Released by: Scream Factory
Release Date: December 20th, 1974 (Theatrical)
December 13th, 2016 (Blu-ray)
December 6th, 2022 (4K blu-ray)
Region Code: REGION A (locked) (2K blu-ray)
Region Code: REGION A (locked) (2K blu-ray)
REGION FREE (4K blu-ray)
Run Time: 1h 38m
Audio: English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
English: DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0
English: DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0 Mono (Original)
English: Dolby Digital 5.1 (448 kbps)
Video: 1080p (1.85:1 Aspect Ratio) (Disc One: 2K Transfer)
1080p (1.78:1 Aspect Ratio) (Disc Two: Critical Mass Transfer)
Run Time: 1h 38m
Audio: English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
English: DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0
English: DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0 Mono (Original)
English: Dolby Digital 5.1 (448 kbps)
Video: 1080p (1.85:1 Aspect Ratio) (Disc One: 2K Transfer)
1080p (1.78:1 Aspect Ratio) (Disc Two: Critical Mass Transfer)
2160p (1.85:1 aspect ratio) (4K blu-ray)
THE FEATURES ⭐⭐⭐⭐
The audio is remastered but sounds the same as the previous blu-ray just without the sibilance that plagued the original release.
*UPDATE* I got into contact with Shout! Factory and they sent me a replacement disc. I got it fast too. I popped it in and it seems like they have fixed the problem. There is still that hard 'S' sound, but it isn't as bad as before and that is probably how it sounded in the first place. Way to go Shout! Factory for fixing this problem in a very timely manner.
Oh, why don't you go find a wall socket and stick your tongue in it, that'll give you a charge. -Barb
NOTE: This review was originally posted on December 23rd, 2016. It is presented exactly as written and has not been changed in any way.
Note #2: I have update this review with my thoughts on the new 4K blu-ray that Scream Factory recently release. The special features are the same as the previous release, but the picture, sound, and packaging have changed. You can read about them in their respective categories down below.
THE FEATURES ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Disc One: 2K Remastered Scan
Commentary with
director Bob Clark
This is a really great commentary. Clark is never at a loss
for a story and we get some good ones. He covers everything from the house to
the different techniques used throughout the film. This is a must listen for
fans of the film.
Commentary with
actors John Saxon and Keir Dullea
The two actors here were recorded separately and spliced
together to make for a decent commentary track. If you have watched the
featurettes found on the second disc of this release then you have heard most
of what this commentary has to offer. It isn’t bad, just bland.
Commentary with
“Billy”
Nick Mancuso records this track as if he were Billy 40 years
later. I listened to ten minutes of this track and turned it off. Gimmick
tracks can work, listen to the commentary track with Ben Stiller, Jack Black,
and Robert Downey Jr. to hear how a track like this can work. Mancuso is a
talented actor, but I sure even he thought this was a dumb idea. This is a
waste of time.
Audio Interview with
Bob Clark
This is just as it sounds. This is an audio interview with
Bob Clark that plays over the first 30 minutes of the film. Some say that it
acts as “a fourth commentary track” and it isn’t. It is a good listen though.
Disc Two: Critical Mass
“Restored” Version
Film and Furs:
Remembering Black Christmas with Art Hindle (26m 11s, HD)
Newly produced featurette made by Shout! Factory and Red
Shirt Pictures. Art Hindle shares some really nice and interesting stories
covering the time he was making Black Christmas as well as some of the other
films that he made with Bob Clark.
Victims and Virgins:
Remembering Black Christmas with Lynne Griffin (26m 35s, HD)
This is the second and last featurette that was made for
this release by Shout! Factory and Red Shirt Pictures. Griffin talks about
working with Bob Clark and how much fun she (and the others) had a set. She
also talks about her time on the convention circuit. She will bring a plastic
bag to each convention and if someone is talking for too long on a panel she is
on, she will put the bag on her head to signify to that person that they need
to let others have a chance to speak as well.
Black Christmas
Legacy (40m 22s, HD)
Produced for the “Seasons Grievings” blu-ray that was
released, only in Canada, in 2015 by Anchor Bay. This is a look back at the
film through interviews with some of the cast and crew, but also with some of
the film’s biggest fans. I found this to be one of the better features on this
set. The only thing that I did not like about this was that they have a
“Remembering Bob Clark” chapter and it is incredibly short. It should have been
longer. Other than that, this featurette is nice.
40th
Anniversay Panel at FanExpo 2014 (18m 2s, HD)
John Saxon, Lynne Griffin, and Nick Mancuso are on hand to
talk about the film and its lasting effect. Mancuso, at one point, asks the
crowd why they like the film this far out from its release. The response was
one any fan would give: Because its good. There is not much here, outside of
that, which we do not already know from the other featurettes. Also, John Saxon
is very hard to hear even when they do put a microphone in front of him. This
is not a jab at Saxon, just a warning that you might have to turn up the volume
to hear him.
On Screen!: Black
Christmas (48m 41s, SD, 1.85:1 4x3)
This is arguably the best feature on the disc. On Screen!
was a tv show that ran in Canada from 2005 to 2008 and covered a wide variety
of Canadian made films. Their first show was this episode that focused on Black
Christmas. We learn a lot about the film. The original script was about
babysitters. Clark took the script by Roy Moore and added a lot of the humor.
I really liked this and it reminded me a lot of the Fox
Movie Channel docs that have shown up on the different Fox dvds and blu-rays.
12 Days of Black
Christmas (19m 48s, SD)
This is where we move from the Anchor Bay special features
to the Critical Mass special features. This is a featurette, hosted by John Saxon,
that looks at the making of the film. We get interviews from the main stay of
actors and we get much of the same stories heard elsewhere on the disc. We do
get interviews with Olivia Hussey, Doug McGarth, and Margot Kidder.
Black Christmas
Revisited (36m 25s, SD)
Another Critical Mass featurette, this one is one part
location revisiting and one part making of. The making of stuff is standard
stuff, but the location revisiting was interesting even for the simple fact
that this is what Scream Factory and Sean Clark would start doing five or six
years later on a regular basis.
Archival Interviews
(1h 41m, SD)
Olivia Hussey, Art Hindle, Margot Kidder, Bob Clark, and
John Saxon. Each of the interview are separate from on another. These are raw
interviews in that we hear the questions being asked. These interviews would
then be edited into the featurettes that we have on this set. Very rarely do we
get raw interview footage like this for a dvd or blu-ray release. It is long
and hard to get through, but I think that te die hard fans will eat this up.
Midnight Screening
Q&A (20m 21s, SD)
John Saxon, Bob Clark, and Carl Zittrer are on hand for this
screening that happened at “The Nuart”
theater in Santa Monica in 2004. Bad
audio makes for a tough watch.
Two Scenes with a New
Soundtrack (3m 4s, HD. 1.85:1 4x3)
Billy’s Entrance and Last Scene. The audio on Billy is
supposed to be the original audio, but it still sounded muffled like it does in
the film.
Theatrical Trailers
(English and French) (8m 16s, SD)
One English trailer, one French trailer. Both the same
trailer.
Original TV and Radio
Spots (3m 9s, SD)
3 TV Spots with the second one being a shortened version of
the theatrical trailer.
2 Radio spots
Alternate Title
Sequences (2m 47s, SD)
2 different title sequences: one for “Silent Night, Evil
Night” and the other for “Black Christmas Silent Night Evil Night” and yes that
second one is just a run on title.
Photo Gallery (52
Images)
THE PACKAGING ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Scream Factory has given us the standard package here. We
get a slip sleeve that features newly commissioned artwork that is really nice.
The artwork is a montage of events from the film and captures the film really well.
The reverse cover is the film’s now infamous theatrical
poster with the girl sitting in a rocking chair with a bag over her head. The
tag line reading: If this film doesn’t make your skin crawl its on too
tight. Still one of the best tag lines for any film.
The two set is housed inside of a non-eco blu-ray case.
Both disc are REGION A (locked)
The 4K blu-ray is REGION FREE while the blu-ray discs are REGION A (locked)
THE PICTURE ⭐⭐⭐⭐
This is one of the trickiest things to cover with this
release. When the film was released on blu-ray back in 2008 (Critical Mass),
the reviews were overwhelmingly negative. The transfer was taken from a worn
print that showed its true colors when put under the microscope. From 2008
until 2016 this is what we had. Sure, we could have imported releases from a
bunch of different countries, but the picture quality was never that great.
Now comes the 2K remastered edition from Scream Factory. This
was promised to be the closest the film has ever looked to being how it looked
when it hit theaters in 1974. From the opening title sequence (which is just a
look at the house while the opening credits play over it) you can tell that
this is going to be a very different transfer. The first thing are the blacks.
In the Critical Mass version, there is a lot of black crush. The encode can not
handle the deep level of blacks. The Scream Factory transfer handles these with
ease, resulting in some of the deepest and darkest blacks I have ever seen.
Trust me, when you see the black level in this transfer you will be amazed as
well.
Next are the colors. The Critical Mass blu-ray has a blue
tint to it. Not like how Rabid Grannies was, but there is a slight blue tint
that you can see when looking at anything that has light shown on it. Looking
at the Scream Factory transfer, the colors look way more natural.
With the 2K transfer, all of the scratches and debris has
been removed and the grain seems to be leveled.
To me, the Scream Factory 2K transfer beats the Critical
Mass transfer all the way, but there are fans who think otherwise. That is why
Scream Factory has both transfers included in this set. You can choose which
transfer you like and never touch the other one again.
The new 4K blu-ray contains a brand new "2022 scan of the original camera negative" and the results are really impressive. The black levels are much more impressive than the previous blu-ray, which were fairly deep to begin with. The Christmas lights strung throughout the house really glow and give us the perfect feeling of Christmas. Grain is intact and not as intrusive as the previous blu-ray. It is more refined. The HDR balances the picture nicely and gives it a more film like appearance. I really liked this transfer.
THE SOUND ⭐⭐⭐1/2
Here is the other controversial topic of this release. Fans were very happy when it was announced that this release would include the original mono soundtrack that the film was produced in. The Critical Mass blu-ray had the mono soundtrack, but that version has been out of print for a while. The problem lies in that there is a consistent sibilance and hiss throughout the whole track. Any time someone says anything that has an “S” sound it becomes distorted, like they have a really bad lisp.
Here is the other controversial topic of this release. Fans were very happy when it was announced that this release would include the original mono soundtrack that the film was produced in. The Critical Mass blu-ray had the mono soundtrack, but that version has been out of print for a while. The problem lies in that there is a consistent sibilance and hiss throughout the whole track. Any time someone says anything that has an “S” sound it becomes distorted, like they have a really bad lisp.
This is really
annoying and makes the track very hard to listen too.
The 5.1 and 2.0 DTS-HD tracks should be the saving grace,
but these tracks have added sound effects that are not present in the original
mono track. This was the first time I watched the film so I didn’t know about
these problems until I started to poke around with the various tracks.
Scream Factory has issued a statement that they are going to
take the original mono that was on the Critical Mass blu-ray and apply it to
the first disc and a replacement program has been put into effect. You have to
email them at info@shoutfactory.com
with your mailing address and proof of purchase and they will send out a
replacement copy as soon as they are made available.
Once the replacement disc has been received by me I will update
my score for the sound.
*UPDATE* I got into contact with Shout! Factory and they sent me a replacement disc. I got it fast too. I popped it in and it seems like they have fixed the problem. There is still that hard 'S' sound, but it isn't as bad as before and that is probably how it sounded in the first place. Way to go Shout! Factory for fixing this problem in a very timely manner.
I have been hearing about this film since I was young.
Everybody who has seen this film has told me how great and scary it was, but I
never got around to watching the film until I decided to review it.
All I can say is Wow.
The film is dark, tense, and scary. Bob Clark, who would go
on to ruin his career with Baby Genuises, directs the hell out
of this film. The film opens with a POV shot of the killer climbing up the side
of the house and going into the attic, where he climbs down into the house and
hides inside one of the bedrooms as he waits for his first victim.
This opening would go on to become a staple in slasher
films. The POV shot puts us into the killer’s shoes and Clark uses again
throughout the film. There is one shot, when Billy goes crazy inside the attic
that sent shivers down my spine. I have seen a lot of POV shots in slasher
films, but this one was different. We have never been put into the shoes of
someone has they are wrecking a room in anger. That shot, along with some
others, has stuck with me and it gets
brought up when I talk to people about the film.
The film has some many of the now cliché things that you
would find in a slasher film that I believe that they are too many to count.
The killer hiding his identity, the killer stalking his prey, the police that
don’t listen (initially), the red herring, the use of uncommon items as an
instrument of death, the final girl. These are just some of the things that Bob
Clark brought to the genre. The POV shot had been done before, but not to this
extent.
Black Christmas also uses sound to an effect that I have
never seen before. The sound here is amplified to a certain, rendering some of
the sounds, especially Billy’s voice, to be unbearably creepy and unnerving. We
dread every phone call the girls get because we know that we are going to hear
what can only be described as the internal dialogue of a mad man said out loud.
One thing that I noticed as I was watching Black
Christmas is the lack of jump scares. There are one or two that I
remember (one of them happening during the lead up to the first kill.) Clark
doesn’t rely on the jump scares because he knows that the atmosphere that he
creating is and maintaining is way more effective than hitting the audience
with a constant barrage of jump scares.
The characters in Black Christmas are also not your
normal slasher characters that we know now. In the 70’s and 80’s, slasher film
characters were, a lot of the time, portrayed as real characters with real
motivations that thought like real people do. The lead character of Jess,
played by the always wonderful Olivia Hussey, is pregnant and has to wrestle
with wanting to terminate the pregnancy while the boyfriend wants to keep the
child. You would not see something like this in a modern slasher film where all
the characters think about is having sex, partying, and being really stupid and
one dimensional.
Black Christmas is horror classic. It takes what was
established in horror at the time and adds so much. This is the film that a lot
of people talk about as creating many of the classic slasher film clichés. The
film has aged incredible well and is still scary and nerve wrecking. The film
has now been added to my Christmas time viewing and will stay there until I die
or stop with Christmas all together.
OVERALL ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Black Christmas is a classic and Scream Factory has given the
film the royal treatment. They gave the film a new 2K transfer that trumps all
other transfers of the film. They also included the Critical Mass transfer for
those who don’t like the new one. They also gathered up all of the special
features from all of the releases over the years and made them easily accessible.
The sound is the only thing that Scream messed up with and they are rectifying
the situation with replacement program.
If you are a fan of the film, there is no reason not to buy
this version of the film. This is one of the best releases that Scream Factory
have ever released and it is one of the best blu-ray releases of the 2016.
The brand new 4K blu-ray is a marvel to behold with the picture and sound. The special features are the same so you aren't losing anything if you pick up this release over the older release. I do recommend picking this release up over the previous one even if you don't have a 4K player. It does include the newer scan in 1080p.
1 Comments
Great review!!!
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