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‘Home for the Holidays’ – Before ‘Black Christmas’ There Was This 1972 Slasher

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The American Broadcasting Company aired its iconic series ABC Movie of the Week from 1969 to 1975. In the intro of Michael Karol’s book The ABC Movie of the Week Companion: A Loving Tribute to the Classic Series, the author called the anthology show “influential” for baby-boomers. Karol then went on to quote a press release from Barry Diller; ABC’s vice president at the time said the network was trying to “broaden the base of familiar television anthologies and movies-for-television” and how a 90-minute format would “do justice to that special echelon of story ideas, which don’t quite work in the standard one-and two-hour television program forms.” The concept also entailed working with production companies outside of their own (ABC-Circle Films), including frequent collaborator Spelling-Goldberg (as in, Aaron Spelling and Leonard Goldberg). And as many fans of vintage American tele-cinema will agree, one of Spelling-Goldberg’s, not to mention ABC’s most memorable TV-movies from that momentous era is Home for the Holidays.

Back then, starring in a made-for-television movie after appearing on the big screen wasn’t as frowned upon as it is today. So Jessica Walter going from Play Misty for Me to this movie-of-the-week wasn’t a huge step down in her career — if anything, the part gave Walter more recognition. The Flying Nun herself, Sally Field was on the cusp of greater fame with Sybil and Smokey and the Bandit in her near future. Jill Haworth has the least amount of screen-time in Home for the Holidays, but her character made a memorable exit. The two most prolific actors in the female cast, Julie Harris and Eleanor Parker, each brought experience and gravitas to their opposing roles. And three-time Oscar winner Walter Brennan, who turned in one of his final performances before passing away two years later, held his own even as his character was bedridden the entire time. There isn’t an ineffectual performance among this stacked ensemble.

“If there’s one thing the good people of Kenyon liked to talk about, it was the Morgan Family,” states a supporting character early on in 1972’s Home for the Holidays. This one pointed line says everything about the family in question without really saying anything at all. Yet, regardless of what happened in the past to earn this clan such a reputation, nothing can compare to the events of this Christmas. As four estranged sisters reunite at their ancestral house, an eeriness washes over them as well as those watching this classic TV-movie. There’s something wrong about the Morgans. Something very, very wrong.

home for the holidays

Image: Sally Field, Jill Haworth and Eleanor Parker’s characters surround Walter Brennan’s bedridden character in Home for the Holidays.

Viewers are barely five minutes into Home for the Holidays before the laid-up Morgan patriarch all but announces the goings-on at his remote estate. The ailing father removes his hands from his face after pretending to sleep and, in a hushed and anxious voice, asks his confidante and oldest daughter Alexandra/Alex (Parker), “Where is she?” The “she” in question is, of course, Mr. Morgan’s second wife and the story’s ostensible villain, Elizabeth (Harris). It wouldn’t be until all of the Morgan daughters are gathered before their one remaining biological parent that the audience learns the man’s life is in immediate danger.

Screenwriter Joseph Stefano understood family dysfunction; he wrote the script for Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho adaptation. And while his characters in Home for the Holidays have the potential to be as complex as Norman Bates, there was too little time to expose everyone’s innermost workings. Stefano and director John Llewellyn Moxey were up against a 75-minute runtime here. Even so, the family “therapy” swiftly begins as soon as Alex’s three younger sisters — Christine/Chris (Field), Frederica/Freddie (Walter) and Joanna/Jo (Haworth) — all arrive and hear out their paranoid father. Once they all catch up in the nastiest manner possible, which includes the father implying one daughter is promiscuous and shaming another for her substance use disorder, the main plot comes into focus. After nine years apart, this curmudgeon’s children have been summoned to look into whether or not Elizabeth is indeed slowly poisoning him. And if she is, maybe then give their stepmother a taste of her own medicine.

The growing storm outside is a timeworn method of amplifying tensions inside. Although, the Morgans don’t exactly need inclement weather to make them feel on edge. Elizabeth’s calm demeanor, even in the face of near constant insinuation, is unnerving enough before reaching all the sheer sadness on display. From an outsider’s perspective, the family’s pathos courses solely through Freddie, whose coping mechanisms are perhaps her last connection to her mother. It’s through Walter’s heavy-hearted character that the four sisters’ shared trauma becomes known; the original Morgan matriarch evidently took her own life on account of her husband’s infidelity. Acting like Henry VIII, the father sought someone else to bear him a son after receiving only daughters. Each of those daughters having a masculine nickname is a bitter reminder of their innate failure to make their father happy.

home for the holidays

Image: Sally Field, Jessica Walter, Jill Haworth and Eleanor Parker in Home for the Holidays.

What starts off like a Hitchcockian thriller eventually transforms into one of the earliest examples of American slashers. A proto-slasher, as some would say. For reference, this movie came out a good eight years before the popular subgenre kicked off and became a permanent fixture of horror. The Morgan daughters have no time to investigate Elizabeth — a woman plagued by rumors since her last husband died under mysterious circumstances — before an unseen assailant picks them off one by one. The meager and bloodless body count along with the soapy adult atmosphere are far cries from the emerging attributes of typical slasher movies. Nevertheless, the journey to death is familiar. Unsuspecting characters gather at a single location only to then die at the hands of a disguised killer. In this case, the pitchfork-wielding perpetrator dons a yellow slicker and a pair of red kitchen gloves.

When analyzing his other directed works, such as The City of the Dead and fellow famous TV-movie The Night Stalker, Moxey was undoubtedly more at home in the supernatural. Home for the Holidays does an admirable job of distorting its reality so that everything increasingly feels like a nightmare, though. Dramatic thunderclaps and ironic dialogue indicate this is, in fact, a story plucked out of someone’s twisted imagination. Moxey’s direction comes across as a patchwork of both American Gothic and Giallo cinema, especially once Field’s character takes off through the rainy woods in search of help and then makes a grave discovery about her perilous situation.

Unlike the slashers to come after, Home for the Holidays doesn’t unmask its villain with sick pleasure. Viewers feel worse now knowing who is actually behind these premeditated murders. Their identity is not as obvious or logical as most killers’ reveals, but once the reasoning is given so greatly in their mid-Atlantic way of speaking, the tragedy of everything that has happened so far hits even harder. There isn’t a drop of snow to be found in this cheerless Christmas-set story, however, the antagonist’s motive rant is chilling.

From pursuers of campy classic television to slasher scholars, Home for the Holidays is a gift for everyone to enjoy. It entertains as much as it intrigues. Whether or not this movie directly inspired a more famous staple of holiday horror — Bob Clark’s Black Christmas was released two years later — is unclear, but without question, this beloved piece of vintage TV did predict tropes still in use today.

home for the holidays

Image: The poster for Home for the Holidays showcases its slicker-clad and pitchfork-wielding killer.

Paul Lê is a Texas-based, Tomato approved critic at Bloody Disgusting, Dread Central, and Tales from the Paulside.

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Editorials

Silly, Self-Aware ‘Amityville Christmas Vacation’ Is a Welcome Change of Pace [The Amityville IP]

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Twice a month Joe Lipsett will dissect a new Amityville Horror film to explore how the “franchise” has evolved in increasingly ludicrous directions. This is “The Amityville IP.” 

After a number of bloated runtimes and technically inept entries, it’s something of a relief to watch Amityville Christmas Vacation (2022). The 55-minute film doesn’t even try to hit feature length, which is a wise decision for a film with a slight, but enjoyable premise.

The amusingly self-aware comedy is written and directed by Steve Rudzinski, who also stars as protagonist Wally Griswold. The premise is simple: a newspaper article celebrating the hero cop catches the attention of B’n’B owner Samantha (Marci Leigh), who lures Wally to Amityville under the false claim that he’s won a free Christmas stay.

Naturally it turns out that the house is haunted by a vengeful ghost named Jessica D’Angelo (Aleen Isley), but instead of murdering him like the other guests, Jessica winds up falling in love with him.

Several other recent Amityville films, including Amityville Cop and Amityville in Space, have leaned into comedy, albeit to varying degrees of success. Amityville Christmas Vacation is arguably the most successful because, despite its hit/miss joke ratio, at least the film acknowledges its inherent silliness and never takes itself seriously.

In this capacity, the film is more comedy than horror (the closest comparison is probably Amityville Vibrator, which blended hard-core erotica with references to other titles in the “series”). The jokes here are enjoyably varied: Wally glibly acknowledges his racism and excessive use of force in a way that reflects the real world culture shift around criticisms of police work; the last names of the lovers, as well the title of the film, are obvious homages to the National Lampoon’s holiday film; and the narrative embodies the usual festive tropes of Hallmark and Lifetime Christmas movies.

This self-awareness buys the film a certain amount of goodwill, which is vital considering Rudzinski’s clear budgetary limitations. Jessica’s ghost make-up is pretty basic, the action is practically non-existent, and the whole film essentially takes place in a single location. These elements are forgivable, though audiences whose funny bone isn’t tickled will find the basic narrative, low stakes, and amateur acting too glaring to overlook. It must be acknowledged that in spite of its brief runtime, there’s still an undeniable feeling of padding in certain dialogue exchanges and sequences.

Despite this, there’s plenty to like about Amityville Christmas Vacation.

Rudzinski is the clear stand-out here. Wally is a goof: he’s incredibly slow on the uptake and obsessed with his cat Whiskers. The early portions of the film lean on Wally’s inherent likeability and Rudzinski shares an easy charm with co-star Isley, although her performance is a bit more one-note (Jessica is mostly confused by the idiot who has wandered into her midst).

Falling somewhere in the middle are Ben Dietels as Rick (Ben Dietels), Wally’s pathetic co-worker who has invented a family to spend the holidays with, and Zelda (Autumn Ivy), the supernatural case worker that Jessica Zooms with for advice on how to negotiate her newfound situation.

The other actors are less successful, particularly Garrett Hunter as ghost hunter Creighton Spool (Scott Lewis), as well as Samantha, the home owner. Leigh, in particular, barely makes an impression and there’s absolutely no bite in her jealous threats in the last act.

Like most comedies, audience mileage will vary depending on their tolerance for low-brow jokes. If the idea of Wally chastising and giving himself a pep talk out loud in front of Jessica isn’t funny, Amityville Christmas Vacation likely isn’t for you. As it stands, the film’s success rate is approximately 50/50: for every amusing joke, there’s another one that misses the mark.

Despite this – or perhaps because of the film’s proximity to the recent glut of terrible entries – Amityville Christmas Vacation is a welcome breath of fresh air. It’s not a great film, but it is often amusing and silly. There’s something to be said for keeping things simple and executing them reasonably well.

That’s a lesson that other indie Amityville filmmakers could stand to learn.

2.5 out of 5 skulls

The Amityville IP Awards go to…

  • Recurring Gag: The film mines plenty of jokes from characters saying the quiet part (out) loud, including Samantha’s delivery of “They’re always the people I hate” when Wally asks how he won a contest he didn’t enter.
  • Holiday Horror: There’s a brief reference that Jessica died in an “icicle accident,” which plays like a perfect blend between a horror film and a Hallmark film.
  • Best Line: After Jessica jokes about Wally’s love of all things cats to Zelda, calling him the “cat’s meow,” the case worker’s deadpan delivery of “Yeah, that sounds like an inside joke” is delightful.
  • Christmas Wish: In case you were wondering, yes, Santa Claus (Joshua Antoon) does show up for the film’s final joke, though it’s arguably not great.
  • Chainsaw Award: This film won Fangoria’s ‘Best Amityville’ Chainsaw award in 2023, which makes sense given how unique it is compared to many other titles released in 2022. This also means that the film is probably the best entry we’ll discuss for some time, so…yay?
  • ICYMI: This editorial series was recently included in a profile in the The New York Times, another sign that the Amityville “franchise” will never truly die.

Next time: we’re hitting the holidays in the wrong order with a look at November 2022’s Amityville Thanksgiving, which hails from the same creative team as Amityville Karen <gulp>

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