Via TVOrNotTv:
Naughty and nice
Bob Clark: the director behind two unlikely Christmas classics

http://www.cbc.ca/arts/film/story/2008/12/10/f-black-christmas-christmas-story.html

A director best known for B-level horror pics and one T&A sensation
might not sound like a promising source of Christmas cheer. Yet when
Bob Clark died in 2007, he left behind two films that deserve a place
alongside Yuletide classics like Miracle on 34th Street and It's a
Wonderful Life.

Bob Clark's films Black Christmas (1974) and A Christmas Story (1983)
have become staples of holiday TV, and both have been re-released on
DVD this season. A long-time cult favourite, Black Christmas was made
possible by Canada's tax-shelter allowances of the '70s and early
'80s, and was shot in various recognizable Toronto locations (among
them, the University of Toronto).

Black Christmas begins during a party, as a bunch of sorority girls
celebrate the upcoming holiday break. During the festivities, a killer
manages to slip into the Pi Kappa Sig house attic unseen. When the
girls receive a series of disturbing, profanity-laden phone calls and
one of their housemates disappears, they turn to the police for help.
While the psycho dispatches his victims one by one, three of the
spunkier co-eds — Jess (Olivia Hussey), Phyl (SCTV's Andrea Martin)
and Barb (a scene-stealing Margot Kidder) — try to survive long enough
for the local police chief (John Saxon) to trace those increasingly
menacing calls.

After a decent theatrical run in Canada, Black Christmas was DOA on
American screens and dismissed by critics as a cruddy, low-rent
slasher film. Thanks to word of mouth, the odd midnight screening and
the internet (where one die-hard Canadian fan has created the popular
fansite called Itsmebilly.com), the film has attracted a number of
passionate devotees over the years, including Steve Martin, Elvis
Presley (!) and countless film geeks who have pronounced it a
groundbreaking entry in the horror film canon.

I am firmly in the geek camp on this one. While undeniably low budget,
Black Christmas was innovative in both plot and style. The movie's
subjective camerawork (from the killer's point of view),
claustrophobic setting, creepy sound effects and the showdown between
the crazed killer and a "final girl" would eventually become staples
of the slasher genre. As Clark acknowledges on one of the DVD extras,
the climactic moment in 1979's When a Stranger Calls ("The call is
coming from inside the house!") was a blatant ripoff of his film.
Given Clark's friendship and brief collaboration with director John
Carpenter, horror aficionados also maintain that Carpenter's Halloween
(1978) was inspired by the heavy breathing and stalking camerawork
pioneered in Black Christmas.

After Black Christmas, Clark forged an unpredictable career filled
with diverse projects and about-faces. Instead of continuing in the
horror vein, he established a reputation for directing A-list actors
in classier, award-winning fare like Murder by Decree (1978) and
Tribute (1980). In 1982, however, he changed course yet again,
releasing the semi-autobiographical teen exploitation romp Porky's.
Critically maligned but astoundingly profitable, Porky's enabled Clark
to obtain U.S. funding for his next film, A Christmas Story (1983),
which was based on the writings of American humourist Jean Shepherd.

If a feel-good holiday movie seems out of place in Clark's resumé, one
need only listen to his DVD commentary on A Christmas Story: Ultimate
Collector's Edition. In it, he gives a rhapsodic account of the first
time he heard Shepherd on the radio; it suggests that A Christmas
Story was no money gig — it was a labour of love. Based on Shepherd's
novel In God We Trust, All Others Pay Cash, the film unfolds as a
series of nostalgic vignettes with one central plot line: young
Ralphie Parker's (Peter Billingsley) determination to receive a Red
Ryder air rifle for Christmas (despite his mother's warning, "You'll
shoot your eye out!").

What drew Clark to Shepherd's work was its tone, which Clark described
as "classic Americana without sentimentality." A grown-up Ralphie
(Jean Shepherd) narrates, Wonder Years-style, while his onscreen
nine-year-old self daydreams, fends off school bullies and endures a
truly bizarre (and politically incorrect) family Christmas dinner
involving a "Chinese turkey."

Some of it comes off as precious, but Clark was careful to season the
movie with enough realism and edge to keep things interesting. The
scene where Ralphie accidentally utters the "F-dash-dash-dash word"
and is treated to a mouthful of Lifebuoy soap is instantly relatable;
so is a moment where Ralphie and his two pals, Flick and Schwartz,
engage in a schoolyard game of "triple dog dare" with disastrous
results. For a movie that's become a family crowd-pleaser, A Christmas
Story features some surprisingly dysfunctional elements, including an
ongoing, passive-aggressive parental feud over a leg lamp to a visit
with one of the creepiest mall Santas ever.

A Christmas Story was well received in Canada, and it earned Clark two
Genie Awards (for best director and screenplay). Like Black Christmas,
the movie was stalled by a truncated theatrical release in the U.S.,
and only achieved popular acclaim when it became available again via
TV broadcasts and VHS tapes years later. A Christmas Story now has
such a rabid following that the TBS cable network plays 24-hour
marathons of it every Christmas Eve. To mark the movie's 25th
anniversary, thousands recently made a pilgrimage to the Cleveland
home where some of the film's exteriors were shot.

What ties these seemingly disparate films together is Clark's healthy
skepticism about the spirit of the holidays, coupled with a genuine
fondness for his characters — the same "warmth and affection" he
adored in Jean Shepherd's fiction. It's there in Marian Waldman's
hilarious portrayal of Mrs. Mac, the boozy housemother in Black
Christmas. It's also present in A Christmas Story's final scenes,
which involve a shambolic, last-minute detour to the Chop Suey Palace.
Reflecting on their unorthodox turkey dinner, the entire Parker family
erupts in delirious laughter, which fills the restaurant. The moment
feels joyous and entirely unscripted — and is precisely the sort of
thing that sets Clark's holiday films apart from the rest.


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