Silent Night, Deadly Night Review

The film follows Billy Chapman, a young man traumatized by witnessing his parents’ murder by a man in a Santa suit on Christmas Eve. Raised in a strict, abusive orphanage, Billy eventually suffers a psychological break when forced to play Santa at a local toy store. He embarks on a "naughty or nice" killing spree, wielding an axe while dressed as Father Christmas. The Controversy: Protesting St. Nick

"Silent Night, Deadly Night" (1984) remains one of the most infamous entries in the 1980s slasher boom, less for its cinematic quality and more for the firestorm of controversy it ignited upon release. The Plot: Trauma in a Red Suit Silent Night, Deadly Night

The outcry was so intense that TriStar Pictures pulled the film from theaters after only two weeks, despite it outperforming A Nightmare on Elm Street at the box office during its opening weekend. Legacy and Cult Status The film follows Billy Chapman, a young man

Parents picketed theaters, singing Christmas carols to drown out the film's screams. The Controversy: Protesting St

Critics Siskel and Ebert famously went on a crusade against it, with Ebert reading the names of the production crew on air to "shame" them.

Stripped of the 1980s moral panic, the film is a quintessential "mean-spirited" slasher. It leans heavily into psychological trauma and "Santa-slasher" tropes that had been explored before (like in Christmas Evil ), but with a more aggressive, commercial edge.

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Silent Night, Deadly Night