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“The Boulet Brothers’ Dragula” – Dracmorda and Swanthula Select Their Top Five Christmas Horror Movies

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Boulet Brothers Christmas Horror

The fifth season of “The Boulet Brothers’ Dragula” is on hiatus for the holidays, set to resume airing on January 9, 2024. As a special treat to help with the wait, the Boulet Brothers bring unhappy holiday tidings with a selection of their favorite Christmas horror movies!

Season five of the mainline series is currently delivering a diverse cast from all over the world on an even bigger stage, showcasing some of the best looks and performances in the show’s history, as well as some of the most extreme extermination challenges ever seen. In addition, the Boulet Brothers‘ themselves, Dracmorda and Swanthula, have taken over as the series directors.

It’s been a monumental year or so for The Boulet Brothers, which included the release of the aforementioned spin-off “The Boulet Brothers’ Dragula: Titans, a world tour, and The Boulet Brothers’ Halfway to Halloween TV Special (written and directed by the Boulet Brothers). As if that’s not enough, “The Boulet Brothers’ Dragula” has already received a sixth season renewal.

As if their work and “The Boulet Brothers’ Dragula” didn’t already speak for itself, Dracmorda and Swanthula are savvy horror fans, and they’ve offered a special selection of Christmas horror movies to keep you busy while we wait for season five to return.

Without further ado….

Drac: Merry Christmas uglies, and unhappy holidays! While all your relatives, friends and community members are trying to ruin your holiday break with good tidings and cheer, we here at Boulet manor know just what you need to get you through these difficult times.

Swan: It’s dripping wet, heart pounding, and can keep you out of breath for up to two hours at a time…

Drac: …No, not that you naughty little thing – we’re talking about a good old fashioned classic Christmas Horror Film, and we’ve comprised a list of our favorite flicks that are sure to get you through this despicably joyous season.

Swan: There’s something for everyone here, so turn down the lights, turn up the volume, and enjoy your holiday in hell!


5: Christmas Evil

Christmas Evil

Drac: This movie is mentally ill, weird, and makes absolutely no sense, so it’s just like Christmas! This film has somehow become a cult favorite, and John Waters himself loves it, so who am I to argue? Due to its horridness, it has secured a place on our jolly little list.


4: Gremlins

Gremlins

Swan: This is my favorite gateway holiday horror film. It’s funny, it’s campy, it’s deliciously 80’s in style, and it features hundreds of evil little creatures destroying an entire town on Christmas Eve. What more could you want?


3: Female Trouble

Female Trouble

Drac: This movie is a wild ride, and the ultimate John Waters masterpiece. It kicks off with one of the most memorable family Christmas scenes in cinematic history, and it shows you what a dark turn life can take if you don’t get the heels you want from Santa.


2: Silent Night, Deadly Night

Silent Night, Deadly Night

Swan: While some consider Silent Night, Deadly Night to be the ultimate holiday slasher, I think it doubles as soft core gay adult entertainment. Robert Brian Wilson as Billy Chapman is the type of Santa that you want to break into your house and stab you to death (if you know what I mean).


1: Black Christmas

Black Christmas

Drac: Black Christmas is, in my opinion, the ultimate holiday horror film. It perfectly captures the eeriness of Christmas, and shows you that when you turn the diamond a little and look at the holiday through a slightly different lens, it really can be truly terrifying.


Celebrate the four pillars of Drag, Filth, Horror, & Glamour when “The Boulet Brothers’ Dragula” season five resumes on January 9, with new episodes airing on Shudder and AMC+ every Tuesday.

Boulet Brothers Dracmorda and Swanthula

Photo Credit: Nathan Noyes

Horror journalist, RT Top Critic, and Critics Choice Association member. Has appeared on PBS series' Monstrum, served on the SXSW Midnighter shorts jury, and moderated horror panels for WonderCon, SeriesFest, and Popcorn Frights Film Fest.

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Editorials

5 Found Footage Hybrid Horror Movies to Watch After ‘Backrooms’

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Banshee Chapter - Found Footage Hybrid Horror Movies
Banshee Chapter

Found footage movies rely on immersion and a particular kind of suspension of disbelief in order to scare viewers, so it stands to reason that playing along with the “kayfabe” of it all is necessary for these movies to be effective. However, despite being something of a purist when it comes to in-universe recordings, I’ve come to accept that traditional productions can benefit from the occasional injection of found footage thrills.

For instance, Kane Parsons’ Backrooms adaptation makes genius use of the analog gimmick in order to trap us in the titular rooms alongside our main characters before effortlessly switching back to a more cinematic language. In honor of these dynamic films that manage to combine the best of both worlds, today I’d like to share six other hybrid horror movies that successfully incorporate found footage into their scares!

For the purposes of this list, “hybrid” horror movies are defined as any flick that shifts between diegetic recordings and traditional filming techniques for a significant amount of time (or at least for pivotal scenes).

As usual, don’t forget to comment below with your own hybrid favorites if you think a particularly freaky one was missed.

With that out of the way, onto the list!


5. The Last Broadcast (1998)

Lance Weiler and Stefan Avalos in found footage horror film The Last Broadcast

Internet critics may have overstated the influence that Stefan Avalos and Lance Weiler’s The Last Broadcast had on The Blair Witch Project, but the found footage subgenre still owes a huge debt to this underrated piece of avant-garde filmmaking. However, while the movie sets itself up as a documentary about the disappearance of a group of cryptid-hunters attempting to track down the Jersey Devil, things take a darker and much more grounded turn towards the final act.

I won’t get into details in order to avoid spoilers, but suffice to say that the jarring shift in perspective actually helps to sell the idea that everything we’ve seen before the finale was an attempt at using filmmaking to manipulate the public perception of a “real” incident.

Not bad for a movie with a $900 budget!


4. Cam (2018)

When you consider just how much the internet affects our daily lives, it’s strange that we don’t see Screenlife elements pop up in more movies these days. For instance, Isa Mazzei & Daniel Goldhaber’s highly underrated Cam only works as a freaky parable about online sex-work because it masterfully balances Madeline Brewer’s intimate moments with highly immersive segments within cyberspace.

While one might argue that the entire film could have been produced as a Screenlife experience, the hybrid approach allows the filmmakers to explore our main character’s life beyond the screens – with the duality of modern human existence actually becoming a recurring theme in the story.


3. Banshee Chapter (2013)

Banshee Chapter - found footage horror movies

Most of H.P. Lovecraft’s popular stories were told in the epistolary format (where the text is presented as an in-universe compilation of letters or personal notes), so it makes sense that a spiritually faithful adaptation of his work would incorporate elements from the modern-day equivalent to epistolary fiction – found footage!

That’s why Blair Erickson’s Banshee Chapter is such an effective scare-fest, as this hybrid adaptation of From Beyond -retold through a conspiratorial lens as it references MK-Ultra and even secretive numbers stations- immerses viewers in a mind-bending tapestry of Cosmic Horror that blurs the line between fiction and reality.


2. The Deep House (2019)

The underwater setting does a lot of the heavy lifting when it comes to Alexandre Bustillo and Julien Maury’s The Deep House, with the film being especially uncomfortable if you’re already scared of tight spaces and being deprived of oxygen. However, even the universally unsettling elements of the flick only work because the POV often shifts into claustrophobic footage courtesy of our main characters’ GoPro cameras.

Telling the story of a couple of YouTubers who encounter a haunted house at the bottom of an artificial lake while vacationing in France, The Deep House’s first-person exploration sequences contain some of the film’s scariest moments. In fact, I’d argue that the movie didn’t even need ghosts, as becoming trapped in the titular House already sounds like a fate worse than death.


1. Behind The Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon (2006)

My personal favorite instance of filmmakers successfully managing to combine traditional cinematography with POV filmmaking, Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon, is proof that the two formats can co-exist if the right story comes along.

After all, what better way to conclude a mockumentary all about reality getting increasingly more cinematic than by ditching the found footage gimmick altogether during the finale? Not only does this shift in presentation work on a conceptual level, but it also elevates Behind The Mask into a proper Slasher, which is probably why we’re so excited for that long-overdue sequel!

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