes the caller who in turn threatens to kill her in a sudden low tone A younger student Clare Harrison suggests that the caller could be a rapist before returning to her bedroom to pack her suitcase Shortly thereafter Mrs MacHenry the housemother arrives As Clare packs her things upstairs she fails to notice the intruder hiding behind a plastic dress bag Clare hears Mrs MacHenry s cat Claude meowing from the closet and slowly approaches it only to be suffocated with the plastic dress bag As the party wraps up the killer carries Clare s body into the attic and places her into a rocking chair by the attic window The following morning Clare s father arrives to take her home for Christmas break but she fails to show up Mrs MacHenry assumes Clare went to the fraternity house for a party and helps Mr Harrison look for her Later that day Jess informs her boyfriend Peter that she is pregnant and plans to undergo an abortion Angered Peter insists they continue this discussion later that night In town Mr Harrison Barb and Phyl attempt to report Clare as missing to Sergeant Nash who does not take them seriously until Chris Hayden Clare s boyfriend barges in angrily later that night and demands something be done about Clare s disappearance At the police station they learn that a high school girl Janice Quaife has also vanished After putting a drunken Barb to bed Mr Harrison Chris Jess and Phyl help search for Janice Meanwhile Mrs MacHenry discovers Clare s body before the killer releases a crane hook that impales and kills her In the park Janice s disfigured body is found by the police Jess answers another obscene phone call and decides to file a report with the police only for Peter to surprise her He attempts to persuade her into marriage but she refuses and reaffirms her decision to have an abortion As Peter leaves angrily Lieutenant Fuller arrives with a telephone lineman to tap the phone Jess hears Barb having an asthma attack and rushes to her room Barb claims that she had a nightmare that a man walked into her room After calming her down Jess hears Christmas Carolers at the front door and leaves Barb unattended The killer walks into Barb s room and stabs her to death with a glass unicorn figurine her cries for help are drowned out by the caroling Jess experiences another unnerving phone call in which the caller emulates her argument with Peter Lieutenant Fuller calls her to say the attempt to trace the call failed and theorizes that Peter could be responsible but Jess doubts this After Jess and Phyl are spooked by a couple of search party members they set out and lock up every door and window in the house Phyl sees Barb s door close and goes to check in on her only for her to be killed off screen Jess receives one final phone call in which the killer alludes to some sort of transgression between two children named Agnes and Billy The call is long enough to be traced and Sergeant Nash instructs Jess to leave the house immediately as the calls are coming from within the house Concerned for Barb and Phyl she ventures upstairs where she discovers their bodies Jess sees the killer s eye through a door crack as he slowly begins to close it on her she slams the door against him and runs downstairs not before the killer grabs Jess by her long hair in which she screams out and flees into the basement and locks it shut as the killer bangs on it She then hears footsteps walking away and presumably the front door opening However when she walks downstairs into the basement Jess sees Peter peek through a window and call her name he breaks a window and enters the basement as he calls her name worriedly Once Peter finds her he begins to approach her as she backs away and clutches the fire poker The police arrive and hear Jess screaming they discover her barely conscious in the basement with Peter s bloody body next to her Believing that Peter was the killer they put Jess to bed sedated in her room and leave her alone in the house with a police officer standing outside The killer s voice is heard from the attic and a shadow is seen descending the attic s ladder implying that he is still alive The still undiscovered bodies of Clare and Mrs MacHenry are seen through the attic window before the house s telephone begins to ring Cast EditOlivia Hussey as Jess Keir Dullea as Peter Margot Kidder as Barb John Saxon as Lt Fuller Marian Waldman as Mrs MacHenry as Mrs Mac Andrea Martin as Phyl James Edmond as Mr Harrison Douglas McGrath as Sergeant Nash Art Hindle as Chris Lynne Griffin as Clare Michael Rapport as Patrick Les Carlson as Bill Martha Gibson as Mrs Quaife John Rutter as laughing detective Dave Clement as Cogan Julian Reed as Officer Jennings Nick Mancuso as Billy phone voice uncredited 7 8 Bob Clark as Billy s shadow phone voice uncredited 9 Albert J Dunk as Billy s POV uncredited 10 Production EditDevelopment Edit Black Christmas was initially developed by Canadian screenwriter Roy Moore who wrote the screenplay under the title Stop Me 11 Inspirations for the film came from the urban legend known as The Babysitter and the Man Upstairs 12 which had become widespread during the 1970s 13 14 Moore also claimed to have been inspired by a series of murders that occurred during the holiday season in the Westmount area of Montreal 15 16 As noted in an article for The Telegraph the murders which occurred in 1943 were perpetrated by a fourteen year old boy who bludgeoned several of his family members to death 8 Film producers Harvey Sherman and Richard Schouten had Timothy Bond rewrite the script to give it a university setting 12 17 Clark who had felt the original script was too much of a straightforward slasher film made several alterations in dialogue 12 and also incorporated humorous elements into the film particularly the drunkenness of Barb and Mrs Mac who Clark based on his aunt 11 Clark felt that college and high school students had not been depicted with any sense of reality in American film and that he intended to capture the astuteness of young adults College students even in 1974 are astute people They re not fools It s not all bikinis beach blankets and bingo 11 Casting Edit The central cast of Black Christmas clockwise from left to right Olivia Hussey Keir Dullea John Saxon and Margot Kidder Olivia Hussey who had previously garnered international fame for her role as Juliet in Franco Zeffirelli s Romeo and Juliet 1968 signed on to appear in the film after being told by a psychic that she would make a film in Canada that would earn a great deal of money 11 Clark sought Keir Dullea to play the role of Peter based on his performance as Dave Bowman in 2001 A Space Odyssey 1968 11 The role of Mrs Mac was offered to Bette Davis 12 who declined the part 11 Margot Kidder was cast in the role of Barb and said she had been attracted to the character because she was wild and out of control and not a conventional leading part 11 For the role of Clare Harrison whose murder jump starts the film s plot Toronto native Lynne Griffin was cast after her mother who was also her casting agent at the time got her an audition Griffin would later go on to star in Curtains 1983 and in the acclaimed television series Wind at My Back 1996 2001 18 Gilda Radner was offered the role of Phyllis Carlson She accepted the part but dropped out one month before filming began owing to Saturday Night Live commitments and was replaced by Andrea Martin 12 11 The role of Lieutenant Fuller was originally given to Edmond O Brien Upon his arrival to the set however the producers realized he would be unable to fulfill the duties required of the part due to his failing health stemming from Alzheimer s disease 9 John Saxon who had read the script prior was called by the producers who offered him the role He accepted and had to arrive in Toronto from New York City within two days to begin shooting 11 For the role of the film s antagonist Italian Canadian actor Nick Mancuso was cast as one of the main voices in the phone call sequences When auditioning for the role director Clark had Mancuso sit in a chair facing away from him so as not to see the actor s face Clark then had Mancuso experiment with different voices in order to come up with one that was right for the character with Clark later offering him the part 8 John Saxon had appeared in the first giallo 19 Filming Edit Soldiers Tower at the University of Toronto is featured in the film The film was shot from 25 March to 11 May 1974 at a cost of 686 000 equivalent to 3 707 542 in 2021 with 200 000 coming from the Canadian Film Development Corporation 20 The house featured in the film had been discovered by Clark while scouting for locations and its owners agreed to lease the home for the production 11 Additional photography was completed on the University of Toronto campus 11 According to John Saxon Clark had meticulously drawn out storyboards with key shots which he brought to the film set each day I could understand exactly what I thought he needed and the scene needed 11 Scenes in the film involving POV shot of Billy scaling the house was accomplished through the use of a rig designed by camera operator Bert Dunk which was attached to Dunk s head as he climbed up the side of the house 10 Griffin s death scene which was shot with a handheld camera in a real closet was accomplished in only a couple of takes According to Griffin her character s surprise as the killer lunges from the closet was genuine as the actress later recalled It was a total shock because I didn t really know when to expect him to jump out Shots of Clare s corpse in the rocking chair required the actress to wear an actual plastic bag over her head for extended periods of time Griffin would also state that these scenes came relatively easy for her I was actually and still am a fairly good swimmer so I could hold my breath for a long time And I could also keep my eyes open for a long time without blinking 18 Margot Kidder remembered shooting the film as being fun I really bonded with Andrea Martin filming in Toronto and Ontario Olivia Hussey was a bit of an odd one She was obsessed with the idea of falling in love with Paul McCartney through her psychic We were a little hard on her for things like that 21 Post production Edit The composer of the film s score Carl Zittrer stated in an interview that he created the film s mysterious music by tying forks combs and knives onto the strings of the piano to warp the sound of the keys 9 Zittrer also stated that he would distort the sound further by recording its sound onto an audiotape and make the sound slower 9 The audio for the disturbing phone calls was performed by multiple actors including Mancuso 12 8 and director Bob Clark 9 Mancuso stated in an interview that he stood on his head during the recording sessions to compress his thorax and make his voice sound more demented 7 Mancuso spent only three days recording dialogue for the character later recalling the experience as being very avant garde with Clark encouraging him to improvise with the character s voice 8 During preparation in 1975 for the film s American release Warner Bros studio executives asked Clark to change the concluding scene to show Clare s boyfriend Chris appear in front of Jess and say Agnes don t tell them what we did before killing her However Clark insisted on keeping the ending ambiguous The original title of the film was initially planned to be Stop Me 12 Clark has stated in an interview that he came up with the film s official title saying that he enjoyed the irony of a dark event occurring during a festive holiday According to Clark as well Warner Bros changed the title to Silent Night Evil Night for the United States theatrical release 9 Release EditTheatrical distribution Edit Black Christmas was distributed in Canada by Ambassador Film Distributors and released in Toronto on 11 October 1974 22 20 The film grossed 143 000 from nine theatres in Toronto in its first two weeks and earned 1 3 million during its theatrical run in Canada Warner Bros believed that the film would earn at least 7 million in the United States The film was released on 20 December but only earned 284 345 during its theatrical run due to competition from The Godfather Part II and The Man with the Golden Gun 23 For its American release the film was retitled to Silent Night Evil Night due to fears that the original title would mislead audiences into believing the film was a blaxploitation movie They retracted the title after the initial release restoring it to Black Christmas for subsequent screenings 11 Warner Bros rereleased the film in Los Angeles in August 1975 and it earned 86 340 in one week Its theatrical run was extended to nineteen theatres The film s successful run in Los Angeles and Chicago resulted in Warner Bros expanding the film to seventy theatres for Halloween However the film only made 354 990 from those theatres worth 700 per theatre per day causing fifty eight of the locations to cancel their bookings The film ended its theatrical run in December after making less than 1 million that year 24 The film was the third highest grossing Canadian film of all time in Canada with a gross of 2 million behind The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz 1974 and the French language Deux femmes en or 1970 directed by Claude Fournier 25 26 Television premiere controversy Edit The film under the title Stranger in the House was set to make its network television premiere on Saturday night January 28 1978 on NBC s weekly Saturday Night at the Movies Two weeks prior to its premiere the Chi Omega sorority house on the campus of Florida State University in Tallahassee was the scene of a double murder in which two Chi Omega sisters asleep in their beds were bludgeoned to death The killer then went to a nearby room in the sorority house and violently attacked two more sleeping co eds who survived The killer was later identified as Ted Bundy who was executed for this and other homicides on January 24 1989 27 A few days before the film was set to premiere on network television Florida s then Governor Reubin Askew contacted NBC President Robert Mullholland to request the movie not be shown due to its all too similar theme as the murders of sorority sisters by an unknown madman at the Chi Omega Sorority House On Tuesday January 24 NBC TV gave several of its affiliates in Florida Georgia and Alabama the option of showing an alternate film Doc Savage The Man of Bronze in place of Stranger in the House 27 The report revealed that the network said in a statement issued yesterday in New York City that it was responding to concern voiced by the affiliates because of the murder of two coeds this month in a sorority house at Florida State University in Tallahassee 27 Critical response Edit During its initial release the film had garnered mixed reviews A H Weiler of The New York Times called it a whodunit that raises the question as to why was it made 28 Variety called the film a bloody senseless kill for kicks feature that exploits unnecessary violence in a university sorority house operated by an implausibly alcoholic ex hoofer Its slow paced murky tale involves an obscene telephone caller who apparently delights in killing the girls off one by one even the hapless house mother 29 Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune gave the film 1 5 stars out of 4 and called it a routine shocker that is notable only for indicating the kind of junk roles that talented actresses are forced to play in the movies 30 Kevin Thomas of the Los Angeles Times wrote Before it maddeningly overreaches in a gratuitously evasive ending Black Christmas opening today at selected theaters is a smart stylish Canadian made little horror picture that is completely diverting It may well be that its makers simply couldn t figure out how to end it 31 Later reviews have been more positive On Rotten Tomatoes Black Christmas holds an approval rating of 72 based on 36 reviews with an average rating of 6 4 10 The website s critics consensus reads The rare slasher with enough intelligence to wind up the tension between bloody outbursts Black Christmas offers fiendishly enjoyable holiday viewing for genre fans 32 On Metacritic the film has a weighted average score of 65 out of 100 based on nine critics indicating generally favorable reviews 33 Heidi Martinuzzi of Film Threat called the film innovative and praised the leading actresses Olivia Hussey and Margot Kidder 34 TV Guide awarded the film three out of four stars writing Although strictly standard fare the material is elevated somewhat through Clark s skillful handling of such plot devices as obscene phone calls from the killer to the girls via the upstairs phone and a nicely handled twist ending which provides a genuine shock 35 Author and film critic Leonard Maltin gave the film two and a half out of four stars calling it bizarre but also praised Kidder s performance as a standout 36 The Time Out film guide noted that the film manages a good slice of old fashioned suspense 37 Home media Edit Black Christmas has been released on DVD several times in North America A 25th Anniversary edition was released in Canada on November 6 2001 by Critical Mass 38 This edition only contains the theatrical trailer as a bonus feature 39 The following year on December 3 2002 Critical Mass released a Collector s Edition of the film on DVD with making of documentaries two audio commentary tracks and reversible English and French cover artwork 40 On December 5 2006 Critical Mass released a third Special Edition DVD with a newly remastered transfer two original scenes with newly uncovered vocal tracks a new documentary on the making of the film and cast and crew interviews 41 This edition was later released on Blu ray on November 11 2008 42 Anchor Bay released a Blu ray and DVD in Canada titled the Season s Grievings Edition It contains the same transfer of the film as the Special Edition release and all previous bonus content plus the addition of a new documentary Black Christmas Legacy a 40th anniversary panel from Fan Expo 2014 a new commentary track featuring Nick Mancuso as the character Billy a new retrospective booklet written by Rue Morgue Magazine and new packaging art by Gary Pullin art director of Rue Morgue Magazine This new edition was released on Blu ray and DVD on November 24 2015 43 In the United States Scream Factory released the film in a collector s edition Blu ray on December 13 2016 with a new transfer and new extras 44 The Scream Factory release collates all of the bonus materials from the previous releases by Critical Mass and Anchor Bay and also features the 2006 Critical Mass restoration of the film in the bonus materials 44 Scream Factory also released the film in a collector s edition 4K Ultra HD Blu ray on December 6 2022 45 Unlike the previous home media releases and like the 1986 U S VHS release from Warner Home Video the collector s edition 4K Ultra HD Blu ray release Disc 1 and 2 featured the Warner Bros logo at the beginning and end of the film Accolades EditSaturn Award Academy of Science Fiction Fantasy amp Horror Films 1976 Nominated Best Horror Film 46 Canadian Film Awards 1975 Won Best Sound Editing in a Feature Kenneth Heeley Ray 47 1975 Won Best Performance by a Lead Actress Margot Kidder 48 1975 Nominee Best Feature Film 49 Edgar Allan Poe Awards 1976 Nominated Best Motion Picture A Roy Moore 50 Legacy EditBlack Christmas eventually gained a cult following and is notable for being one of the earliest slasher films It went on to inspire other slasher films the biggest one of all being John Carpenter s Halloween which was apparently inspired by Clark suggesting what a Black Christmas sequel would be like 51 11 52 Black Christmas has been included in multiple lists in various media outlets as one of the greatest horror films ever made The film ranked No 87 on Bravo s The 100 Scariest Movie Moments 53 It was ranked at No 67 in IndieWire s The 100 Best Horror Movies of All Time its entry stating that the plot sounds formulaic but Black Christmas remains timeless thanks to its terrifying and elusive killer Billy whose backstory is never revealed as well as a foreboding ending that doesn t offer much hope for the film s Final Girl 5 Thrillist s Scott Weinberg in his article The 75 Best Horror Movies of All Time ranked the film at No 48 6 Paul Schrodt of Esquire placed the film at No 23 in his list of the 50 Best Horror Films of All Time 54 In 2017 Complex magazine named Black Christmas the 2nd best slasher film of all time 55 The following year Paste listed it the 3rd best slasher film of all time 56 while also placing the character Jess Bradford at 1 in their list of 20 Best Final Girls in Horror Movie History 57 While director Clark maintained he did not intend for the film to have political leanings critics have noted Black Christmas is nonetheless a feminist film for its treatment of female characters particularly Jess having agency and making the choice to have an abortion and its portrayal of casual misogyny as when the police initially fail to take the sorority s concerns about the phone calls and Clare s absence seriously 58 59 60 Film critic Tim Dirks of the film review website Filmsite org added the film to his list of films featuring the Greatest Film Plot Twists Film Spoilers and Surprise Endings based on the film s major plot twists the revelation that the real killer was hidden inside the unsearched attic and Jess implied murder 61 Olivia Hussey told Bravo during an interview about their 100 Scariest Movie Moments series that when she met Steve Martin for the first time he told her that she starred in one of his favorite films of all time Hussey initially thought he was referring to Romeo and Juliet but was surprised when Martin said it was Black Christmas and that he had seen the film 27 times 62 Related works EditNovelization Edit A novelization of the film written by Lee Hays was published in 1976 by Popular Library 63 64 The book follows roughly the same plot but sticks with Roy Moore s original script Because of this the novel ends up fleshing out the characters more adding scenes and lines of dialogue that were initially cut from the film s final script and giving the Pi Kappa Sigma property more backstory 65 It s Me Billy Black Christmas Revisited Edit A book chronicling the behind the scenes making of the original film as well as time given to the remakes was made available in 2022 The book features new interviews with original cast members and more and was written by author Paul Downey of Bloody Flicks and filmmaker Dave Hastings 66 Remakes Edit Main articles Black Christmas 2006 film and Black Christmas 2019 film Black Christmas has been remade on two separate occasions with the films differing significantly from the original The first remake was directed by Glen Morgan and was released on December 25 2006 It is loosely based on the original film containing more graphic content and a focus into the past of Billy Andrea Martin was the only original cast member to appear in the film and Bob Clark served as an executive producer 67 The second remake was made by Blumhouse Productions directed and written by Sophia Takal co written by April Wolfe and produced by Jason Blum 68 69 70 Starring Imogen Poots and Cary Elwes the film was released on December 13 2019 71 It s Me Billy A Black Christmas Fan Film Edit A short fan film funded through an Indiegogo campaign was released on YouTube and Vimeo with the title It s Me Billy in May 2021 It is billed as an unofficial sequel to the original film and picks up the story 50 years later following the granddaughter of Jess Bradford The film was written produced and directed by Dave McRae and Bruce Dale and acts as a concept for a feature film as well as the first part of a two part story The film is available for free It s Me Billy was nominated for Best Cinematography in the Dramatic Short category at the 65th annual CSC Canadian Society of Cinematographers awards 72 73 74 See also EditList of films featuring home invasions Holiday horror List of films set around ChristmasReferences Edit Muir 2011 p 314 Black Christmas 1974 British Board of Film Classification Archived from the original on April 16 2019 Retrieved March 11 2020 Paszylx Bartlomiej 2009 The Pleasure and Pain of Cult Horror Films An Historical Survey McFarland pp 135 6 ISBN 978 0 786 43695 8 Jenkins Philip 2008 Decade of Nightmares The End of the Sixties and the Making of Eighties America Oxford University Press p 146 ISBN 978 0 195 34158 4 a b Righetti Jamie October 9 2019 The 100 Best Horror Movies of All Time IndieWire p 4 Retrieved December 3 2019 a b Weinberg Scott October 22 2019 Best Horror Movies of All Time Ranked Scariest Movies Ever Made Thrillist Retrieved December 3 2019 a b Slay bells ring an interview with Black Christmas stars Lynne Griffin Nick Mancuso and Doug McGrath The Film Reel November 24 2015 Retrieved December 18 2016 a b c d e Power Ed December 11 2019 The curse of Black Christmas the man behind The Prowler on the slasher film that ruined his career Telegraph co uk The Telegraph Retrieved January 13 2020 a b c d e f 13 Things You Didn t Know About Black Christmas Chiller TV channel December 25 2015 Archived from the original on December 29 2015 a b DuFort Leavy Lyne Duffin Dan May 2005 Bob Clark interview BLACK CHRISTMAS A CHRISTMAS STORY CHILDREN SHOULDN T P Icons of Fright Retrieved March 25 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Orchard Tristan dir Clark Bob Kidder Margot Dullea Keir et al July 22 2005 Black Christmas On Screen Canadian Television Fund a b c d e f g Black Christmas 1974 Turner Classic Movies Archived from the original on July 27 2020 Jan Harold Brunvand 2012 Encyclopedia of Urban Legends ABC CLIO pp 46 47 ISBN 978 1 59884 720 8 Koven Mikel J 2008 Film Folklore and Urban Legends Scarecrow Press p 129 ISBN 978 0 8108 6025 4 Dupuis Chris October 28 2016 Homegrown horror 5 Canadian scary movies you need to watch this Halloween Canadian Broadcasting Company Retrieved November 19 2017 Dan Duffin Director 2006 The 12 Days of Black Christmas DVD Canada Critical Mass Releasing Black Christmas Legacy documentary Black Christmas Blu ray Scream Factory 2016 a b Six for Her Scythe An Interview with Lynne Griffin Part I Yerror Trap com The Terror Trap July 2011 Retrieved March 26 2019 Vagg Stephen July 29 2020 The Top Twelve Stages of Saxon FilmInk a b Turner 1987 p 180 Random Roles Margot Kidder The A V Club March 3 2009 Retrieved December 18 2016 Black Christmas Library and Archives Canada May 12 2015 Retrieved July 29 2019 Nowell 2011 p 75 76 Nowell 2011 p 76 77 Canadian Films Grosses Variety November 24 1976 p 32 Canada Only B O Figures Variety November 21 1979 p 24 a b c Network Offers TV Alternative for Terror Film The Palm Beach Post Associated Press January 25 1978 p 61 Retrieved July 14 2016 via Newspapers com Screen Murky Whodunit Black Christmas Is at Local Theaters The New York Times October 20 1975 p 45 Retrieved June 1 2019 Black Christmas Variety Penske Media Corporation December 31 1974 Archived from the original on December 31 2013 Retrieved November 18 2017 Siskel Gene October 6 1975 Master Gunfighter a whopping misfire Chicago Tribune Section 3 p 6 Thomas Kevin August 6 1975 Gothic Tale of a Black Christmas Los Angeles Times Part IV p 12 Black Christmas 1974 Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved March 28 2023 Black Christmas Metacritic Retrieved May 4 2020 Black Christmas Film Threat December 24 2004 Retrieved June 4 2012 Black Christmas 1974 Review TV Guide Retrieved November 20 2017 Maltin Leonard Carson Darwyn Sader Luke 2013 Leonard Maltin s 2014 Movie Guide Penguin Press p 137 ISBN 978 0 451 41810 4 Black Christmas Time Out London Time Inc Archived from the original on November 7 2012 Retrieved November 9 2017 Black Christmas 25th Anniversary DVD DVD Talk Retrieved November 19 2017 Black Christmas DVD Critical Mass 2001 Black Christmas DVD Critical Mass 2002 ISBN 1 55259 366 5 Black Christmas DVD Critical Mass 2006 Black Christmas Blu ray Blu ray com Retrieved November 19 2017 Hanley Ken W October 15 2015 Exclusive Trailer Anchor Bay Canada s BLACK CHRISTMAS Blu ray Seasons Grievings Edition Fangoria Archived from the original on December 1 2017 Retrieved November 20 2017 a b Spurlin Thomas January 20 2017 Black Christmas Collector s Edition DVD Talk Retrieved November 20 2017 Black Christmas Collector s Edition Shout Factory December 6 2022 Retrieved December 11 2022 Academy of Science Fiction Fantasy amp Horror Films USA Awards for 1976 IMDb Archived from the original on April 30 2016 Canadian Film Awards Cinema Canada Cinema Canada Magazine Foundation 18 24 25 1975 Rist Peter ed 2001 Guide to the Cinema s of Canada Greenwood Publishing Group p 112 ISBN 978 0 313 29931 5 Best film showdown 11 vie for all Canadian honours Ottawa Journal October 3 1975 p 39 Retrieved March 28 2018 via Newspapers com Crump William D 2013 The Christmas Encyclopedia 3rd ed McFarland p 43 ISBN 978 1 476 60573 9 Squires John November 11 2016 How Halloween Was Basically an Unofficial Black Christmas Sequel Bloody Disgusting Retrieved November 11 2016 Muir 2011 p 315 Dirks Tim Greatest Scariest Movie Moments and Scenes B AMC Filmsite Schrodt Paul October 19 2018 50 Best Horror Movies of All Time Scariest Horror Films Ever Made Esquire com Esquire Retrieved December 3 2019 Barone Matt October 23 2017 The Best Slasher Films of All Time Complex Retrieved January 21 2020 Vorel Jim August 8 2018 The Best Slasher Movies of All Time Paste Archived from the original on July 12 2019 Retrieved January 21 2020 Vorel Jim October 4 2016 The 20 Best Final Girls in Horror Movie History PasteMagazine com Paste Magazine Retrieved March 19 2020 Monagle Matthew December 13 2019 The Politics of Slasher Black Christmas Austin Chronicle Retrieved November 17 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Romano Aja December 19 2017 Skip Die Hard this year Black Christmas is the cynical 2017 holiday movie alternative Vox Retrieved November 17 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Moon Robin December 21 2020 Slay Girls The Sliding Scale of Feminism in the Black Christmas Films HorrorObsessive com 25YL Media Retrieved November 17 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Dirks Tim Greatest Movie Plot Twists Spoilers and Surprise Endings Filmsite org American Movie Classics Company Inc Retrieved March 11 2020 Stitzel Kelly October 31 2012 Horror Movie Marathon Part The Last Popdose Hays Lee 1976 Black Christmas Popular Library Searles Jourdain October 30 2018 The Low Budget Canadian Film That Inspired Halloween and Launched an Entire Horror Genre Thrillist Retrieved December 16 2019 A Slasher Classic in Print Unwrapping the Black Christmas Novelization December 17 2020 Upcoming Book It s Me Billy Black Christmas Revisited Takes a Definitive Look at the Slasher Classic March 8 2021 Garrett Diane April 4 2007 Bob Clark 67 director Variety Penske Media Corporation Retrieved November 19 2017 Hendricks Adam June 23 2019 Day 1 blackchristmas Archived from the original on December 23 2021 Retrieved August 8 2019 via Instagram Hendricks Adam July 31 2019 Day 27 blackchristmas Archived from the original on December 23 2021 Retrieved August 8 2019 via Instagram Hendricks Adam July 31 2019 THAT S A WRAP blackchristmas Archived from the original on December 23 2021 Retrieved August 8 2019 via Instagram Sneider Jeff June 13 2019 Blumhouse to Remake Black Christmas with Director Sophia Takal Collider Archived from the original on June 14 2019 Retrieved June 14 2019 Squires John March 29 2021 Black Christmas Fan Film It s Me Billy Tells the Story of Jess Bradford s Granddaughter Bloody Disgusting Retrieved March 29 2021 Squires John December 20 2020 Fan Film It s Me Billy Takes Place 50 Years After the Original Black Christmas Bloody Disgusting Retrieved December 20 2020 Harding Bradley July 9 2020 Black Christmas How The Original Ending Is Explored In A Fan Made Sequel Screen Rant Retrieved July 9 2020 Works cited EditMuir John Kenneth 2011 Horror Films of the 1970s McFarland ISBN 978 0 786 49156 8 Turner D John ed 1987 Canadian Feature Film Index 1913 1985 Canadian Film Institute ISBN 0660533642 Nowell Richard 2011 Blood Money A History of the First Teen Slasher Film Cycle Continuum International Publishing Group ISBN 9781441124968 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Black Christmas 1974 film Black Christmas at IMDb Black Christmas at AllMovie Black Christmas at Box Office Mojo Black Christmas at the TCM Movie Database 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