Horror themed Christmas movies are certainly nothing new, but writer/director
Jalmari Helander
gives us a Christmas movie that is a horror-fantasy-dark comedy-boy’s
adventure tale, and that my friends is a rare export indeed.
This
movie bases its story on a mixture of Christmas folklore; the Finnish
legends of Joulupukki, a horned pagan figure, and Krampus the German
equivalent. Although the Krampus focuses more on punishing bad little
children and not so much on the gift giving, and is closer to the Santa
in this movie.
It’s strange that Coca-Cola didn’t go in this direction for their marketing campaign.
The picture opens with an American excavation company drilling deep
into a mountain located in the northern wilds of Finland, Brian Greene (
Jonathan Hutchings)
is an eccentric American archeologist who believes that this is not a
natural mountain but a burial mound to rival the pyramids of Giza, and
that deep down in that tomb lies the original Santa Claus.
When has uncovering ancient tombs ever been a good idea?
Two local boys spy on the operation; Pietari (
Onni Tommila) and Jusso (
Ilmari Järvenpää)
who had cut a hole in the fence to sneak in and watch the drilling.
Pietari still believes in Santa and is mocked by his friend who clearly
isn’t afraid of being on anyone’s naughty list.
A boy pure of heart.
That night, Pietari does some research on the origins of Santa with
most of what he learns scaring the pants off him, as it looks like the
“real” Santa tracks down bad little boys and beats their backsides
bloody before boiling them in oil and devouring them. Pietari starts to
wear his hockey gear and duct tapes cardboard to his backside as a
precaution, as well as stapling the December 24th door in his advent
calendar closed. Better safe than sorry.
Do not open that door.
But the locals have more to be worried about, as their livelihood
hinges on the herd of reindeer that are due to migrate through the area,
and when they are found slaughtered, assumed by the adults to be the
work of Russian super wolves, things look dire for the community.
Pietari is worried that it was the hole that he and Jusso cut in the
fence that allowed the wolves into the area. He wants to tell his father
but is threatened into silence by Jusso.
I hope Rudolph wasn’t with this lot.
Things take a decidedly weird turn when Pietari’s father Rauno (
Jorma Tommila)
discovers a body in his illegal wolf-pit trap that appears to be an old
bearded man. Stranger still is when Rauno and his friend Piiparinen (
Rauno Jovonen)
realize the old man is still alive. They at first believe the old man
to be an American employee of Greene because of the American passport
they find in his coat, but when he responds to neither Norse nor
American, and really only becomes responsive when he sniffs either
gingerbread cookies or children, it begins to don on the adults that
things may not be what they seem.
“Kidnap the Sandy Claws, lock him up real tight, throw away the key and then turn off all the lights.”
When they learn that someone has been stealing empty burlap sacks and
radiators from all over town the adults finally start to listen to
Pietari. They believe him when he says this is Santa Claus and that he
was dug up by the Americans and has been running around spying on the
children, mostly snatching them as well. Rauno has the brilliant plan of
selling back Santa Claus to Greene for the cost of their lost herd of
reindeer, and by brilliant I mean insane. Worst of all it turns out the
old codger isn’t Santa but one of his helpers, one of his many, many
helpers, as our heroes find themselves quickly surrounded by a horde of
naked white bearded old men.
Night of the Living Santas.
It’s inside warehouse 24 that the true horror of the situation is
revealed; a massive block of ice centered in the warehouse is surrounded
by all the stolen radiators and amongst them are the missing sacks,
though no longer empty but now full of children. These “
Santa’s Helpers” are trying to melt free their master and have collected all the “
bad” little boys and girls of the town to feed him when he awakens.
“Now nobody better put a bloody heated blanket on that thing!“
Rare Exports is a rare Christmas gem, as not only is
it a darkly original comedic tale but has a lead in the form of young
Onni Tommila who exceeds all expectations of a child actor. He is the
heart and soul of this movie. The scenes between he and his father are
beautiful and heart felt as both try and deal with life’s troubles;
Rauno trying to raise a boy without a mother’s help while also worrying
about how he is going to keep him fed, and Pietari trying to balance
being a good son and discovering the secrets around him. Pietari does
win his dad’s respect, as it his quick thinking and courage that saves
the day as he figures out how to lure a throng of naked Santa’s into a
trap.
Pied Piper of Finland.
Though ostensibly a horror film there isn’t a lot of gore on display here, certainly not in the league of such films as
Dead Snow or
Silent Night Deadly Night,
but the sight of hundreds of axe wielding naked old men is horrifying
in its own right. So I’d easily recommend this film for family members
of seven and up. It is a great fairy tale in the manner of the Grimm’s
Brothers with nods to such films as
John Carpenter’s The Thing, and with a young hero whose deeds rival those of your modern action star.
I will not spoil the ending but it is a rare export indeed.
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