Bad Santa

Bad Santa (2003)

 
0.0
 
2.6 (2)
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John Wilson
Updated December 01, 2024
Bad Santa

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Movie Overview | Bad Santa (2003)

In this dark comedy, the crotchety Willie T. Stokes (Billy Bob Thornton) and his partner (Tony Cox) reunite once a year for a holiday con. Posing as a mall Santa and his elf, they rip off shopping outlets on Christmas Eve. This year, however, Willie is falling apart. He's depressed and alcoholic, and his erratic behavior draws the suspicion of mall security (Bernie Mac). But when befriending a small boy brings out his kinder side, Willie begins to wonder if there is still some hope for him.

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2 reviews
Overall rating
 
2.6
Entertainment Factor
 
3.0(2)
Story
 
2.5(2)
Actors Performance
 
2.5(2)
Cinematography
 
2.5(2)
Sound Track
 
2.5(2)
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Bad Santa - The Title Fits The Movie
(Updated: January 04, 2025)
Overall rating
 
2.4
Entertainment Factor
 
3.0
Story
 
2.0
Actors Performance
 
3.0
Cinematography
 
2.0
Sound Track
 
2.0
Since the holiday season has started, and I had time during the long Thanksgiving weekend, I decided to catch up on Christmas themed movies that I had never seen or not seen in quite some time.  Bad Santa, however, was just that.....BAD!  The story is not what you would think a Christmas story would be, warm and fuzzy and uplifting during the holidays.  This story was dark and twisted, but yet had a positive turn at the end which redeemed it, sort of.  True, it is supposed to be a comedy, but the premise of the story has a lot to be desired and there is too much profanity, so it cannot be "enjoyed" by families with young children.  The story is about con man, Willie Soke, played by Billy Bob Thomton, who, along with his friend, Marcus, played by Tony Cox, rob the stores he works for during the Christmas season.  Although this IS supposed to be a comedy and the 
foul language, sex and violence that is woven throughout, continuously it seems, that is meant to draw laughter from the viewer but, in most cases, is just not funny and makes this movie not what a Christmas holiday film should be.  The only saving factor of this film is, towards the end, Willie befriends a young boy and starts to change, thinking that there may still be hope for him after all.  This is the only spark in the movie that brings this story a glimpse of hope and light.
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Bad Santa, Bad Movie
(Updated: January 04, 2025)
Overall rating
 
2.8
Entertainment Factor
 
3.0
Story
 
3.0
Actors Performance
 
2.0
Cinematography
 
3.0
Sound Track
 
3.0
Bad Santa is obsessed with detailing the squalor of its titular character’s life. A viciously misanthropic con man, Willie T. Soke (Billy Bob Thornton), along with his dwarf accomplice, robs the stores he works for every Christmas season. The intimacy with which Soke’s self-hatred is enumerated borders on the grotesque, not because of any innate repulsion toward such subject matter, but because it’s all done in such an aggressively clumsy manner. The satiric skewering of traditional values, yuletide or otherwise, by focusing on the bitterness and loathing of one fringe-dwelling individual, is a time-honored practice, often giving rise to a parodic philosophy of refreshing distrust and genuine insight. Bad Santa is a work of profoundly skeptical vulgarity which refuses to kowtow to, if not works against established generic notions of the “Christmas film,” but this refusal is so poorly versed, so shoddily constructed, that what lingers in the mind is the vulgarity itself rather than any well-articulated subversive intention.

The script trots out a collage of foul language, sex and violent anti-social behavior in an attempt to impress the audience with how little it needs to care, and ends up looking cheaply provocative. Tony Cox in particular, playing Soke’s partner Marcus, is labored with dialogue so heavily dipped in profanity that it begins to sound like ad-libbed playground ranting, and sequences obviously designed to elicit laughter, such as Cox’s confrontation with a sluggish Bernie Mac as the head of store security, look like two ill-prepared improv performers left in front of the camera and told to kill time. Some of Thornton’s actorly passages transcend the film’s dishonest agenda and are oddly compelling for their brevity; they offer fleeting glimpses of Soke’s wounds, and, to his credit, Thornton never overplays these moments.

The not-so-little Brett Kelly, as Soke’s chubby conscience (most often referred to as “the kid”), was presumably chosen for the film because he couldn’t act, and he behaves with the cringing awkwardness that suits a child so typically humiliated. His scenes with Thornton’s Soke are at times broadly humorous if only because of Soke’s amazement at the kid’s ability to absorb every insult he hurls at him, but it’s because these insults appear to exist solely as spectacle that they become unfunny acts of cruelty fobbing themselves off as the “truths” of a cynically realistic humor. Bad Santa does indeed have a sentimental streak; presumably once the filmmakers have demonstrated their lack of belief in generic clichés, they feel that they can adopt the strategies of those very same clichés with impunity. Bad Santa tries to be as vulgar and offensive as possible so that it might somehow justify the inevitability of its own happy ending. 



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