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Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale

Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale is a 2010 Finnish fantasy action horror comedy film written and directed by Jalmari Helander about people living near Korvatunturi who discover the secret behind Santa Claus. The film is based on the 2003 short film Rare Exports Inc. and its 2005 sequel Rare Exports: The Official Safety Instructions by Jalmari Helander and Juuso Helander, both of which involve a company that traps wild Santa Clauses and trains and exports them to locations around the world.

Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale
Theatrical release poster
Directed byJalmari Helander
Written byJalmari Helander
Produced byPetri Jokiranta
Starring
  • Onni Tommila
  • Jorma Tommila
  • Per Christian Ellefsen
  • Tommi Korpela
  • Rauno Juvonen
  • Ilmari Järvenpää
  • Peeter Jakobi
  • Jonathan Hutchings
  • Risto Salmi
CinematographyMika Orasmaa
Edited byKimmo Taavila
Music by
  • Juri Seppä
  • Miska Seppä
Distributed by
  • FS Film Oy (Finland)
  • Scanbox Entertainment (Norway)
  • Chrysalis Films (France)
Release dates
  • 24 September 2010 (2010-09-24) (AFF)
  • 3 December 2010 (2010-12-03) (Finland)
Running time
82 minutes[1]
Countries
  • Finland
  • Norway
  • France
  • Sweden[2]
Languages
  • Finnish
  • English
Budget1.803 million[3]
Box officeUS$4,015,133[4]

Plot

An American and British research team from the firm Subzero are taking drill core samples on top of Korvatunturi (Ear Fell) in the Finnish region of Lapland. It is believed to be the home of Joulupukki, a figure in Finnish folklore that helped shape modern-day versions of Santa Claus. Team leader Riley realizes that the fell is an ancient burial mound built by the Sámi to conceal and imprison something. Two local boys, Juuso and Pietari, watch the team at work and eavesdrop on their discussions. They run to Juuso's nearby snowmobile quarreling about Santa Claus' existence as the team begins to excavate the fell using explosives. When they reach a glacier in the mountains, they find hundreds of reindeer carcasses.

Rauno heads to Korvatunturi to demand reparations from the Subzero company, whom he believes is responsible for the troubles over the reindeer. Instead, he finds a deep pit and no trace of the Subzero personnel.

On the morning of Christmas Eve, the trap ensnares a naked old man. Pietari sneaks out of his father's house to a police truck and reaches the village, where Rauno hears that potato sacks, heaters, and a hair dryer have gone missing. Pietari learns that Juuso has also been missing, with a straw effigy found in his place.

Piiparinen, a colleague of Rauno, brings a sack containing the skinny old man and leaves his inactive body on a table in Rauno's reindeer slaughterhouse. While he, Rauno, and Aimo, another colleague, discuss their plans, Pietari finds that all his friends have gone missing. Piiparinen has his ear bitten off by the old man after he teases him with a piece of gingerbread. Pietari asks his father to spank him for his bad deeds, as he fears the children's bad deeds might have caused Santa to take them away.

Rauno's group dresses the old man in Piiparinen's Santa costume and message the Americans that they "have found Santa Claus". They take the old man in a cage to an airbase, where they meet Riley, the only survivor of an attack that killed the other Subzero workers. Riley warns that the caged man is not Santa Claus but one of his elves, and that they must not behave rudely. When one of them swears, the other elves appear and destroy the electric lights, and kill Riley and his pilot. The men and Pietari run to Hangar 24, where they find a horned being in an enormous block of ice being melted by the missing heaters. Underneath the block of ice are several sacks containing the crying stolen children, including Juuso.

Piiparinen comes out of the hangar and distracts the elves by throwing gingerbread at them to reach the helicopter. Rauno and Aimo make a net, which Pietari climbs on as it picks up the sacks of children to lure the elves to the reindeer pen. The other men place explosives all over Santa Claus' ice block and cut off his horns before fleeing the hangar in a truck. Pietari climbs down the net of children and an antenna to open the reindeer pen as the horde of elves runs toward him. Rauno and Aimo detonate the explosives, killing Santa Claus and causing the elves to stop at the reindeer pen before they can hurt Pietari. Afterwards, Rauno, now reconciled with Pietari, decides to start a new business with Subzero, in which the captured elves are trained to become mall Santas and exported to various locations worldwide.

Cast

  • Onni Tommila as Pietari Kontio
  • Jorma Tommila as Rauno Kontio
  • Tommi Korpela as Aimo
  • Rauno Juvonen as Piiparinen
  • Per Christian Ellefsen as Riley
  • Ilmari Järvenpää as Juuso
  • Peeter Jakobi as Pietari's Elf
  • Jonathan Hutchings as Brian Greene
  • Risto Salmi as Sheriff
  • Jens Sivertsen as Main Elf
  • Sigmund Bøe as Main Elf
  • Olav Pedersen as Main Elf
  • Nils M. Iselvmo as Main Elf

Production

The film was produced by Cinet (Finland) in co-production with Pomor Film (Norway), Davaj Film (Sweden) and Love Streams Agnès B. Productions (France), with support from the Finnish Film Foundation, Norwegian Film Institute, FilmCamp and Filmpool Nord.[5]

Development

In 2003, the Finnish commercials production company Woodpecker Film published the short movie Rare Exports Inc. online.[6] (It is available on other YouTube channels as well.) Here, the film's writer and director Jalmari Helander established a band of three hunters (marker, sniper, and tracker) searching the wilderness of Lapland for the wild Santa Claus. After the positive reception from an online audience, Woodpecker Film produced and published the sequel short movie Rare Exports: The Official Safety Instructions in 2005,[7] again with Helander as writer-director.

In 2007, Jalmari Helander introduced producer Petri Jokiranta to his idea of a feature-length Rare Exports film based on his short films that had already acquired a cult reputation on the Internet. Jokiranta's company, Cinet, picked up the rights and Helander started to develop the concept together with Jokiranta.

Release

In 2009, Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale was in production and in Christmas 2010 it was released simultaneously in Finland, Norway, Sweden, Germany, UK, US and Australia.[citation needed] The film was distributed in US by Oscilloscope Laboratories, an independent film distribution company.[citation needed]

Box office

Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale has grossed $4,015,133.[citation needed]

Home media

Rare Exports was released on DVD and Blu-ray Disc on 25 October 2011. The Blu-ray version includes the two original short films and a variety of featurettes, such as a "Making Of", a look at the concept art, explanation of the animatics and computer-generated imagery, the notoriously contemptible[8][9] feature film Santa Claus Conquers the Martians, and other extras.[10]

Critical reception

On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 90% based on 105 reviews, with a weighted average rating of 7/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Rare Exports is an unexpectedly delightful crossbreed of deadpan comedy and Christmas horror."[11] On Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating to reviews, the film has a weighted average score of 71 out of 100, based on 18 critics, indicating "Generally favorable reviews".[12]

Roger Ebert awarded the film three and a half out of four stars and called it "a rather brilliant lump of coal for your stocking" and considered it "an R-rated Santa Claus origin story crossed with The Thing." He continued, "Apart from the inescapable [fact] that the movie has Santa and reindeer in it, this is a superior horror film, a spot-on parody of movies about dead beings brought back to life. Oh, and all the reindeer are dead." Ebert concluded that "this is a fine film. An original, daring, carefully crafted film, that never for one instant winks at us that it's a parody. In its tone, acting, location work, music and inexorably mounting suspense, this is an exemplary horror film, apart from the detail that they're not usually subtitled A Christmas Tale and tell about terrifying wild Santas."[13]

Novelist and critic Kim Newman gave the movie 4 out of 5 stars ("Excellent") and praised its "very black humour and a strange mix of revisionist mythology, gruesome horror and authentic Christmas spirit. It has a gritty, outdoorsy feel appropriate to an exploration of the brutal side of a harsh, all-male life in an extreme climate ... Helander also shows suspense chops in vintage John Carpenter mode – the scenes with the captured Santa, a grinning creature waiting for a chance to kill, are good, straight horror stuff, and there's an effective climactic siege of bearded monsters."[14]

Michael Rechtshaffen of The Hollywood Reporter described the movie as "a fiendishly entertaining Christmas yarn rooted in Northern European legend and lore, complete with a not-so-jolly old St. Nick informed more by the Brothers Grimm than Norman Rockwell. While the richly atmospheric package has been wrapped with a healthy dose of wry satire, it's not of the mean-spirited Bad Santa variety. Helander, a successful commercial director in his native Helsinki, shrewdly blends just the right amounts of fairy tale wonder and action movie heroics into the oddball mix to highly satisfying effect."[15] Jeannette Catsoulis of The New York Times called the movie "a thing of frigid beauty and twisted playfulness ... Kids will love the diminutive, motherless hero and a plot that's completely bonkers; adults will enjoy the exuberantly pagan images and deadpan humor." It was rated a New York Times Critics' Pick.[16] Sheri Linden of the Los Angeles Times praised the "twisted black humor in this frosty Finnish fantasy ... What unfolds is a dark comic thriller and action-hero send-up, a strange alloy of daredevil helicopter maneuvers and night of the living elves. Captured in atmospheric widescreen camerawork, the end-of-the-world frozen landscape (actually Norway) is spectacular and spooky."[17] Reviewer Annika Pham, writing for Cineuropa.org, described it as a "Tim Burton-esque version of Santa's story" and said, "The icy Lappish landscapes are beautifully captured by [director of photography] Mika Orasmaa and the feel of the large-scale adventure epic is wrapped up in sweeping musical orchestration. The scary elements (suggested more than shown) are sufficient to keep 13+ viewers on edge, but could have been further elaborated – along with the original concept – to make Rare Exports a timeless seasonal delight."[5]

Collider.com's reviewer Dave Trumbore called the film "a darkly humored tale that fits perfectly in line with such anti-Christmas classics as Gremlins and The Nightmare Before Christmas" and wrote, "The contemporary Nordic setting that's so fitting for horror movies these days (Let the Right One In, Dead Snow) is a perfect backdrop for Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale, not only in mood but in mythology as well ... While Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale does not have the level of gore of Dead Snow or the emotional impact of Let the Right One In (although Pietari does earn his father's respect in the end), it's a uniquely entertaining tale that adds a bit of welcome darkness to the often saccharine times leading up to Christmas."[10]

Awards

The film won numerous awards such as the Locarno International Film Festival's Variety Piazza Grande Award[5] and Best Motion Picture, Best Cinematography, and Best Director – as well as a "Special Mention" for the Silver Méliès for Best European Motion Picture Award – at the 43rd Sitges Film Festival in 2010.[18] In 2011, director Jalmari Helander and producer Petri Jokiranta received the Finnish Film State Award for their collaboration.[citation needed]

The film and crew earned further awards in 2011: nominated for Best Film for the Jussi Award, it won for Best Cinematography, Best Music, Best Sound Design, Best Editing, Best Art Direction, and Best Costume Design. The film won the Pegasus Audience Award at the Brussels International Fantastic Film Festival, and was nominated for the Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror Films's Saturn Award in the category of Best International Film.[10]

References

  1. ^ "RARE EXPORTS (15)". British Board of Film Classification. 2010-10-27. Retrieved 2012-12-12.
  2. ^ Weissberg, Jay (August 13, 2010). "Variety Reviews - Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale". Variety. Retrieved April 19, 2012.
  3. ^ Finnish Film Foundation, Facts & Figures 2009 (Finnish), p. 6. Retrieved 22 July 2011
  4. ^ "Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale (2010)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 22 July 2011.
  5. ^ a b c Pham, Annika (November 25, 2010). "Bloody Christmas greetings from new Finnish wunderkind". Cineuropa. Retrieved December 1, 2014.
  6. ^ Rare Exports Inc. on the official YouTube channel of production company Woodpecker Film on YouTube[dead link]
  7. ^ "Rare Exports: The Official Safety Instructions" on the official YouTube channel of production company Woodpecker Film on YouTube[dead link]
  8. ^ "Santa Claus Conquers the Martians (1964)". The Public Domain Review. Open Knowledge. Retrieved December 1, 2014. ...a 1964 science fiction film that regularly appears on lists of the worst films ever made. It is regularly featured in the 'bottom 100' list on the Internet Movie Database, and was featured in an episode of the 1986 syndicated series, the Canned Film Festival. ... The film took on newfound fame in the 1990s after being featured on an episode of the comedy series Mystery Science Theater 3000 ... It became a holiday staple on the Comedy Central cable channel in the years following its 1991 premiere. It has since found new life again in the 2000s having been riffed by Cinematic Titanic.
  9. ^ Hall, Phil (December 17, 2004). "THE BOOTLEG FILES: SANTA CLAUS CONQUERS THE MARTIANS". Film Threat. New Jersey: Mark Bell. Retrieved December 1, 2014. ... the film is still a source of wonder – basically, people wondering how such a crazy movie ever got made.
  10. ^ a b c Trumbore, Dave (2011). "RARE EXPORTS: A CHRISTMAS TALE Blu-ray Review". Collider.com. Retrieved December 1, 2014.
  11. ^ "Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale (2010) - Rotten Tomatoes". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango. Retrieved 8 December 2020.
  12. ^ "Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale Reviews - Metacritic". Metacritic.com. Metacritic. Retrieved 7 July 2018.
  13. ^ Ebert, Roger (22 December 2010). "Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved 31 December 2010.    
  14. ^ Newman, Kim. "Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale: You better watch out, you better not cry". Empire. United Kingdom: www.empireonline.com. Retrieved December 1, 2014.     
  15. ^ Rechtshaffen, Michael (December 10, 2010). "Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale -- Film Review". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved December 1, 2014.
  16. ^ Catsoulis, Jeannette (December 2, 2010). "Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale (2010) - Discovering a Sinister Santa in Finland". The New York Times. Retrieved December 1, 2014.
  17. ^ Linden, Sheri (December 9, 2010). "Movie review: Rare Exports". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved December 1, 2014.
  18. ^ Sitges Festival Internacional de Cinema Fantàstic de Catalunya (October 16, 2010). "Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale, by Jalmari Helander, wins the Best Motion Picture". Sitges Film Festival. Retrieved December 1, 2014.

External links

  • Official website
  • Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale at IMDb
  • Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale at Box Office Mojo
  • Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale at Rotten Tomatoes
  • Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale at Metacritic  
  • Rare Exports Inc. at IMDb
  • The Official Rare Exports Inc. Safety Instructions at IMDb

rare, exports, christmas, tale, 2010, finnish, fantasy, action, horror, comedy, film, written, directed, jalmari, helander, about, people, living, near, korvatunturi, discover, secret, behind, santa, claus, film, based, 2003, short, film, rare, exports, 2005, . Rare Exports A Christmas Tale is a 2010 Finnish fantasy action horror comedy film written and directed by Jalmari Helander about people living near Korvatunturi who discover the secret behind Santa Claus The film is based on the 2003 short film Rare Exports Inc and its 2005 sequel Rare Exports The Official Safety Instructions by Jalmari Helander and Juuso Helander both of which involve a company that traps wild Santa Clauses and trains and exports them to locations around the world Rare Exports A Christmas TaleTheatrical release posterDirected byJalmari HelanderWritten byJalmari HelanderProduced byPetri JokirantaStarringOnni Tommila Jorma Tommila Per Christian Ellefsen Tommi Korpela Rauno Juvonen Ilmari Jarvenpaa Peeter Jakobi Jonathan Hutchings Risto SalmiCinematographyMika OrasmaaEdited byKimmo TaavilaMusic byJuri Seppa Miska SeppaDistributed byFS Film Oy Finland Scanbox Entertainment Norway Chrysalis Films France Release dates24 September 2010 2010 09 24 AFF 3 December 2010 2010 12 03 Finland Running time82 minutes 1 CountriesFinland Norway France Sweden 2 LanguagesFinnish EnglishBudget 1 803 million 3 Box officeUS 4 015 133 4 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 3 1 Development 4 Release 4 1 Box office 4 2 Home media 5 Critical reception 5 1 Awards 6 References 7 External linksPlot EditThis article s plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed Please help improve it by removing unnecessary details and making it more concise December 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message An American and British research team from the firm Subzero are taking drill core samples on top of Korvatunturi Ear Fell in the Finnish region of Lapland It is believed to be the home of Joulupukki a figure in Finnish folklore that helped shape modern day versions of Santa Claus Team leader Riley realizes that the fell is an ancient burial mound built by the Sami to conceal and imprison something Two local boys Juuso and Pietari watch the team at work and eavesdrop on their discussions They run to Juuso s nearby snowmobile quarreling about Santa Claus existence as the team begins to excavate the fell using explosives When they reach a glacier in the mountains they find hundreds of reindeer carcasses Rauno heads to Korvatunturi to demand reparations from the Subzero company whom he believes is responsible for the troubles over the reindeer Instead he finds a deep pit and no trace of the Subzero personnel On the morning of Christmas Eve the trap ensnares a naked old man Pietari sneaks out of his father s house to a police truck and reaches the village where Rauno hears that potato sacks heaters and a hair dryer have gone missing Pietari learns that Juuso has also been missing with a straw effigy found in his place Piiparinen a colleague of Rauno brings a sack containing the skinny old man and leaves his inactive body on a table in Rauno s reindeer slaughterhouse While he Rauno and Aimo another colleague discuss their plans Pietari finds that all his friends have gone missing Piiparinen has his ear bitten off by the old man after he teases him with a piece of gingerbread Pietari asks his father to spank him for his bad deeds as he fears the children s bad deeds might have caused Santa to take them away Rauno s group dresses the old man in Piiparinen s Santa costume and message the Americans that they have found Santa Claus They take the old man in a cage to an airbase where they meet Riley the only survivor of an attack that killed the other Subzero workers Riley warns that the caged man is not Santa Claus but one of his elves and that they must not behave rudely When one of them swears the other elves appear and destroy the electric lights and kill Riley and his pilot The men and Pietari run to Hangar 24 where they find a horned being in an enormous block of ice being melted by the missing heaters Underneath the block of ice are several sacks containing the crying stolen children including Juuso Piiparinen comes out of the hangar and distracts the elves by throwing gingerbread at them to reach the helicopter Rauno and Aimo make a net which Pietari climbs on as it picks up the sacks of children to lure the elves to the reindeer pen The other men place explosives all over Santa Claus ice block and cut off his horns before fleeing the hangar in a truck Pietari climbs down the net of children and an antenna to open the reindeer pen as the horde of elves runs toward him Rauno and Aimo detonate the explosives killing Santa Claus and causing the elves to stop at the reindeer pen before they can hurt Pietari Afterwards Rauno now reconciled with Pietari decides to start a new business with Subzero in which the captured elves are trained to become mall Santas and exported to various locations worldwide Cast EditOnni Tommila as Pietari Kontio Jorma Tommila as Rauno Kontio Tommi Korpela as Aimo Rauno Juvonen as Piiparinen Per Christian Ellefsen as Riley Ilmari Jarvenpaa as Juuso Peeter Jakobi as Pietari s Elf Jonathan Hutchings as Brian Greene Risto Salmi as Sheriff Jens Sivertsen as Main Elf Sigmund Boe as Main Elf Olav Pedersen as Main Elf Nils M Iselvmo as Main ElfProduction EditThe film was produced by Cinet Finland in co production with Pomor Film Norway Davaj Film Sweden and Love Streams Agnes B Productions France with support from the Finnish Film Foundation Norwegian Film Institute FilmCamp and Filmpool Nord 5 Development Edit In 2003 the Finnish commercials production company Woodpecker Film published the short movie Rare Exports Inc online 6 It is available on other YouTube channels as well Here the film s writer and director Jalmari Helander established a band of three hunters marker sniper and tracker searching the wilderness of Lapland for the wild Santa Claus After the positive reception from an online audience Woodpecker Film produced and published the sequel short movie Rare Exports The Official Safety Instructions in 2005 7 again with Helander as writer director In 2007 Jalmari Helander introduced producer Petri Jokiranta to his idea of a feature length Rare Exports film based on his short films that had already acquired a cult reputation on the Internet Jokiranta s company Cinet picked up the rights and Helander started to develop the concept together with Jokiranta Release EditIn 2009 Rare Exports A Christmas Tale was in production and in Christmas 2010 it was released simultaneously in Finland Norway Sweden Germany UK US and Australia citation needed The film was distributed in US by Oscilloscope Laboratories an independent film distribution company citation needed Box office Edit Rare Exports A Christmas Tale has grossed 4 015 133 citation needed Home media Edit Rare Exports was released on DVD and Blu ray Disc on 25 October 2011 The Blu ray version includes the two original short films and a variety of featurettes such as a Making Of a look at the concept art explanation of the animatics and computer generated imagery the notoriously contemptible 8 9 feature film Santa Claus Conquers the Martians and other extras 10 Critical reception EditOn Rotten Tomatoes the film holds an approval rating of 90 based on 105 reviews with a weighted average rating of 7 10 The site s critical consensus reads Rare Exports is an unexpectedly delightful crossbreed of deadpan comedy and Christmas horror 11 On Metacritic which assigns a normalized rating to reviews the film has a weighted average score of 71 out of 100 based on 18 critics indicating Generally favorable reviews 12 Roger Ebert awarded the film three and a half out of four stars and called it a rather brilliant lump of coal for your stocking and considered it an R rated Santa Claus origin story crossed with The Thing He continued Apart from the inescapable fact that the movie has Santa and reindeer in it this is a superior horror film a spot on parody of movies about dead beings brought back to life Oh and all the reindeer are dead Ebert concluded that this is a fine film An original daring carefully crafted film that never for one instant winks at us that it s a parody In its tone acting location work music and inexorably mounting suspense this is an exemplary horror film apart from the detail that they re not usually subtitled A Christmas Tale and tell about terrifying wild Santas 13 Novelist and critic Kim Newman gave the movie 4 out of 5 stars Excellent and praised its very black humour and a strange mix of revisionist mythology gruesome horror and authentic Christmas spirit It has a gritty outdoorsy feel appropriate to an exploration of the brutal side of a harsh all male life in an extreme climate Helander also shows suspense chops in vintage John Carpenter mode the scenes with the captured Santa a grinning creature waiting for a chance to kill are good straight horror stuff and there s an effective climactic siege of bearded monsters 14 Michael Rechtshaffen of The Hollywood Reporter described the movie as a fiendishly entertaining Christmas yarn rooted in Northern European legend and lore complete with a not so jolly old St Nick informed more by the Brothers Grimm than Norman Rockwell While the richly atmospheric package has been wrapped with a healthy dose of wry satire it s not of the mean spirited Bad Santa variety Helander a successful commercial director in his native Helsinki shrewdly blends just the right amounts of fairy tale wonder and action movie heroics into the oddball mix to highly satisfying effect 15 Jeannette Catsoulis of The New York Times called the movie a thing of frigid beauty and twisted playfulness Kids will love the diminutive motherless hero and a plot that s completely bonkers adults will enjoy the exuberantly pagan images and deadpan humor It was rated a New York Times Critics Pick 16 Sheri Linden of the Los Angeles Times praised the twisted black humor in this frosty Finnish fantasy What unfolds is a dark comic thriller and action hero send up a strange alloy of daredevil helicopter maneuvers and night of the living elves Captured in atmospheric widescreen camerawork the end of the world frozen landscape actually Norway is spectacular and spooky 17 Reviewer Annika Pham writing for Cineuropa org described it as a Tim Burton esque version of Santa s story and said The icy Lappish landscapes are beautifully captured by director of photography Mika Orasmaa and the feel of the large scale adventure epic is wrapped up in sweeping musical orchestration The scary elements suggested more than shown are sufficient to keep 13 viewers on edge but could have been further elaborated along with the original concept to make Rare Exports a timeless seasonal delight 5 Collider com s reviewer Dave Trumbore called the film a darkly humored tale that fits perfectly in line with such anti Christmas classics as Gremlins and The Nightmare Before Christmas and wrote The contemporary Nordic setting that s so fitting for horror movies these days Let the Right One In Dead Snow is a perfect backdrop for Rare Exports A Christmas Tale not only in mood but in mythology as well While Rare Exports A Christmas Tale does not have the level of gore of Dead Snow or the emotional impact of Let the Right One In although Pietari does earn his father s respect in the end it s a uniquely entertaining tale that adds a bit of welcome darkness to the often saccharine times leading up to Christmas 10 Awards Edit The film won numerous awards such as the Locarno International Film Festival s Variety Piazza Grande Award 5 and Best Motion Picture Best Cinematography and Best Director as well as a Special Mention for the Silver Melies for Best European Motion Picture Award at the 43rd Sitges Film Festival in 2010 18 In 2011 director Jalmari Helander and producer Petri Jokiranta received the Finnish Film State Award for their collaboration citation needed The film and crew earned further awards in 2011 nominated for Best Film for the Jussi Award it won for Best Cinematography Best Music Best Sound Design Best Editing Best Art Direction and Best Costume Design The film won the Pegasus Audience Award at the Brussels International Fantastic Film Festival and was nominated for the Academy of Science Fiction Fantasy and Horror Films s Saturn Award in the category of Best International Film 10 References Edit RARE EXPORTS 15 British Board of Film Classification 2010 10 27 Retrieved 2012 12 12 Weissberg Jay August 13 2010 Variety Reviews Rare Exports A Christmas Tale Variety Retrieved April 19 2012 Finnish Film Foundation Facts amp Figures 2009 Finnish p 6 Retrieved 22 July 2011 Rare Exports A Christmas Tale 2010 Box Office Mojo Retrieved 22 July 2011 a b c Pham Annika November 25 2010 Bloody Christmas greetings from new Finnish wunderkind Cineuropa Retrieved December 1 2014 Rare Exports Inc on the official YouTube channel of production company Woodpecker Film on YouTube dead link Rare Exports The Official Safety Instructions on the official YouTube channel of production company Woodpecker Film on YouTube dead link Santa Claus Conquers the Martians 1964 The Public Domain Review Open Knowledge Retrieved December 1 2014 a 1964 science fiction film that regularly appears on lists of the worst films ever made It is regularly featured in the bottom 100 list on the Internet Movie Database and was featured in an episode of the 1986 syndicated series the Canned Film Festival The film took on newfound fame in the 1990s after being featured on an episode of the comedy series Mystery Science Theater 3000 It became a holiday staple on the Comedy Central cable channel in the years following its 1991 premiere It has since found new life again in the 2000s having been riffed by Cinematic Titanic Hall Phil December 17 2004 THE BOOTLEG FILES SANTA CLAUS CONQUERS THE MARTIANS Film Threat New Jersey Mark Bell Retrieved December 1 2014 the film is still a source of wonder basically people wondering how such a crazy movie ever got made a b c Trumbore Dave 2011 RARE EXPORTS A CHRISTMAS TALE Blu ray Review Collider com Retrieved December 1 2014 Rare Exports A Christmas Tale 2010 Rotten Tomatoes Rotten Tomatoes Fandango Retrieved 8 December 2020 Rare Exports A Christmas Tale Reviews Metacritic Metacritic com Metacritic Retrieved 7 July 2018 Ebert Roger 22 December 2010 Rare Exports A Christmas Tale Chicago Sun Times Retrieved 31 December 2010 Newman Kim Rare Exports A Christmas Tale You better watch out you better not cry Empire United Kingdom www empireonline com Retrieved December 1 2014 Rechtshaffen Michael December 10 2010 Rare Exports A Christmas Tale Film Review The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved December 1 2014 Catsoulis Jeannette December 2 2010 Rare Exports A Christmas Tale 2010 Discovering a Sinister Santa in Finland The New York Times Retrieved December 1 2014 Linden Sheri December 9 2010 Movie review Rare Exports The Los Angeles Times Retrieved December 1 2014 Sitges Festival Internacional de Cinema Fantastic de Catalunya October 16 2010 Rare Exports A Christmas Tale by Jalmari Helander wins the Best Motion Picture Sitges Film Festival Retrieved December 1 2014 External links EditOfficial website Rare Exports A Christmas Tale at IMDb Rare Exports A Christmas Tale at Box Office Mojo Rare Exports A Christmas Tale at Rotten Tomatoes Rare Exports A Christmas Tale at Metacritic Rare Exports Inc at IMDb The Official Rare Exports Inc Safety Instructions at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rare Exports A Christmas Tale amp oldid 1129482761, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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