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  • Merry Christmas & Happy New Year 🍾, 'Black Christmas' turns 50 🎄, 'You Are Not Me' rules as queer cinema, & more

Merry Christmas & Happy New Year 🍾, 'Black Christmas' turns 50 🎄, 'You Are Not Me' rules as queer cinema, & more

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by Bee Delores | Bluesky | Instagram | Letterboxd

It's hard to imagine that we've reached six months (!!!) since we started the newsletter. Brett and I have covered everything from Digging Up the Marrow and The House of the Devil to Cat People (1942), Sorority Row, and Tourist Trap. As we reach the end of the year, and enjoy some much-needed time off, we look ahead to what's next in 2025 -- for better or for worse. With this year becoming a banner year for horror, the genre certainly has its work cut out of itself. But I'm most looking forward to horror movies like Bystanders, Wolf Man, Megan 2.0, and The Black Phone 2.

As our very last newsletter of the year, we celebrate Christmas, New Year's Eve, and all the horrors that entails. Whether you're spending time with family or making your own holiday traditions with your chosen family, we hope that you get time to snuggle your loves ones -- and that includes fur babies (I have four) -- and put on some holiday horror that comforts you or maybe check out some new-to-your horror classics. Our issue takes a looking back at Black Christmas for its 50th anniversary, the newly-released queer horror You Are Not Me, and The Nights Before Christmas, among a slew of other treats. We hope you won't be disappointed and stick around with us for the new year.

From Brett and I, we wish you a very Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. May you get all you wanted and then some this holiday season.

You can read past editions right here.

By Brett Petersel | Bluesky | Instagram | Letterboxd | X

This was a crazy week for Scream 7 news. Variety has reported that Courteney Cox is returning, as is Mason Gooding. Sam Rechner and Anna Camp (Pitch Perfect) are joining the film, too. This cast is looking good.

The I Know What You Did Last Summer cast is being finalized, too. JLH is BACK!

The Texas Chain Saw Massacre sawed its way into the Library of Congress’ National Film Registry. Some of the other films are questionable, though.

We have our first official look at M3GAN in M3GAN 2.0, which hits theaters on June 25, 2025.

28 Days Later is officially back on Digital!

by Bee | Bluesky | Instagram | Letterboxd and Brett | Bluesky | Instagram | Letterboxd | X

We have been teachers for two decades and have seen dozens of cases where parents marked their children’s lives for the worse,” co-writers and co-directors Marisa Crespo and Moisés Romera share in their joint directors’ statement. Their words take root in their new film, You Are Not Me, and sprout from soured soil, as their tale about a dysfunctional family conceals far more than meets the eye. With great attention to the intricacies of the blood ties that bind, the queer horror/thriller makes a late-year bid for one of the year’s biggest, most satisfying surprises. [Read Bee's Review]

Jim Makichuk's Ghostkeeper is one of those movies that's not great -- but it supplies enough moody (and a wacky ending) to get the job done. The 1981 film (dare I call it a slasher, even though it's really not?!) follows three travelers on a snowmobile New Year's Eve trip through the mountains. When they get caught in an unexpected blizzard, they decide to check out a lodge looming large on a nearby ridge. Inside, they discover nothing but silence... and one bizarre host. When the group decides to spend the night, against their better judgment, strange things begin to happen. It's a little supernatural slow-burn that might scratch that itch. [written by Bee]

Bee Delores founded B-Sides & Badlands in 2017. Initially a music blog, they expanded to cover all things horror in 2018 and has since reviewed everything from ultra-indie gems like Death Trip to such breakout hits as In a Violent Nature. Check out all the fresh and rotten reviews.

Bee Delores | Bluesky | Instagram | Letterboxd

Black Christmas, a grueling art-piece of male aggression & female power

This piece originally appeared on B-Sides & Badlands

Black Christmas is as subtle in its themes as a fresh batch of frothy eggnog. Within the first 15 minutes, the viewer is immersed in a seductively tragic world of micro-aggression and suffocating levels of toxic machismo. In rewatching the Canadian cult classic a few weeks ago, I was once again struck with how gruesome and uncomfortable Bob Clark’s 1974 film really is. It’s stunningly visceral and innovative as a slasher prototype, whose smartly drawn examinations of femininity, the Final Girl template, and an attacker’s temperament for loathing women would later be perfected with the beautifully-constructed psycho-thriller known as John Carpenter’s Halloween.

However, Black Christmas was truly ahead of its time, offering up progressive concepts of a woman’s claim over her body and a man’s malicious intentions, and remains the unceremonious Godfather of the slasher craze of the 1980s. Its granular, POV framework splinters the onscreen perspective between that of the viscously provocative villain, only known as “The Moaner” to our house of heroines, and that of a close-knit group of sorority girls, who were coming of age only a decade after the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (and just a year after Roe v Wade). It’s a raw and unnerving juxtaposition of one white man’s rage set against a backdrop of women’s continuing struggle to break free of the patriarchy and come to understand and revel in their burgeoning sexuality.

In one of her early roles, Margot Kidder embodies a snarky, salacious extrovert with a proclivity for fellatio jokes and wine. Though she meets a grisly end in the third act, a particularly frightening murder sequence, Kidder’s lionhearted, witty, and hard-boiled Barb reminds the audience that a woman’s role is not to fulfill some absurdly passive sexual thrill of the male fantasy. Instead, Barb exhibits the kind of fierce, garishness, and strong, determined will that we’ve come only to expect from her male counterparts (at least in slasher popcorn flicks). And it’s a role Kidder plays to great effect, allowing her performance to ebb between flashy exuberance and subtle character work. Largely, the film analyzes a woman’s agency over her body, her actions, and her mind through the lens of a whodunnit fright night.

The cast of characters⏤ which includes Andrea Martin (as Phyl), Lynn Griffin (Clare Harrison) and Marian Waldman (as the boozy, hilariously brazen house mother Mrs. Mac) ⏤ settles in for a celebratory send-off before the holiday break. Booze and warm tidings abound, drawing the audience into their world of gleeful celebrations and sisterhood, while just outside the front door, someone’s shaky first-person perspective stumbles across the front lawn, down the snow-capped sidewalk, up the frozen latticework, and into the open attic window. The first obscene (and onscreen) phone call happens before we even hit the 10-minute mark and instantly pricks the nerves to cast intoxicating dread. “Billy” grunts and squeals into the phone, and the camera pans across the girls’ faces to further tighten the film’s screws on tension and discomfort. Knowing the calls have been taking place over several days makes the skin crawl even more…

Billy’s crass ramblings quickly escalate into sleazy, mud-slung filth. “You pig cunt. Let me lick it. Lick it. Let me lick your pretty piggy cunt. Suck my juicy cock. I’ll come over, and you can suck it,” he spits, his words extending virulent male oppression of and claim over women. Barb snaps. “You fucking creep,” she snarls back at the caller. The dastardly facade falls away, and Billy says in a crisp, clear whisper: “I’m going to kill you.” Clink. A chill runs down Barb’s spine, but she quickly recovers. “Well, super tongue strikes again!” exclaims Phyl. Barb replies, flicking her tongue with playful snideness, “Fastest tongue in the west!”

Hussey’s Jess, a timid but courageous lead, also carries much of the empowered woman thesis both in the overarching story and the more personally-wrought subplot. As the main thread line of mayhem unravels, Jess is faced with an unwanted pregnancy, and she must decide what to do next ⏤ wrestling with her unavoidable reality, a decision to terminate the pregnancy, and what her future could hold.

When given the news that she wants an abortion, her boyfriend Peter (played by Keir Dullea) takes a twisted and manipulative tone. “You can’t make a decision like that. You haven’t even asked me,” he says to her, waxing a sweet and gentle, yet calculated, air. To which Jess responds, “I wasn’t even going to tell you…” Peter takes a second to chew over her words before turning on her and condemning her as selfish, “Don’t you ever consider anyone but yourself?”

Peter’s hotheaded demonization of pro-choice works in tandem with his devolution into literal madness, a red herring to the murderous, post-modern tale. He spirals outward just as “The Moaner” ramps up his violent pleasures. A crudely drawn archetype of the angry white man, Peter comes to the sorority house to talk Jess out of her decision. When it’s clear Peter’s immaturity is showing, Jess doesn’t have time for such foolishness. “Peter, what kind of game are you playing? I thought you wanted to talk. So, why don’t you quit attacking me, and we’ll try to have a rational, adult conversation…”

Peter then goes on to express his distaste for university living and his plan to leave the conservatory for good. He presumes they’ll get married soon after, a bold assumption that takes Jess back a moment. Her resolve is riddled on her face, and she realizes what she must do next. “I told you about some of the things I wanted to do. I still want to do those things. You can’t ask me to drop everything I’ve been working for and give up all my ambitions because your plans have changed. Be realistic. I can’t marry you.” He’s vexed by her audacity and lashes out, exposing a bruised ego and venomous masculinity. “You selfish bitch. You’re talking of killing a baby as though you were having a wart removed…what the hell are you trying to do to me?” he hisses. “What are you doing to yourself?” Jess tosses back. He leaves in a huff but not before threatening her: “You’re gonna be very sorry.”

Later on, Peter phones her after a few too many beers and weeps crocodile tears to invalidate her feelings, as well as to exploit her deep adoration for him. “Don’t kill the baby,” he blubbers into the phone. His accusatory temperament is unwittingly the catalyst that propels Jess into the third act and also further confirms her fears of him, that he could perform such ungodly acts on her sisters. It’s especially frightening when it is uncovered that the obscene phone calls are coming from inside the house ⏤ a startling revelation of sheer horror and a plot device later famously retooled for the opening scene of 1979’s Carol Kane-starring When a Stranger Calls.

The set pieces are all in place ⏤ from the boyfriend’s inane, vengeful, and drunken invectives to a high, practically bloodless body count ⏤ and Jess rises to the occasion to escape the grasp of a hate-mongering, female-despising killer hellbent on destruction. Olivia Hussey’s performance is plainspoken but rich and grounded in texture. In just over 90 minutes, she blossoms from the sweet girl-next-door type into one of the most fiercely independent and brave heroines in all of the slasher pantheon. She’s a victim of circumstance in almost every way. Even in turning down her boyfriend’s flippantly forward marriage proposal and going head-to-head with “Billy,” she musters up inner strength and skill to fight for her life. Jess not only survives the night, but she reclaims her own distinct identity in one last act of defiance and survival by ⏤ surprise! ⏤ killing her psychotic boyfriend with a fireplace poker.

As it turns out, of course, “Billy” is still very much alive as revealed in the film’s final few frames. Even the presentation of the killer, who remains nameless and faceless onscreen, skewers the wide-sweeping, deeply-rooted misogyny in our culture ⏤ the viewer is left unable to properly pin down and access his damage in any conceivably healthy way. That. is. terrifying. Jess’ transformation is a vision of storytelling, thanks in large part to screenwriter Roy Moore, who manages to infuse a sense of potent vulnerability into his sketch of Jess, as well as vibrant portraits of Phyl and Barb, especially. All three women emit variations of womanhood and self-sustainability, and they elevate the material through discerning, affecting, and complex performances.

When the credits were rolling, I couldn’t help but wonder how such a progressively confident thriller could have been made more than 50 years ago. Here we are in 2024, and we still have much work to do. Such a groundbreaking film as Black Christmas feels as vital to the story of women today as it ever has.

Thank you, Bob Clark and Roy Moore, for your gifts of story. And thank you, Olivia Hussey, for portraying one of the most important characters in film history.

Favorite New Year's Horror Movies

Let’s say goodbye to 2024 with our favorite New Year’s horror films. Check out the list on Letterboxd.

by Bee Delores | Instagram | Letterboxd | X and Brett Petersel | Instagram | Letterboxd | X

If you’ve got a bloodlust for high-octane camp, with a very Silent Night, Deadly Night perversity, Paul Tanter’s The Nights Before Christmas will have you absolutely drooling. With a script co-written with Simon Phillips, who also stars as the deranged psychopathic Santa Claus, the film pours thick grittiness over its jagged parts. Opening in a mental asylum, Santa and co-conspirator, Mrs. Claus (Sayla de Goede), wreck havoc on the other patients and the institute’s staff ⏤ perhaps, as we learn, as payback for severe mistreatment. Flash forward four years, and the maniac duo return to finish what they started, plotting out Santa’s List and picking off the names one by one. Even those marked as “Nice” must play a vital role in exacting their revenge. The story devolves into wobbly storytelling, but it’s always gleefully macabre. Where Phillips’ performance is downright chilling, de Goede toys with a child-like temperament in a similar way as Sherie Moon Zombie’s Baby in the Firefly Trilogy. We don’t get nearly enough Christmas-themed horror, and The Nights Before Christmas fits rather nicely in place. [Review originally appeared on B-Sides & Badlands]

In Shudder’s A Creepshow Holiday Special, written and directed by Greg Nicotero, werecreatures play at the center of an admirable, if not totally operational, Christmas treat. Adam Pally stars as an exhausted, end-of-his-rope Robert Weston, who suffers from erratic blackouts, often waking up naked and bloody from some unknown midnight rendezvous. He seeks out “SA,” or “Shapeshifters Anonymous,” in the hopes to find a solution, or at the very least a community to understand what is happening to him. He’s fully aware he changes forms, but he can’t comprehend how or why. [Read Bee's review]

I try to get into the Christmas (horror) spirit every year, but I think my holiday movie-watching has been forever ruined ever since I watched 2016’s Red Christmas. It’s a terrible film filled with terrible characters and an odd storyline, as well as many loopholes, including how the deranged killer/stranger has incredible powers. The fact that this film has a 4.3 rating on IMDb is just insane. [Review by Brett]

Favorite Christmas Horror Films

Forget eggnog and presents. It’s time to share our favorite Christmas horror films full of blood, guts, killer Santas, decapitations and more. Check out our favorite Christmas horror films on Letterboxd.

A24’s Death of a Unicorn’s first trailer has been released. The film hits theaters in Spring 2025.

Terrifier 3 is coming back to the theaters for a limited time (December 24th). Get your tickets now!

Torture porn, shock-for-shock's sake, violence that doesn't serve the plot, and characters you hate - what was going on in the 2000s in horror cinema? And why were audiences hungry for it? Millennial Nasties takes a critical but appreciative look at an oft-ignored subset of horror. This book dissects the English-language horror films of the 2000s and the cultural events they were responding to. Processing tragedy and war throughout the world, keeping pace with films from other countries, and swinging wildly away from the safe horror of the 1990s, the 2000s brought grisly kills and shocking gore to cinema audiences and home viewers. Films once dismissed as torture porn, their nasty slasher friends, and the remakes of this era have found a new home, and that home is a subgenre called Millennial Nasties. Order the book here.

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