The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Why there’s no room at the inn for Gremlins

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It may be about Christmas, and it has “Christmas” in the title, but The Nightmare Before Christmas is not a Christmas movie.

In a revelation that pleases me – not least because it gives me the opportunit­y to have The Courier print the word “Christmas” four times in an article’s opening paragraph on the day after Bonfire Night – a leading figure in making the 1993 animated film has settled the issue: it’s a Halloween film.

Henry Selick, who directed the Tim Burton-produced classic, was asked the question at a horror film festival and said the film is about the residents of Halloween Town and how they feel about Christmas. It’s creepy, not jingly.

I agree, because I love that film and it doesn’t feel right watching it in December, even if it has Santa and presents. Also, this supports my argument about so-called Christmas films. Brace yourselves. This is controvers­ial.

Die Hard is not a Christmas film.

Hear me out. I know it’s set at Christmas and it has Christmas music in it. I know it starts with John McClane trying to meet his wife Holly – yes, Holly – at a Christmas party. But that’s it; after that, it’s an action film. The seasonal setting is incidental.

Such is my contention. To qualify, a film must be festive, not just set at Christmas. So, It’s A Wonderful Life meets the standard because, despite its grim theme of attempted self-obliviatio­n, it has that feelgood ending.

Elf is a Christmas film because it’s about Christmas spirit. See also Miracle on 34th Street, the Polar Express, and so on. Love Actually isn’t Christmass­y, actually, despite that heartbreak­ing scene with Emma Thompson’s gift, because it’s chiefly a romcom. Or Gremlins. The monsters come from a Christmas gift and even get tangled in a Christmas tree but I submit that the tinsel is irrelevant. Gremlins is a monster movie. Otherwise, you might as well suggest Alien is an Easter movie because it has an egg in it.

If you wish to continue this debate, please write in. I can argue this all the way to the New Year.

Die Hard is not a Christmas film

 ?? Mike Donachie ??
Mike Donachie

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