CORPORATE LINE: This holiday season the traditional Christmas tale will never be the same with the cleverly twisted, merrily irreverent story of a Santa so bad he’s wickedly funny. Terry Zwigoff’s BAD SANTA stars Billy Bob Thornton as one of the most crooked, corrupted and downright hysterical Kris Kringles ever to grace the screen. Inspired by a mix of movie classics including the outrageous one-liners and outcasts of “The Bad News Bears” and the riotous impertinence of “South Park,” with a dash of the holiday spirit of “A Christmas Carol,” albeit one that would make Dickens wince, BAD SANTA is a Christmas comedy unlike any other.
On the heels of two films that brought him a hip, cult following and critical acclaim – “Crumb” and “Ghost World” – director Terry Zwigoff emerges with his most accessible comedy to date, all the while pulling no punches on a wild ride through Christmas’ outlandish, funnier side. Laughing riotously all the way, the film skewers such classic holiday traditions as rampant commercialism, smart-mouthed mall rugrats and Santa’s saintly image.
Billy Bob Thornton is Willie T. Stokes, a washed-up, wise-cracking Department Store Santa who can’t help but be more naughty than nice. Underneath his ill-fitting red suit, Willie is actually a safecracker who makes one big score every year – on Christmas Eve. As shoppers head home from the mall, this Santa and his ingenious Elf – Willie’s midget partner-incrime Marcus (TONY COX) – crack the store safe and make off with their own holiday stash. But then comes Phoenix. Here Santa and his Elf find their annual heist endangered by a pesky store manager (JOHN RITTER), a savvy mall detective (BERNIE MAC), a sexy Santa fan (LAUREN GRAHAM) and an innocent but beleaguered 8 year-old misfit (BRETT KELLY) who decides to believe that Willie – as intoxicated, acid-tongued and felonious as he seems to be — is the real Santa he’s been seeking.
BAD SANTA stars a comic ensemble that includes Billy Bob Thornton, Bernie Mac, John Ritter (reuniting with Billy Bob Thornton for the first time since “Sling Blade”), Lauren Graham, Tony Cox, Brett Kelly, Cloris Leachman and Lauren Tom. The film is directed by Terry Zwigoff from a script by the team of John Requa and Glenn Ficarra. The executive producers are Joel and Ethan Coen and the producers are Sarah Aubrey, John Cameron and Bob Weinstein.
THE GOOD: This anti-holiday flick is not for the faint at heart. Badder Santa (the unrated version) is offensive, cruel, mean, nasty, and funny.
Led by Billy Bob Thornton, the cast is fantastic. Thornton’s miserable excuse for a human is more than the role needed. Thornton will have you believing that he never believed in Santa—on screen and off. Bernie Mac is good as the store security officer, but it is Tony Cox, as Thornton’s partner in crime, who comes in under the radar and nearly steals the show.
DIRECTOR’S CUT: Usually a Director’s Cut runs longer than the original theatrical release. The original theatrical release of Bad Santa runs ninety-one minutes and the Director’s Cut runs eighty-eight minutes. It’s not something you will really notice. It wasn’t massive difference and doesn’t add to the movie—it actual takes away the amount of time.
DVD FEATURES: The commentary by Director Terry Zwigoff and Editor Robert Hoffman doesn’t seem to be a major difference either. They both seem to talk about the issues with the movie and how they had to deal with certain changes.
The deleted and alternate scenes are very interesting and seem to be relevant to the movie so it wasn’t obvious why they were cut. The outtakes aren’t anything of real interest. The “behind the scenes” is dry and nothing special as are the interviews—which are remarkably short.
FRANKLY: Bad Santa is good. Watch it late, when the kids go to bed—it’s for adults only! As in most Hollywood films, Willie goes from Grinch to lovable lug. And even though it gets melodramatic and sappy nothing melts your heart like Santa having a quickie with a hooker.
+ Charlie Craine
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