Christmas
With holiday season underway, Charles E. Sellier’s Silent Night, Deadly Night was the perfect way to usher in the spirit on this Horrific Inquiry.
Die Hard is not a film that just occurs during the holiday season, but rather because of it.
Love Actually is as heartwarming as it is quotable – the experience of love and joy a permanent staple each and every year.
Scrooged skillfully blends a cocktail of valuable lessons and infectious laughter, ensuring its place as a memorable addition to the holiday film canon.
A Creature Was Stirring feels as though it has something deeper to say, but never seems to find the cohesion and narrative direction to say it.
The Holdovers is overflowing with gentle warmth and biting humor, making for a perfect Christmas movie and an easy go-to cheer-up picture.
Its absurdity may run its course, but proves not every aspect of Jack Frost needs to be put on ice.
If you are looking for a warm and cheery film propped by the predictability of Christmas magic, Falling for Christmas is the film for you.
It proves once again that it knows how to utilize some of the most intelligent and hilarious comedians working in Hollywood.
Violent Night is a worthy addition to the Christmas action-comedy lineup, but its sizable helping of blood and gore isn’t enough to make it truly stand out.
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The Killing Tree had the potential to be an over-the-top Holiday horror classic, but the practical effects moments are overshadowed by bad CGI.
Black Christmas is not the knock-out holiday film you might be craving, but it entertaining to say the least.
Patrick Ridremont’s The Advent Calendar is a holiday horror film about a woman given the opportunity to walk again, but at what price?
This battle of Nazis versus Christmas forms the unusual narrative backbone of a bizarre yet beloved Christmas classic: Santa Claus is Comin’ to Town.