Home for the Holidays (1972 TV Movie)
5/10
Simply having a traumatizing Christmas time!
26 December 2016
Yours truly is a man of many silly traditions, and one of them is that I insist on watching one Christmas-themed horror movie per year during the Holiday period! Since I've been doing this for many years already, it's getting more difficult each year to select a worthwhile holiday-horror title each year. At first I was thrilled to have stumbled upon this "Home for the Holidays", but in all honesty it's only a very standard and numeric whodunit TV-thriller and there just happens to stand a Christmas tree in the entrance hall of the house where most of the film is set. Apart from the tree and the holiday reference in the title, "Home for the Holidays" isn't at all what you expect from a Christmas horror flick. There aren't any maniacal killers dressed up as Santa or demonic elves, and even the typical Christmassy circumstances got overlooked. For example, there's a thunderstorm raging outside instead of snowflakes tumbling down. Joseph Stefano, who also wrote the screenplay of the legendary "Psycho", delivered the script to TV-producer Aaron Spelling and multi-talented director John Llewellyn Moxey. Impressive names, to say the least, and the cast list is also stupendous, but the movie itself is less than memorable. Benjamin Morgan begs for his four adult daughters to return home because he's convinced that his second wife Elizabeth is slowly poisoning him to death. The daughters believe him, because Elizabeth's first husband also died under mysterious circumstances, but still they're reluctant to help their father. For you see, Benjamin always was a tyrant and the daughters feel that he drove their beloved mother to commit suicide. Shortly after, a murderous psychopath dressed in a raincoat and waving around a pitchfork makes it clear that nobody of the Morgan family is supposed to survive this Christmas. The mystery/whodunit factor of this film is probably one of the weakest and most predictable ones I've ever seen. One good glimpse at all the faces of the lead players is enough to guess who the killer is, and when and his/her motivations get revealed at the end, it makes little to no sense. The main reason to track down and watch "Home for the Holidays" is undoubtedly the female top-cast! Jessica Walter, Jill Hayworth, Eleanor Parker and Julie Harris all give away superb performances. But the girl standing in the spotlights the most here is Sally Field as the youngest and most innocent daughter Christine. Sally was 26 years old around the time of release, but here she looks like an adorable angel not a day over 15.
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