Cover of the film "My Christmas Guide" featuring characters Trevor, Payton and guidedog Max.

What if seeing puns became a movie?

Anyone can see it is Christmas-time, but will a blind man spot the benefits of using a guide dog? Do you need eyes to be a man and a professor? In our 2023 Christmas special, Jeff and sar peep the recently released Hallmark Channel made-for-television film My Christmas Guide. Join us in gazing into the Christmas vomit abyss that is this romantic (?) holiday thriller woke-a-thon.

Listen at…

Grading the Film

As always, this film is reviewed with scores recorded in four main categories, with 1 being the best and 5 being the worst. Like the game of golf, the lower the score the better.

How accurate is the representation?

Jeff – 2 / 5

sar – 1 / 5

Total – 3 / 10

How difficult was it to watch the movie?

sar – 4 / 5

Jeff – 5 / 5

Total – 9 / 10

How often were things unintentionally funny?

sar – 2.5 / 5

Jeff – 3 / 5

Total – 5.5 / 10

How far back has it put disabled people?

Jeff – 2.5 / 5

sar – 4 / 5

Total – 6.5 / 10

The Verdict

Regrets, I have a few…

Podcast Transcript

Jeff:

Welcome to Invalid Culture, a podcast dedicated to excavating the strangest and most baffling representations of disability in popular culture. Unlike other podcasts that review films you’ve probably heard of, invalid Culture is all about the abyss of pop culture, adjacent media that just never quite broke through because well, they’re just awful. Now let’s dig in to the worst films you’ll wish you never knew existed.

Mvll Crimes [musical interlude]:

I’m arguing with strangers on the internet // not going out today because I’m feeling too upset // I’m arguing with strangers on the and I’m winning…and I’m winning!!

Jeff:

Welcome to a special bonus edition of Invalid Culture. As always, I am your host Jeff and I am joined today by past podcast and new co victim. Sarah, welcome.

sarah:

Hello. Thanks for having me.

Jeff:

Are you excited to be here again?

sarah:

Obviously I haven’t been here since the last Christmas special.

Jeff:

Yeah, we’ve been on a bit of a hiatus, but we thought it’s Christmas time, it’s time for family, and so it was time to bring you back for another moment of torture

sarah:

Time for more terrible Hallmark films vaguely about disability.

Jeff:

Absolutely. That’s the time of the year. It’s the reason for the season, I believe. So this year to ring in the festive season, we were given a present by the Hallmark Channel. Once again, a Hallmark has decided to dip their giant toes and walking sticks into the world of disability and media or film. This time with the 2023 November release of My Christmas Guide. Now from the Box, My Christmas Guide is allegedly a movie about “a college professor who connects with a guide dog trainer after losing his eye sight and a adopting a seeing eye dog.” That’s essentially the high level, but we’re going to dig a lot deeper into this movie. Before we do though, as I said, this is a Hallmark movie, made for TV, is released in November. It was written by Keith Hemstreet. Now he has a very interesting history. He has written a ton of movies in the last year that all appear to be romantic TV shows, things like a Royal Christmas Crush also came out this year and Love in Glacier National also cave out this year, so Keith Hemstreet just banging out the romantic TV movies. It was also directed by Max Mcguire. Max splits their time between Christmas movies, Christmas by Design, Record Breaking Christmas, The Most Colorful Time of Year and murder movies. Other movies he’s done: Abducted on Prom Night, The Good Wife’s Guide to Murder, the Ice Road Killer, et cetera.

sarah:

I want him to combine those two genres. I feel like he would be the guy to do it. I want the Ice Road Christmas killer.

Jeff:

Yeah, I love it. I love it. I thought that was phenomenal. What a career path. Great. Now, unlike most films that we do in this podcast, this film actually features an actually disabled actor playing their own character. Ben Mehl is playing the main character Trevor. Ben is disabled, is blind, and is best known probably for his role as a librarian in Netflix’s show You and he’s noted in an interview that quote, my role on you was my first role where I haven’t had to pretend to be able to see more than I actually can. He went on to talk about this movie in particular, stating that to be able to represent a character who has vision loss while personally having similar experiences attracted me to the role. He says that he hopes that he’s able to raise people’s understanding and awareness of the different experiences of disabled people and wants audiences to always be reminded to be aware of disability. So that’s a little bit about who we have in our main character. Trevor, does that help you understand the movie better at all, Sarah?

sarah:

No, but I really wish that he went for the seeing pun in that based on the script.

Jeff:

Yeah, not to always be aware, but to always see to

sarah:

See disability wherever we go.

Jeff:

Absolutely. Our romantic lead, a female lead is played by Amber Marshall, who is our guide dog trainer. She is from London’s own, I should have said London’s own Amber Marshall from London, Ontario, best known probably for her role as Amy in CBC’s Heartland. So we’ve got some real Canadian media legends

sarah:

Here. That’s something I’ve actually heard of. That’s pretty cool.

Jeff:

And then there’s a third character not in the Love triangle, but critical to the film, which is Trevor’s daughter.

sarah:

Oh, I thought you were going to say Chainsaw.

Jeff:

No. Chainsaw is the most important character to me.

sarah:

He was also surprisingly important to the Love Triangle, though. Don’t sleep on chainsaw.

Jeff:

Don’t sleep on chainsaw, but Chainsaw, unlike Ava Weiss who plays Annie, Chainsaw was not in the film Moonfall, which Ava Weiss was. She is in the terrible possibly amazing film Moonfall.

 

So just off the absolute top, Sarah, just really quickly, how did you feel about this movie?

sarah:

If you excuse all of the really poorly done references to the fact that they’re trying to do an inclusivity film, but through the lens of extreme exclusivity, they were obsessed in every scene with pointing out that the protagonist was blind. He is different guys. By the way, this is an inclusivity film. I was actually much more fascinated by the love triangle angle because I am convinced and we can argue about this, that the true victim of this film was Chad, the heavily gaslit boyfriend. I really feel like he lost a lot in this, and you’re supposed to just go with it because he is a nothing character and I disagree. I’m coming out in defensive Chad here. What did you think,

Jeff:

Jim? Chad? Yeah, I would say honestly, and I apologize to all the Hallmark fans out there, this was probably one of the most boring films I’ve watched for this podcast.

sarah:

It was hard. That was a tough one.

Jeff:

It was so slow and nothing happens. I think it’s the only redeeming quality, thank God. I don’t know if this is cinematographer decision or the director’s decision, but the number of Slowmo glamor shots of the Guide back of

sarah:

Max, yes, was the

Jeff:

Only thing that helped me get through this film.

sarah:

We were counting them at one point.

Jeff:

There were many. That was great. That was great. I have huge, huge love for that, huge love for chainsaw, and while those are our opinions and our sort of overarching views of the film, we are not the only ones who have opinions views about this film. There are of course critics that have written about this film that have analyzed it, have spoken about it, and let’s hear a little bit from them. And so our first critic that I wanted to talk about is Brett White. Now, Brett White wrote a very long thing about this film for Decider. It’s basically a blog that lets you help to understand if you want to watch a movie or not, which I think is actually a pretty clever, I pretty clever conceit. This is what Brett White had to say about his experience with the film. There’s a lot of patient character work that you only realize was character work, right? As the script is making big emotional moves, he goes on to say, interestingly, Trevor feels unlike any hallmark hunk we’ve ever had, primarily because he has a brainy profession and doesn’t exactly brood smolder or flirt with our leading lady. Trevor’s a different kind of leading man, and Ben is fantastic in the part

sarah:

I’m desperately trying not to ask for his background, but I’m thinking definitely Laurier and definitely film studies, and I can say that because I did Laureate film studies. I do like, what did I call her? I called her b-list Santa Stark, the protagonist love interest. She was probably the closest thing to actual talent in the film, but the rest, I don’t know, agree to disagree.

Jeff:

I particularly like this quote because it seems almost like Brett White is kind of calling Ben not attractive, is sort of like he’s

sarah:

Not my type.

Jeff:

He’s smart. He doesn’t brood or smolder or flirt.

sarah:

I needed a positive adjective and the one I went with was smart.

Jeff:

He’s a brainy professional,

sarah:

But even, okay, can we do quick rants?

Jeff:

Yeah,

sarah:

Even the scenes where they let him, okay, so context, they let him be some kind of amalgamation between sessional professor and full professor depending on what room he was standing in. That’s another thing. But if you take for granted that he is a legitimate English professor, every single time he does a scene where he’s supposed to be very bookish and knowledgeable about classical texts, he blows it. It sounds like he just read it the other day and he’s nervously commentating on it, and everyone around him immediately dismisses anything he says about literature to be like, no, your only legitimate character trait is that you’re blind. We don’t care about this book thing.

Jeff:

Yeah, I fully agree. I feel like the one thing I didn’t believe the most is that this man was a professor.

sarah:

Oh yeah. At all. He did no research for that role.

Jeff:

He had the satchel, he had the satchel bag…

sarah:

He did have the satchel, he did the, what’s it called, mock neck turtleneck. He did that a couple times and he attempted to speak in professional situations about literature, which I guess on its face I agree with, but I’ve heard sessionals do a better job than this. Maybe full professor.

Jeff:

Yeah, it sounded like chat GPT writing a professor character. Actually, I think that would probably be better, but yeah, so Brett White, he is a fan. He liked it. It’s a different kind of leading man. He’s not a hunk, he’s not brooding, he’s not smoldering. He doesn’t flirt, but he is fantastic. This was not the opinion however of CGVSLewis on IMDV who gave this a five out of 10 title in their user response quote, A guide dog finds a home for Christmas and a woman boots or obnoxious boyfriend. This is the title of the review.

sarah:

I already disagree, but continue. Yeah.

Jeff:

Okay, so I don’t know what CGVSLewis sounds like, but I assume it sounds a little bit like this: Also, as I keep mentioning, I like my entertainment as entertainment and not social justice causes. I work all day at a hospital as I have for 30 years, and I don’t want to come home turning on my entertainment to be the lecture. Granted, this was a soft lecture, but it still took several opportunities to hit us over the head with the challenges faced by those who are mobility impaired. Guess what? I see it every day at work. A big part of our job is education, and I would like to just be entertained when I come home tired and with sore feet. I did really appreciate the classic literature quotes. That was my favorite part.

sarah:

Where was the classic literature quote? Oh, in his lecture where he started reciting Chaucer from memory or something?

Jeff:

No, you were giving them way too much credit. He had a quote from To Kill a Mockingbird of one kine. He had a quote from Mark Twain and he had a quote from Ellison, which is probably the most not high school English class book, Invisible Man, that they referred to.

sarah:

Oh I’m hoping he was quoting American Psycho. That would’ve been great.

Jeff:

No,

sarah:

That would’ve been a nice Easter egg.

Jeff:

I love the fact that somebody went on a anti woke rant about a Hallmark movie, about a guide dog,

sarah:

The absolute wokeness of mobility impairment.

Jeff:

I also love that part of their job is education, but they don’t know that this would not be defined as a mobility impairment.

sarah:

Yeah, yeah. It checks out actually.

Jeff:

Okay, I’m sorry. I think we need to talk about this film. So let’s take a little wander through the story of my Christmas guide as best as I understand it.

So our movie begins with the introduction of Trevor, a Dickens-obsessed professor of “Classic Literature” in <insert random American town that is totally definitely not St. John’s NFLD>. Losing his vision and wife, no relation, several years ago has left him disoriented. After damaging his face walking into a non-OSHA compliant construction site, there are questions about if Trevor can continue working because there is apparently no way to make a 6-month long sidewalk construction project safe for blind people. One day, while picking up his dog-obsessed daughter from school, local guide dog trainer Payton is out for a stroll and observes Trevor aggressively serving Blind Man™. After staring silently at Trevor from across the street for an entire scene, Payton decides to intrude on this stranger’s life, demanding the school secretary give her dog guide service literature in a clear violation of school stranger danger rules. After some debate about whether or not a dog would make Trevor’s life easier or harder, he eventually relents and begins training to acquire extremely photogenic guide dog, Max. This training largely consists of being guided around town with Payton cosplaying as a harnessed dog and giggling maniacally. What are your thoughts on the beginning of the film, Sarah?

sarah:

That’s almost hard to characterize. I think for the first, at least half of its runtime, I was kind of confused as to what the movie was actually about because I think I was looking for, because when we watched Christmas Evil last year, there’s a fairly robust plot line. There’s this trauma circuit between the brothers and then there’s this B Ark where the brother tries to redeem himself by this Christmas party. There is virtually no blot in this film in comparison to last year’s film. So I kept waiting for the moment of intrigue, but I think upon reflection, the moment of intrigue was actually Peyton forcing herself into Trevor’s world via this kind of weird play at his daughter’s school to get him to adopt a dog because she’s the one who trains the dogs. But then I don’t even know why she knew what school to go to. It stands up until you start thinking about it and then you’re like, wait, that doesn’t make any sense whatsoever.

Jeff:

Yeah, I think they were leaving the school. I think that’s how she knew that was the school that

sarah:

The daughter went to, and she just shows up with disability information. By the way, in case you’ve only been blind since yesterday, I actually train seeing eye dogs and you can have one. Yeah, I didn’t like it. I didn’t like the setup.

Jeff:

Would you say that Peyton is a crafty capitalist or is she a conniving capitalist?

sarah:

Peyton is garbage, so a capitalist in general from the Marxist,

Peyton definitely coming out in favor of getting more clients for her dog training school, but she’s also spending most of the movie gaslighting the shit out of her boyfriend to think that he’s a terrible boyfriend so that she can break up with him with zero regrets or remorse in order to be with this blind guy that she just met, who I guess she thinks is hot or has a charismatic personality or both of which he actually exhibits neither. So I’m not sure what she’s seeing, but she’s definitely seeing more than what she sees in Chad, and she spends so much of this film and you were with me and I was so mad just telling this guy over and over like, you are no good. I don’t like what you’re doing to me. While he’s trying to be the kind of prototypical supportive boyfriend, they even named him Chad. They did him dirty, but they didn’t even make his villain arc good.

Jeff:

So let’s talk about that. As our story continues to unfold, we discover that Peyton is in a strained relationship with her golf obsessed boyfriend, literally named Chad, who is leaving her for Christmas to go golfing in Florida with his friends and chainsaw. Yes, these are their names. I should clarify here. Chad does not look like the kind of person who would have friends named Thurp and Chainsaw. Chad very much looks like the type of person whose friends would be named like Huston and Beauregard perhaps

sarah:

And Derek.

Jeff:

Yeah, absolutely not. And trades up. No. So as Peyton and Trevor start to work together, sparks begin to fly that even a blind man could see that maybe there is something here. Trevor’s daughter, Annie is now starting to get bullied at school because her dad is blind, but through the miracle potential of Peyton becoming her new mommy, she almost completely ignores a bully. Instead of wandering down the school shooter pathway, Peyton and Trevor continue to get closer with Trevor showing Peyton around the only campus in America where Christmas is clearly winning the war on Christmas. Peyton eventually decides to do a totally normal professional relationship thing and introduces Trevor to her father at a Christmas charity event because Chad has bailed on this commitment in order to golf at the number one golf course in Florida.

sarah:

So one, I think we decided partway through the film that although it seems to be introduced from Peyton’s perspective that Peyton and Chad are in a fairly serious relationship, it starts to kind of erode by the two thirds mark, and it seems to me at least that they’re in a way more casual arrangement than Peyton seems to think from the interactions they’re having. But even then he’s doing stuff like calling her from Florida to check in and ask for permission to stay longer with his friends and stuff, which to me seems like solid boyfriend behavior and she gets off the phone rolling her eyes. I can’t believe he would ask for more time. I can’t believe he’s not coming home to me right away from this trip that has clearly been prearranged for months. I don’t know. I’m back on this.

Jeff:

Sure. I mean, I will say there was the swap out where he implied that he had this big surprise for her and then he brings her outside and the surprise is that he has bought himself golf clubs.

sarah:

Surprise baby. I’m leveling up my golf game.

Jeff:

So I, I think this is the tension that they’re trying to draw out and this is that he keeps on insinuating that something’s coming to her, but it never is. It’s never coming. But I think you’re right in that there does appear to be this clear disconnect between where Chad thinks the relationship is and where Peyton thinks it is, because Peyton thinks it’s like we’re married or we’re about to get married, and Chad is sort of like, I might see you next week maybe

sarah:

Pretty much. Peyton also seems to not respond at all to emotional dialogue cues, which he gives a ton of, and at least among my female friends, we talk a lot about how that’s maybe missing in some relationships. Chad’s got it in spades, even if they’re just casual. He’s got the full social worker routine about how validated does this make you feel, or I’d like to remind you that you’re special to me kind of thing. I don’t think a lot of people have that, and she’s just sitting in the car like, Ugh, insufferable. And I’m like, really? Is it insufferable though?

Jeff:

Meanwhile, we have some really scintillating, some scintillated romance sparking between Peyton and Trevor. I will give this movie credit. They did not do the typical trope of the blind man touching the woman’s face and saying, you are beautiful.

sarah:

I’ve felt sure I was waiting for that.

Jeff:

They did not do that. What they did do instead was have Trevor essentially say, you smell real pretty. There is a scene in which he essentially says, well, I can’t see you, but you smell pretty and then asks if he smells pretty.

sarah:

He actually kind of demands that he complimented.

Jeff:

And I’d like to know how many of your relationships Sarah have started with an exchange of smell description?

sarah:

You know what? I think many of my past relationships have actually started on the seeing description how drop dead gorgeous I am. That is a joke. So maybe the joke is because he can’t see, hey, he’s got to start with smell, but he has taken that way too seriously. It gets a bit weird.

Jeff:

And I also wonder, I mean that the implication is that she has a lovely perfume or something that she’s wearing. I would’ve given this way more credit if she had been eating smart food before they met and she smelled like smart food. That is an appealing smell. I would That’s true. If you smell I smelled like smart food, I might ask to be out on a date. That’s true.

sarah:

If you follow it up with offering that smart food to me, yeah, I’d go places with you no problem if

Jeff:

You’ll share the smart food.

sarah:

Exactly. That’s fair enough. I’m getting right in the car.

Jeff:

That’s actually the surprise maybe that Chad had for the end of the film of family sized bag of smart food, perhaps.

sarah:

Perhaps.

Jeff:

Perhaps. Yeah. So we move forward in our film. We’re finally at the end. Chad has now returned from his golf trip only to discover that his girlfriend is spending literally every moment of her life with this clumsy blind man that she had lured off the street confronting Trevor Chad assures Trevor that Peyton is just not that into him. This is just how she is with all the blind people, so he shouldn’t get the wrong idea. Trevor, of course, has a masculine identity crisis and after being forced to go on leave because the school cannot figure out how to make this construction site accessible despite Max clearly having a guide dog that can navigate it has to go on leave. This is the final straw for Trevor whose big sad boy energy results and giving up on everything going home to sulk and returns the dog that he has been living with for weeks.

This tension is almost immediately resolved when a recording of Chad and Trevor’s conversation is revealed to have been captured on the guide dog business security camp. So Peyton dumps Chad runs to Trevor’s arms and assures him that he is a real man and definitely like a professor, even though he is blind, Trevor’s child now, a young offender after assaulted her bully in the cafeteria with a cupcake, is excited for Christmas and spends the final scene watching her dad make it out with new mommy on Christmas Day, which I think makes this film a prequel to Christmas evil.

sarah:

That was a bit of a wild crossover right at the end.

Jeff:

I did not plan this to be essentially a two part that was beautiful. This is evil, but it worked out perfectly. So there’s two things I want to talk about in this part of the film. So thing number one that I want to address. What are your thoughts about the fact that the university forces Trevor to go on a two-term leave because they cannot make this construction site accessible?

sarah:

I actually thought that this is one of the more realistic moments of this otherwise relentlessly unrealistic film because if you do believe and it flip flops throughout the whole film, but if he is a sessional instructor, he would absolutely lose those terms if somebody else could make their lives easier and replace him. So that is completely believable. And in that instance, if he’s been working term to term as a sessional, he probably would have to return the guide dog. And this is an argument I made to you before because all the upkeep costs associated with the CNIB and dog raising and dog training and paying off the dog as well as just all the costs associated with keeping the dog alive, IE vet bills and food and whatever else, he probably legit can’t afford the dog if he loses his sessional contracts. So that was, I don’t think they meant for it in any way to be that realistic. I think it was just a convenient plot point. But from a labor studies perspective, that was probably the most interesting part of the film.

Jeff:

So I had a similar take, but maybe a little hotter than yours. I think on the one hand, I don’t think he’s a sessional because he does have an enormous office and it has a fireplace. It does. Which his office is actually bigger than his chair who is in a cubicle farm for some reason. He does. So he has an enormous office to himself that has multiple Christmas trees. His boss chair, I would assume maybe a dean is in UNC cubicle somewhere on campus. But on the one hand, it’s obviously completely absurd this notion that the solution to, I mean, there’s been a lot of construction in my life and I’ve never been told, well, you can’t come to work. We don’t know how to make it safe for you. There’s a absurdity to it, but at the same time there is this unintentional kind of nailed it where not even just universities, but I think a lot of organizations, it’s exactly the type of baffling response to inaccessibility that rings actually weirdly true.

sarah:

Right. I was going to challenge you on that. Do you really not believe no one responds

Jeff:

Exactly. No one responds to inaccessible situations in a rational way. The responses tend to be really irrational and bizarre, and so in that way, this is actually maybe a really accurate representation that maybe there is actually a bit of reality to be like, yeah, I actually could see an institution being like, well, I don’t know what to do, so we’ll just pay you to not be here.

sarah:

I thought it was totally realistic. Do you remember what happened a couple years ago at u Guelph where the elevator stopped working? So they emailed all the students in wheelchairs and they were like, yeah, take online classes. We’re not fixing the elevator quickly, don’t come. And all the students were like, that’s completely unreasonable. And they didn’t fix it until they got roasted in the news for it.

Jeff:

Yeah. And so think in that way, it seems absurd, but it actually is maybe not completely out of the world. I will say it does seem like an overreaction given the scale of the problem. All we’ve seen of this construction is it appears they’re replacing sidewalk like pieces. This is not a major construction project by any means, and it feels like just a little bit of fencing is all it would take to make this accessible. But I digress.

sarah:

I would also argue that you are at an institution that has a disability studies department, so perhaps it’s easier for me to believe as being from an institution that actively hates disability, that we would fire those people instead of accommodating for them because we would never get a department like disability studies.

Jeff:

So this is the other question I have because they are really, really vague on their wording on what happens here because the way it’s framed in the film is that he just won’t be teaching for the winter term and the summer term that he’ll be taking two terms off and that decision is made and then five students write a letter to the boss and the boss changes his mind.

sarah:

Yeah, I forgot about that.

Jeff:

And reinstates, and so it doesn’t sound like they were necessarily firing him. It’s like he was going on leave. That’s sort of how they kept framing it, is that he had

sarah:

…and the students have a little solidarity protest about it.

Jeff:

Five of them, yes. I just want to put out only five of his students were willing to write a letter to say, you shouldn’t ban him from campus. Correct. Which seems like a low number, a really low number

sarah:

For an English prof. I don’t know. That also kind of rings accurate to me.

Jeff:

Yeah, I mean when they did do this shots of the students, there did only appear to be eight students in his class. Exactly.

sarah:

So five out of eight is actually great.

Jeff:

I also though don’t imagine many universities would do anything if five students wrote them. I think there’s a lot of universities that wouldn’t respond to a hundred students writing to them necessarily. So yes, there was though obviously that scene also killed me because clearly they were trying to do this whole sort of dead poet society like, oh, captain, my captain kind of thing, where they have the students marching into the office, but they didn’t have the budget to hire a lot of people. And so they’re like, well, we’ll have three people and one of them will hand in multiple letters and that’ll be our big protest maneuver. Then all the viewers will get their uplifting, all the students care about him. I felt really underdeveloped, I would say.

sarah:

I think the whole film felt a little underdeveloped. So in that sense, I’m with you. Fair enough.

Jeff:

Fair enough. So I think what we’re moving toward then is there are some tropes here in this film, some pretty well worn others, maybe not quite, but I thought we should probably talk a little bit about some of these tropes. So the first trope that I wanted to talk about is the requisite scene at the beginning of the film in which Trevor has to explain his disability because you Yeah, you

sarah:

Got to wonder why they went for the medicalization angle for something like blindness, because I think it’s fairly culturally accepted that there are some people who can’t see, and that’s kind of all the explanation you need.

Jeff:

They don’t into a surprising amount of detail.

sarah:

I want to see retina scans. I want to see exactly how much Trevor can’t see.

Jeff:

Give me the exact, why don’t you give us the camera view to show us stats, what he’s not able to see. Yeah. This felt weird and it felt weird in particular because of how much time the movie spends reminding us and showing us. If you cannot see

sarah:

From, he wears these ridiculous glasses just as a visual of, remember Trevor is blind,

Jeff:

Giant blackout, wraparound glasses, awful. Got the walking stick, always rocking the eye dog. Eventually he is surrounded by icons of blindness, and yet there needed to be this moment where he sits down for a very serious conversation to tell Peyton all about his medical history.

sarah:

Yeah, Peyton, somebody he literally just met.

Jeff:

Yes, but she smells good. So she does. She’ll understand

sarah:

Marker of trust.

Jeff:

Yes, yes. I’ve always wondered what would happen in my life if every time I met someone, 10, 15 minutes into the conversation, I started reading them out my medical chart and was like, alright before. And they’re like, this is a Starbucks, just make your order, please. And I’m like, no, you need to know about my formal muscular dystrophy.

sarah:

Pardon? It is

Jeff:

The big one.

sarah:

Exactly. The big one. We’re bringing that back.

Jeff:

Yeah. So I wonder, I feel like people would just tolerate it, but I don’t think it would make friends.

sarah:

No, I think people would uncomfortably wait for you to come to a complete stop and then they’d take a right hand turn.

Jeff:

They would no doubt of the relationship probably pretty quickly.

sarah:

Pretty quickly.

Jeff:

What I would love to see from a Hallmark movie is for them to just apply this as a standard for all characters, whether or not they actually have. So it’s like every character is introduced and then they’re like, you just need to know that I actually have dandruff and have my entire life, and I fought it and I was bullied for it. And it’s a thing that my scalp is so dry, medically dry,

sarah:

I’m the love interest and I have adult onset asthma and I’m going to relay for you the factors which make my life more difficult.

Jeff:

Yeah. I’m not really good at sleeping. My security rhythms are really off. Correct. And so I’m actually often really tired. And it’s a medical condition though.

sarah:

Correct. And the blind guys, are you trying to do an oppression Olympics here? I don’t give a shit.

Jeff:

You can take your C Pap machine and stuff it

sarah:

Chill out, buddy. At least you can see it.

Jeff:

Right. So that actually is a great segue to the second trope that I wanted to talk about. This movie spends a lot of time making puns around the word seeing exhausting and sight constantly. Everyone can see, obviously you can see if only they could see why was this intentional or was this Freudian?

sarah:

It had to have been because sometimes you can almost see the actors looking off screen or looking toward camera one or two. Did you get that?

Jeff:

I really wondered how in it, there were so many of them that at times I feel like this was just how the people wrote the script. This is just how they talk with this sort of idea of site being equivalent to knowledge that you must seem to understand. But then there were other times where they very clearly were leaning into it and trying to make this pun. Yes, but it was overwhelming at times. Yes.

sarah:

The equivocation of blindness and ignorance made this film really uninclusive for me. Not only because of how hard they went on it, but also how hard they went on his visual as his defining character trait is that he is blind. And if you know anything else about him, that’s just a bonus, which feels to me extremely uninclusive for an inclusivity film about, look at Trevor, he’s just like us. He has romance problems like us. He has to walk around traffic and construction like us. It just all rang really hollow when you add in all of those, I don’t know Tropey signals about, but remember he’s blind.

Jeff:

Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. I don’t fully understand why they felt they had to keep reminding us. And it may be because this is a made for TV movie. It’s clearly designed to sit within commercial breaks. So people are kind of coming in and coming out at any moment. And I’ll say, and I don’t know if this is a, I compliment to the film, but you could pretty much start watching this movie at any point in the movie and you would have all the information you need to understand what’s about to happen.

sarah:

It’s like friends, it doesn’t matter where you start.

Jeff:

No. You just jump in wherever and you’re like, okay, well this guy’s clearly blind there. People are mentioning it, obviously they clearly have something going on. Oh, her boyfriend’s name, Chad. So he must be bad. Yeah. Okay. So I think that there may be that element here happening where the form is requiring it, but I think that’s a very generous assumption and I don’t think that that’s probably what’s going on.

sarah:

I think that speaks more to how little plot there was. It was bizarrely simplistic even for a Hallmark film.

Jeff:

Yeah. Well, I think it’s important to remember the writer and the director of this film made by 18 movies this year. So I assume they probably wrote the thing in four days, maybe

sarah:

Four hours,

Jeff:

Maybe.

sarah:

Maybe filmed in four days across Cobourg all the way to St. John’s.

Jeff:

Yeah, yeah,

sarah:

Yeah.

Jeff:

The other trope that I noticed that really stood out to me in this film was the bully. So Trevor’s daughter, Annie is being tormented a boy at school who is constantly doing a pantomime of her father. So he is constantly walking around with his eyes closed, being like, I’m blind, look at me and walking into stuff or touching stuff, and Annie’s getting angrier and angrier. Eventually Annie will decide to smash a cupcake in his face. Annie is then suspended, expelled, punished for suspended, suspended for violence on school campus. Again, I think accurate and brave of Hallmark to stand up on the anti-retaliation things that happened in school. And then eventually she will save the bully because as we learned in Star Wars, there’s always a bigger fish and there’s an even bigger bully who is picking on her bully. But this bully wets the bed, I don’t know how Andy knows this, but this boy who clearly experienced trauma as a child and is now bedwetting as an older child, gets called out embarrassed. He runs off and the blind bully is now your dad’s pretty cool actually, and everything’s resolved. Sarah, why do you think whenever we have a disabled character, there is always a need for a bully to be harassing this person or their family?

sarah:

Okay, so I’ve only been thinking about this for 10 seconds, but this is my conspiracy theory for why there is a hyped up bully character. I think, and this doesn’t work if you do it with Christmas Eve, but I think it’s the exception that proves the rule. I think a lot of these movies, especially as they get worse, like Harley Quinn or Beautiful Mind or Silver Linings Playbook, they put in these really simplistic bully characters to stand in for years and years or maybe even decades of accumulated kind of ableist trauma stems or all of these side comments that people made over the years that you could kind of take generously or maybe they didn’t mean it like that kind of thing. And over time, that starts to become its own kind of subra within you as to how people are being seen you. So if you take that as, or the bully as a stand-in for all of those collective years of trauma that you accumulate from these little microaggressions or maybe major aggressions both, it is a really silly way of representing all of that in one shitty character that takes up way less script time, way less film time to get the same kind of trauma across.

But if you don’t understand how all of those microaggressions can pile up into one big bully, I think that nuance is lost on you. And I think in this case, I don’t know if I would give the hallmark screenwriter credit for that’s what he was doing, but I think it could have been, I think I might come out for an at bat for him trying to represent trauma in a quick and dirty fashion.

Jeff:

Yeah. I struggle with this a lot because to have no bullies would be to imply that there isn’t, that people are all treated great all the time and that we never bring up disability, which is not obviously accurate to say when people get bullied just like anybody else, obviously.

sarah:

Absolutely.

Jeff:

So I don’t think it’s an answer of we should never do this, but I also though struggle with it often feels like there’s this quiet appeal in these characters that the viewer is to learn this lesson, to learn the lesson, to number one, to not be that person. So don’t be the bully, which is probably a good lesson. But then I worry that even more so there’s this story being told around the need to defend disabled people, that the world is hostile toward them and that your job as a strong able-bodied person is to stand up for the weaker in able disabled character who’s going to fall prey to this. Correct.

sarah:

And cannot, cannot possibly defend themselves.

Jeff:

Yeah. Trevor never,

sarah:

Even in the film, Trevor didn’t defend himself. It was his daughter that came out of defense of him, which I think he may have been, that would’ve been an honor fight at that point. But I think even more so there’s a kind of irony to that argument because the film itself, as in the screenplay, spends a ton of time bullying Trevor through all the seeing tons and how he’s walking down the street and he always looks a bit doe-ish and the constant visual similes for blindness and ignorance. The film itself is bullying him in the absolute, and we’re supposed to look at that bully and be like, and that’s why we can never be ableist and it doesn’t work. It rings hollow because the writers themselves are clearly wildly ableist about how blindness operates in society.

Jeff:

Yeah, absolutely. Absolutely. And it’s also that same, how many times have we seen the story that the way to fix a bully is to help a bully? And I’ve always found this really complexing to me. If I think back to my time in elementary school, I genuinely do not think that if I had helped the people that were bullying me, I do not think they would’ve stopped bullying me because that’s not how bullying works. It’s not like a social credit system where, well, I will pay you $10 and now you’ll stop bullying me. It doesn’t work like that because at the root of it, there’s a power thing going on here, but there’s also a whole internal thing going on here with the individual. And so then what I’m watching this scene, and he, number one, she basically PTSD shames this boy who’s wetted his bed even though he’s much too old to wet his bed, which is pretty obviously, I would say aside that he probably has experienced in things in his life. So she bullies an older guy, and I wonder the type of dude who’s going to pantomime blindness to mock a girl whose father is blind. I don’t think that he is going to react with thanks to her intervention. I feel like

sarah:

I learned my lesson. Yeah.

Jeff:

I feel like he’s going to be, the worst thing that could happen to him is that he’s being saved by the person that he is ridiculing constantly. I don’t think that’s how you overturn that power dynamic. So it seems like such a weird liberal dream that, well, if we just help each other, we can all build forms of community and that’s the high road. Which isn’t to say that you should also slam cupcakes in people’s faces either. I also don’t think that that’s how you resolve bullying, but

sarah:

I feel like we can almost picture the writer’s room conversation, and I think you hit the nail on the head with calling it liberal fantasy writing where they’re in the room and they go, okay, how do we humanize this bully to show that problems are relative and everybody has their own shit they’re going through and somebody calls out, what if we give him some very obvious trauma symptoms like late stage bedwetting. So now you’re introducing this whole subplot that you can choose to take interest in who is abusing this 12 or 15-year-old boy and why isn’t anyone reporting this? So instead you just get the daughter like, Hey man, that’s really not cool, and I’m going to mock your trauma coping systems because you make really shitty blind jokes in the lunchroom, and if you take it at face value, sure. You get the relativism argument of even people who are mean have their own shit going on.

And it’s possible that everybody is suffering in many of the same ways you are, even if you’re not visibly disabled. But now you’re introducing kind of layers of trauma and deity or long-term illness through this bully character that the movie doesn’t have a hope of framing correctly. They can’t even frame simpler disorders correctly. So this bully character becomes really problematic in a film theory sense because you don’t get his story rectified. Nobody attempts to actually help him because they’ve already deemed him an antagonist character and we get no resolution as to what happens to him. So it’s disappointing.

Jeff:

We’re almost supposed to laugh at the big bully who pees the bed, who also I guess could be defined as disabled, like leafy body disabled anyways by unable to control bodily function. So it’s like, ha, that guy suffered a trauma. Let’s laugh and mock him. But also we are not to be mocking the blind character that is off limits.

sarah:

Correct.

Jeff:

Yeah. Now we’re such an interesting example, unintentionally I think of the way that disabled population, the disabled community is segmented off from itself. And so you have people talking about, well, we need to do better by blind people in this movie. And then they’re like, but also we’re going to just throw under the bus this other type of disability that somebody’s experiencing.

sarah:

Well, it kind of reflects the ongoing conversation even within CDS of disclosed and undisclosed disabilities because disclosed are the ones, if I’m being incredibly reductive, getting all the love right now, everybody wants to include the disclosed disabilities, the more obvious ones, the ones where there’s no moral argument that they did it to themselves or et cetera. Not as willing to include people with terminal illness, mental illness, kind of long-term, undisclosed disabilities or disabilities, we can’t quite as readily understand as blindness. And that can maybe be typified through the bully character who has some obvious traumas and isn’t accepted the same way as the guy with the easily recognizable, easy to diagnose relatively unthreatening disclosed disability.

Jeff:

Yeah, definitely. Now the last trope that I want to talk about comes to us toward the end of the film. So this is after sort of the major breakdown. Trevor is having this masculine identity crisis. He doesn’t think he’s a real man, he doesn’t think he’s a real professor. And we get this very bizarro scene in which Trevor goes and stands behind the lectern and asks Peyton if he looks like a professor. And he discloses that ever since he became blind, he does not think that people will see him as a professor anymore. Again, seeing him as a professor and that he will not look like a professor. Unfortunately, he does have an app that will tell him the color of his suit, but the app, if he puts it on himself,

Will not say professor, unfortunately. And this also ultimately culminates at the end of the film in which Peyton goes and gives an impassioned speech, which convinces Trevor that despite his disability, he is a real man and he is a real professor, and this is sort of what he overcomes his insecurities and will take back his job and will create presumably a mass murderer in his daughter as he starts to make out with Peyton in front of her. So we have this trope often in film in which it is the role of the non-disabled character to come in and to convince the disabled character that they’re not that disabled after all. That may be the only disability and life as a bad attitude. And this movie leaned into it heavily.

sarah:

So I have continuing my completely unrealistic film analysis of this piece of shit film. I think there’s a really interesting connection here, and you can take it in multiple directions, especially if you’re a better scholar than me between, and I’m doing this on the spot, so correct me if I’m wrong, masculine hyper ability. So him at the lectern being this amazing prodigal totally deserving professor character who can do no wrong, all the tropes that we established with cis white male academics who historically have been put up on these Greek like pedestals with the rampant academic notion that we just cannot seem to erase. And it actually goes back to what we were saying about the film bullying him itself, all of that, his narrative of masculine hyper ability and how he doesn’t believe that he could do that. Well, blind relies on the audience presumption that you thought until this moment that blindness equals ignorance.

Like you entered the film this way and nothing we have done so far persuades you otherwise. So then the end of the film when what’s her face, Peyton is correcting him. Like, no, I think that more people than just cis white males could succeed in the academy. And it’s possible that academics don’t just look like that he does really even seem to believe it. Then it’s a really stilted kind of, oh, well, maybe agreement that speaks more to the masculine ability narrative continuing to ring true, and he can be able, despite his disability. And the word despite is coming from this ignorance narrative that you assume everyone in the room has, which anyone in Disability Gang would be immediately offended by. Why are you taking it as a given that that’s what I think that’s my five seconds of film theory about the end of that film.

Jeff:

No. So you’ve totally tapped into something that I really have wanted to talk about with this film. Yeah. Because to add another log onto the Beautiful fire, or maybe it’s a fire that you’ve built here. Excellent. Is that the movie also? It absolutely draws your eyes to the fact that his blindness is a recent development. The implication being he was not blind when he became this hyper-masculine failure of strength and knowledge that the blindness came after, and that it is now a threat to

His current standing, despite the fact that we do get a scene of him listening to, I believe it was a Christmas Carol and might’ve been, or was it one of Dick Dick’s novel? He’s listening to an audio book of a Dickens novel while he’s holding the book, and they ask him, why are you holding the book? You’re listening to it. And he is like, oh, how it feels. Okay, chill out, bro. Anyways, oh, and so anyway, it’s interesting that the movie is both trying to say, of course you’re still a professor even though you’re blind. But the movie itself had to backfill this story and say, oh, but he was a prophet before he became blind. So he did it before disability hit.

sarah:

Yeah. So you’re saying it kind of negates the narrative that he could have even become a professor if he wasn’t blind or if he was blind, he wouldn’t have made it.

Jeff:

Who knows? Maybe it’s like, did they need to put that in there because they felt that the audience wouldn’t believe it, that a blind man could be this professor? So they had to add that in, and I don’t know which is worse. Did they need it to be this lost narrative? He lost his wife, he lost his sight. They were allegedly not connected, but that he’s experienced these tremendous losses that Peyton and to a lesser extent, max, the dog will now fill that there’s this void that needs to be filled. And one of those voids is his relationship with his daughter, which is strange since the end of the marriage. And the other void is his masculinity. He’s lost his masculinity because he lost his wife and he lost his sight. He’s been castrated and that only a woman being reeded to his life. Can he regain that? And once he’s regained it, what does he get back his job? He’s now allowed to be a pro again because the students and the girl have come together, and now he’s a whole man again, even though he’s still has flaws,

sarah:

Count on Jeff to do a psychoanalytic reading of literally any film he has given.

Jeff:

I’m just saying maybe the walking stick is a penis.

sarah:

Do you thank Deleuze and Guattari directly for that, or does that go in the work cited?

Jeff:

I think that was a Lacan. I think that was more of a Lacanian take.

sarah:

Yeah, I think that’s sort of a Lacan. Well shut out, Jacques Lacan.

Jeff:

I think that Lahan hated this film because,

sarah:

Well, according to your reading, he would’ve loved it.

Jeff:

I’m not saying he wouldn’t have been titillated by it. Oh yeah. I just don’t think he would’ve liked it.

sarah:

Jacques Lacan on masculine hyper ability seen through the body.

Jeff:

Yes,

Mvll Crimes:

Exactly.

Jeff:

So as always, invalid culture is of course a completely rigorous and scientific endeavor, and we have developed a completely scientific way of measuring the quality of films. It is of course our invalid culture rating scale.

sarah:

Correct.

Jeff:

We are going to go through our questions here and see where this film lands on the invalid culture scale. As always, we are playing by golf rules, which means the lower the score the better. So let’s get this started. On a scale of one to five, with five being the least, how accurate does this film portray disability?

sarah:

Are we talking about just whether or not the protagonist was accurately blind one? Yeah.

Jeff:

Did it do a good job of presenting blindness or was it way out in the stratosphere about what blindness is?

sarah:

Well, I think you said the actor was actually blind. Right. So what…

Jeff:

Actor was, but that doesn’t necessarily mean they did a good job of it.

sarah:

No, I think the film was actively mocking him, but in terms of the portrayal of the protagonist being blind, I have to give that a one.

Jeff:

Yeah. I am going to give this a 2.5 is my view on it. I understand that he was fairly new to his blindness, but it also just felt really odd to me that he didn’t seem to understand how to be blind, nor was he actually actively trying to find ways to be blind. I found it odd that all of the solutions to his problems were externally generated, but also he was never animating the finding of solutions. He was always just kind of standing there being like, wow, I’m just going to have to keep running into posts. The beginning of the movie starts with him giving this sort of human rights rant about the legal code against the construction site and being like, there’s not obstructional ball. And you’re like, oh, okay. He’s like an advocate, but then routinely throughout the movie, he just gets completely blown over by everybody and everything, and so I’m like, I don’t know. Yeah, he’s new to it, but that felt a little bit, yeah. So I’m going to revise it. I’m going to give it a two, two out of five.

sarah:

Yeah, I feel you. I think that’s a good consideration to keep in mind.

Jeff:

On a scale of one to five, with five being the hardest, how hard was it to get through this film?

sarah:

Oh, wow. Four. The pacing kills this. This could have been a short film, like 25, 30 minutes, and you would’ve lost nothing.

Jeff:

Yeah, I gave this a five. I feel like this was one of the harder ones to get through. It had both so much and so little like all at once. There were lots of little side plots, the bully side plot, the construction side plot, that learning how to train a guide dog side plot, whether or not he would have a dog. His divorce, the Chad side plot, there was so much going on, but yet it also felt like nothing happened in this film. And that’s, I think never a good sign.

sarah:

What if it was the Banality of Day-to-Day life and how we choose to invest or divest in different parts of ourselves, and he went full hundred percent investment in Peyton and Blindness at the expense of literally everything.

Jeff:

His job. That’s actually why they let him go. Had nothing to do with the construction. They were just like, he is obsessed with his dog trainer. We think there’s a lawsuit coming. We have to get this guy off campus.

sarah:

You haven’t been to work in a week. That’s why we’re letting you go. It’s not the blind thing, and he walks away. It was definitely the blind thing.

Jeff:

Definitely the blind thing. On a scale of one to five, with five being the maximum, how often did you laugh at things that were not intended to be funny?

sarah:

Not as much as Christmas Evil, unfortunately. I would say 2.5. There were some funny moments, but a lot of it was just so dull.

Jeff:

Yeah, I would say I gave this a three. There were a few times where I was chuckling. I mean, I was laughing a lot at just the sheer volume of Christmas. I understand that this is Hallmark, and this is their method. Every scene will be the vomit of Christmas. But there is something legitimately hilarious about seeing a professor’s office in a university in America that is covered in Christmas. Trees is funny. That is funny. And also the dean or chair had literal wrapped gifts on his table. Love that. Literally, what a flex. Bring

sarah:

Back the spirit of Christmas.

Jeff:

Yeah, love it. So I leave it a three, but I agree with you largely this was not as entertaining as I would’ve enjoyed.

sarah:

Amen.

Jeff:

So then last but certainly not least, on a scale of one to five, with five being the most, how many steps back has this film put Disabled people?

sarah:

I think in terms of disclosed disability or disabilities that you can see and readily apprehend and interact with and are fairly obvious to the casual viewer, it does a pretty okay job with OSHA violations and some standard troubles that come with heart of sight. I think in retrospect, only because of the conversation we had today, this film really does undisclosed disability dirty. So for every point that I can award it for being super woke to an extent about some of the hardships of blindness, it felt like it was being reported to me by a 12-year-old girl who had recently read the A ODA, which I’m not saying there’s a problem with, but if the screenplay writer is above the age of 12 years old, I am expecting a little bit more depth. Right. You said golf score.

Jeff:

Yeah. High is bad. One is good. That’s a lot of steps back.

sarah:

That’s a lot. That’s quite a few steps back.

Jeff:

Quite a few steps back. I was more generous on this film. I gave it a two in the sense that I think, as you said, I don’t think they did a ton of harm per se. There was nothing that really sort of stood out. I do take rock off, I think for this repetitive masculine disability wrap up, this insistence that if you’re male and disabled, that you inevitably are going to have these weird hangups about your power proficiency, sexuality, whatever. But I also don’t think that that’s the most egregious of sins, so I’m going to give it a 2.5.

sarah:

It felt kind of tokenism plus not just blindness, but male blindness and what your hangups are going to be as a result.

Jeff:

Yes. Okay, so tabulated our scores together

sarah:

With

Jeff:

The score of 24. My Christmas guide are: Regrets, I have a few.

sarah:

That’s like the second tier, right? That’s not bad.

Jeff:

That’s pretty good.

sarah:

You know what? Not bad.

Jeff:

It didn’t blow it Hallmark. Congratulations.

sarah:

Not on this one. Anyway,

Jeff:

It’s not art. And perhaps because it was so shallow it couldn’t do more harm.

sarah:

That’s true. Yeah. If the dialogue had a little more depth to it, it might’ve actually done more overall damage.

Jeff:

And this concludes another episode of Invalid Culture. Thank you for joining us. I hope you enjoyed it or not. Do you have a film you would like for us to cover on the pod, or even better? Do you want to be a victim on invalid culture? Head to word to our website, invalid culture.com and submit. We would love to hear from you. That’s it for this episode. Catch you next month and until then, stay invalid.

Mvll Crimes [musical interlude]:

I’m arguing with strangers on the Internet // Everyone is wrong. I just haven’t told them yet.

 

DVD cover of the Christmas Evil, featuring Santa Claus with a bloody axe and "Merry Christmas" crossed out

Nothing says the holiday’s like stabbing someone with a toy.

Joined by special guest Sarah Currie, this Christmas season we turn our attention to cult classic holiday slasher film, Christmas Evil. But will this typical “mentally ill people are dangerous” romp exceed expectations? Probably not, but at least we got the present we all wanted this year — an answer to the age old question of what happens when a son sees mommy kissing Santa Claus. 

Listen at…

 

Grading the Film

As always, this film is reviewed with scores recorded in four main categories, with 1 being the best and 5 being the worst. Like the game of golf, the lower the score the better.

How accurate is the representation?

Jeff – 4 / 5

Erika – 2.5 / 5

Sarah – 4 / 5

Total – 10.5 / 15

How difficult was it to watch the movie?

Erika – 4 / 5

Jeff – 1 / 5

Sarah – 3 / 5

Total – 8 / 15

How often were things unintentionally funny?

Erika – 5 / 5

Jeff – 3 / 5

Sarah – 5 / 5

Total – 13 / 15

How far back has it put disabled people?

Jeff – 4 / 5

Erika – 4 / 5

Sarah – 2.5 / 5

Total – 10.5 / 15

The Verdict

Crimes Have Been Committed *

Podcast Transcript

Erika:

Welcome to Invalid Culture, a podcast dedicated to excavating the strangest and most baffling representations of disability in popular culture. Unlike other podcasts that review of films you’ve probably heard of, Invalid Culture is all about the abyss of pop culture-adjacent media that just never quite broke through because, well, they’re just awful. I’m your host, Erika.

Jeff:

And I’m your other host, Jeff, and it’s time now for us to think about some culture that might just be invalid.

[Theme song plays, “Arguing with Strangers on the Internet” by Mvll Crimes]

Erika:

Welcome back to another episode of Invalid Culture. It’s that time of year y’all, Chrismukkah is upon us, and that means it’s time for our festive holiday special. Jeff, how you doing?

Jeff:

So hype, very excite. I’m really looking forward… Not that last year’s Christmas episode was any slouch, it’s not every day you get to interview a literal movie star on your podcast. But, no shade to Hallmark, this was a much more heartwarming Christmas tale in my opinion.

Erika:

Huh.

Jeff:

A silence, complete silence.

Erika:

Heartwarming is not how I would’ve described this film, unless you are maybe making a reference to the torch mob?

Jeff:

Yeah, we’re different people, Erika, I think that should be very clear.

Erika:

I do forget that sometimes.

Jeff:

We’re not just different people, we also, as always, this season, have a different person with us. Today we are joined by our guest victim, Sarah. Sarah, can you give an introduction for our fair listeners?

Sarah:

Sure. My name is Sarah, and I professionally do nothing for a living. I am finishing up my doctorate in disability, and I teach classes, and I watch a lot of movies and pretend that that’s an important service to society.

Jeff:

As a media scholar, I can confirm it is.

Sarah:

Naturally.

Erika:

It sounds like you are in the right place.

Sarah:

Yeah. There is no bias here whatsoever as to the veracity of my job.

Jeff:

What would some of our listeners know you from, published work, or studies, or anything? Movies?

Sarah:

Movies! The long list of films that I have appeared in!

Jeff:

Yeah.

Sarah:

You may know me from rants that sound slightly detached from reality on Twitter, or sharing resources online, or publications about UDL in such fantastic venues as criticism, literature, Journal of Multimodal Rhetorics, Mosaic.

Jeff:

That’s it. But no feature films.

Sarah:

But no feature films, no. I actually turned down the Deadpool movie that’s coming out next year, because I’d really like to do my dissertation defense.

Jeff:

Right. Priorities, right?

Sarah:

Yeah.

Jeff:

All right, so Erika, I think you need to tell us what monstrosity did we have to endure this year?

Erika:

This year, the gift that just keeps on giving is Christmas Evil. Christmas Evil brings us the vivid tale of the life of Harry Stadling, a man traumatized as a child by the sight of his mother getting frisky with St. Nick. Making Freud proud, this traumatic event leads to a lifelong obsession with Santa Claus and all things Christmas, until, 30 years after the trauma, the lines between Harry and Santa begin to blur. Troubles at the toy factory he works at, and the negative body hygiene of local bad boy Moss Garcia, eventually push Harry over the edge. Those who stand against the Christmas will die. Dressed as Santa, Harry goes on a part donating toys to disabled kids, part murder rampage to punish those who don’t want to hear the, quote, “tune he’s trying to play”, end quote. Whatever that means. Eventually, he confronts his financially successful repo man brother Philip, for denying his traumatic observations, and after tussling for a bit and eventually punching Philip, Harry loads up into his Santa van, flying off into the cold night to escape the torch-wielding mob that is hunting for him.

Sarah:

That’s actually a better summation than actually subjecting yourself to the film. That did a lot of work, rhetorically, to save people a lot of time and trauma.

Jeff:

That’s about a hundred minutes condensed into a tight paragraph.

Sarah:

I’d like to draw attention to the fact that the first 45 minutes of this film was actually expository content to a plot line that basically didn’t exist.

Jeff:

Right, yes, a hundred percent. A hundred percent.

Erika:

It was like, “We’re just putting in the time before we can start killing people.”

Sarah:

Yeah. It took a really Tolkienesque approach to what was a film that was fairly devoid of any context whatsoever. It took me 20 minutes into the film to figure out that his Peeping Tom house was his brother’s house, because there were so many balding, middle-aged, brunette males in the film, I had trouble keeping track. Every single male cast fit that description, and it made it really hard.

Jeff:

Is this why I like the film so much? Am I drawn to the balding, brunette male demographic?

Sarah:

Which character did you relate the most to?

Jeff:

Obviously Moss Garcia.

Sarah:

Moss Garcia.

Jeff:

Moss!

Erika:

That’s the child that asked for a subscription to Penthouse or Playboy?

Sarah:

Penthouse magazine.

Jeff:

Yeah, yep. Now, we are already cutting into this and joking around, but our opinions don’t matter, because there are legitimate scholars who have weighed in on the quality of this film, and we think it’s important for us to give fair shake to that critical response to this film. There wasn’t a lot of critical response, because it’s actually kind of hard to get your hands on this film back in the 1980s. However, one Tom Huddleston, wrote on Time Out, gave the film a four out of five, and most importantly gave us this great quote. So Tom Huddleston says, quote, “In contrast to most slasher flicks, this isn’t about anything as simple as revenge. Jackson’s concerns are bigger; social responsibility, personal morality, and the gaping gulf between society’s stated aims at Christmastime: charity, hope, goodwill to all men; and the plight of those left on the outside: the children, the mentally ill, the ones who don’t fit in. Bizarre, fascinating, thoughtful, and well worth a look.” These are the words of Tom Huddleston. Of those adjectives, Sarah, how many of them were accurate to you?

Sarah:

There were four, I guess. I would go oh for four. The closest he gets is maybe “well worth a look”, but it kind of has the same ethos as rubber necking for me, where you look at the car accident and you know shouldn’t be looking, but you also can’t look away because now you’ve already seen it, so you feel invested. That was my relationship to Christmas Evil.

Jeff:

Yeah. What about you, Erika?

Erika:

I guess I was watching it and there’s, we’ll get there, but there’s a strong kind of anti-capitalist vibe in the film that I think just turned me a little more compassionate towards it. I was like, “Okay, you’re kind of speaking my language here. Tell me more. This is weird, but I’ll keep listening.” And so maybe Tom was coming from a similar place.

Jeff:

Right, yeah. I came for the disability narrative, I stayed for the strong union rhetoric.

Erika:

Yes.

Sarah:

It’s true. The unionization undertone that outplayed the entire film was actually more resonant than the core storyline, which I’m not sure is what they were going for, but that’s what they got.

Jeff:

Tom wasn’t the only one though who enjoyed this film. In fact, there are some pretty famous people, like John Waters, who have stated that this is maybe the best Christmas movie he has ever seen…

Sarah:

What?

Jeff:

Which is a nuclear hot take. But people on Amazon also have some affinity for this film. Specifically, we have our user Earl Awesome, pretty sure that’s his real name, gave this a five star, with the title Best Christmas movie ever, period, ever, all caps. Two evers. This is what Earl had to say about the film. “I was hesitant to order this, but when I read a statement from John Waters, if you don’t know him, you should, saying it was the best Christmas movie ever. He was right. What’s more, is that this movie is where the idea for,” quote, “Joker came from. Everything in Hollywood is copied. You watch the protagonist descend into madness as the holiday season approaches. It’s an all too real comment on the way holidays can play with the mental health of some. Great acting, great story, great movie, five stars.”

So, I just want to contest, right off the bat, that the Joker existed decades before this film was ever made, so this is definitely not where the idea for the Joker comes from, in any way. I think there’s probably a few other movies like Taxi Driver that also would like to have a word on that. But the question I have for you, Sarah, would you say that this movie was a comment on the way that holidays can play with the mental health of some?

Sarah:

I know where he’s coming from with this, because while I was watching this, and this is kind of a reductive comment, but Harry, our protagonist, our possibly actually real Santa Claus, depending on how you read the ending, is kind of a confusing potpourri of mental illnesses and symptoms that don’t ever really congeal into one credible diagnosis, and I thought the reference to the Joker was really good because at least Christopher Nolan’s version… That is also a character that’s kind of a confusing mass of symptomology that doesn’t actually cohere with anyone’s real, lived experience of psychosis. So I appreciated that somebody had read a comic book at some point and identified like, “Okay, here are some core mental illness symptoms.” They just didn’t care too much for the cohesion of those symptoms into something resembling a diagnostic disorder. And you can argue about whether somebody needs to meet the criteria of a diagnostic disorder to be a credible mentally ill protagonist.

But all that to say, I don’t know if it actually even takes on mental health problems at Christmas, because it just kind of takes on the problem of being completely unable to identify how mental health interacts with a person in general. So if you can’t even get into the person’s psyche, I don’t know how you’re going to then translate it to the level of your psyche’s interaction with a holiday. Right? Does that make sense?

Erika:

That’s actually a surprisingly reasonable segue into our next review, which-

Sarah:

Thank you.

Erika:

… comes-

Sarah:

I thought you were going to say a surprisingly reasonable answer, and I’d be like, “Thank you. I’m here to defy expectations.”

Erika:

“Glad you set the bar so low.” Yeah, so megalon, maybe also dealing with some low standards, gave this a five-star review, titled Fantastic, in which they wrote, “Quite possibly the greatest movie about a man obsessed with Christmas ever made. The depiction of psychosis is frighteningly real, and yet there are moments of hilarity and shocking violence. Highly recommend,” three exclamation points.

Sarah:

Okay.

Erika:

My first question is what about Elf?

Sarah:

That is actually, arguably, a better depiction of psychosis than Christmas Evil.

Erika:

Yeah, that was going for a man obsessed with Christmas, but totally. And what about this depiction of psychosis was…

Jeff:

Frighteningly real.

Erika:

Real or frightening?

Sarah:

If we again return to the metaphor of somebody read a comic book that lightly referenced a villain with mental illness, and then they modeled their character with psychosis after that? Yes, that would be frighteningly realistic, and incredibly expository as to the hyperbolic mentally ill villain who cannot be understood, and every action he takes is both confusing and incredibly tragic. Is that the lived experience of psychosis, in my mind and my community’s mind? I think it would be an emphatic no from everyone in the room.

Jeff:

Our last review comes from, again, I’m pretty sure this is their real name, Davy Dissonance. Davy gave this a two-star, with the title, “The picture quality is watchable and audio is good. Movie Review”. Yeah, I’m going to try my absolute best to not laugh during this, so I’m going to try and do Davy justice here. Davy did not love the film. Okay. Davy says, “As everyone else pointed out, it’s not a slasher movie. It is a demented Christmas movie, pretty much. There are moments when Santa kills, but it’s one home invasion and mass slaughter. That’s it. Anything else is Santa having a period about the fact that no one gives a shit about Christmas or whatever. I didn’t hate this movie. I don’t regret ever watching this, but it’s not my thing. It’s innovative and different, but for some reason I do not give one F about it. I found the movie boring. So up yours.”

Erika:

Wow.

Jeff:

Is Davy Dissonance Harry?

Sarah:

Is Harry Santa Claus?

Jeff:

Well, okay, so that’s maybe a better place for us to start. Number one, does Davy not realize that there is a difference between Harry and Santa?

Sarah:

I don’t know if I understand whether there is a difference between Harry and Santa Claus. The last 45 seconds of that film? I was up for an extra hour last night just laying there, thinking about it. Does that mean…

Jeff:

[inaudible 00:16:42] give me more?

Sarah:

Was he Santa the whole time? Is the joke on the viewer? That we were making fun of this guy, but that guy has actually been the real Santa for the entirety of this film? And all that context building for the first 45 minutes is actually irrelevant?

Jeff:

Yeah, that’s an important question.

Erika:

I have another important question. Is Davy, I haven’t heard this phrasing before, but when Davy asks, “Is Santa having a period?” About the fact that no one gives a shit, is “having a period” slang for being crazy or having an episode?

Jeff:

So I had this question as well, as someone who did not get sex education, I don’t also understand how periods work. And so I also was curious about this. Do you just have a period? Do you bring it on? Is it triggered by things?

Sarah:

That is a mid-millennial slang for PMSing about something.

Erika:

Are we early millennials? Is that what happened here?

Sarah:

I’m not saying that that’s what happened, but I might be strongly implying that that’s what happened.

Jeff:

But still a confusing one to me, given my limited knowledge of how female anatomy works.

Sarah:

A hundred percent. I think that Davy Dissonance can be accused of some anti-feminist rhetoric if we subscribe to third or fourth-wave feminism, and Amazon did not do a good enough job curating that review for use of language that could be offensive to 50% of the population.

Erika:

How did they miss “up yours”?

Jeff:

From now on, I’m just going to put this out there though, every time I now write a review about a movie, and possibly academic books, I’m ending it with, “So up yours.”

Sarah:

If you don’t agree with this, up yours.

Erika:

I might argue that academic writing is just very, very fancy and creative ways of saying “up yours” without saying it.

Sarah:

It’s true. Davy went the extra step of saying the quiet part out loud, and I appreciate him for it.

Erika:

Props for that.

All right, so we’ve heard what the critics had to say, but let’s just take a step back. General impressions of this film. What did you guys think?

Sarah:

I had a lot of trouble with the light pedophilia vibe that permeated this entire film. It made me deeply uncomfortable, and it really does nothing to address it. It normalizes it to such an extent that you would find it weird if this film was your only context for ’80s New York men, if they weren’t into little girls and had pictures of them on their nightstands and shit. Which I thought, for a number of reasons, was just weird.

I did really like how much content there was on the Willowy Springs Hospital for mentally retarded children, and that was the words they used, not the words I’m using. I wrote down, this is my headcanon, the real villain in this movie is intense social anxiety. This is really about Harry’s journey with not wanting to be in spaces with other people or talking to others, and everything else is just a byproduct.

Jeff:

Would you say that this was a frighteningly real portrayal of social anxiety?

Sarah:

I think especially the scene where he goes, this is about halfway through the movie, where he goes to the Christmas party and they drag him in against his will, and then he’s standing and everyone’s staring at him and he starts assuming that they’re going to start shit-talking him. I was like, “That’s actually a pretty good depiction of how social anxiety works in real life.” And I do not think they were going for that at all, but it ended up being a fairly accurate depiction of a kind of medically treatable variant of anxiety. That was laudable in this film.

Erika:

So that actually dovetails really well with my read on the film. For me, this quickly just morphed into a trauma narrative. It’s obviously set up to be that, but it kind of set me off on this contemplation about trauma, and generational trauma, and the role of trauma in mental health. That was really what I spent, I think, the greater part of this movie thinking about. The pedophilia question came up for me too, so we’re going to have to spend a little time with that. It was indeed difficult, very difficult to get through this film. I’m not a horror film… That’s not my genre, but yeah. The Willowbrook bit too, really, that kind of threw me. I guess that pulled me in too, because it was like, “Wait a sec, why? Whoa, whoa.” What in the creation of this film led to that becoming part of the story? To the point that they found a Geraldo lookalike to be the newscaster. That was curious to me.

Sarah:

Yeah.

Jeff:

Yeah. When we picked this film originally, we hadn’t seen it yet, and I think going into it, I thought we were going to get this sort of typical, kind of schlocky like, “Ooh, crazy man goes on a rampage.” And I’m not saying we didn’t get that, but we also got a lot of other confusing things as well that I was not expecting. And I now, in my head, just constantly hear, “Moss… Moss…”

Sarah:

“Moss Garcia!”

Jeff:

“Moss Garcia!” In my head, and I’m going to put that in the positive category. I also want to see Moss Garcia get what’s coming to him as the original bad boy, the original bad boy of New York. And that young Moss Garcia would eventually become Rudy Giuliani.

Sarah:

But in this timeline, Harry is actually older, and Harry might be the original original bad boy, A, if he’s Santa, because that means he’s immortal. So that puts his age as ageless. But B, because the characterization of him is ostensibly a middle-aged man with a burn book and a Santa kink.

Jeff:

Right, basically, yes.

Sarah:

That’s pretty bad!

Jeff:

Yeah. Yeah. Anti-hero, some might say

Sarah:

“It’s me, I’m the problem, it’s me.”

Jeff:

Okay, so we’ve talked a little bit about the high-level stuff, but, I’m sorry, can we please talk about the inciting incident? This movie begins with a scene in which two young boys are witnessing Santa come down, wash his hands in a hand-washing station, as, apparently, you’re supposed to do for Santa. I did not do that in our household. He then butters himself some bread, which I also think is pretty off-myth. He drinks some milk, and everything’s great. But unfortunately, young Harry comes down and watches Santa moan very suggestively to his mother while taking off her garter belt, and then presumably consummated the relationship. Presumably. Harry then goes upstairs, he drops his snow globe, and cuts his hand on it.

Sarah:

I really thought they were going to do more, and I’m not condoning this, but I thought they were going to do more with the self-harm narrative as the inciting incident for violence. I thought it was going to be a kind of The Machinist thing, where wherever he sees blood, or the instantiation of food or eating, he goes into this kind of inarticulate psychosis and begins murdering people. They did that once, and then dropped that whole concept from the rest of the film, which I thought was kind of unfortunate because it was a somewhat interesting way to do it, but still problematic. It’s worth pointing out that that’s not how psychosis works in real life. There are such things as triggers, but if they have a self-harm trigger, it does not compel psychotic individuals to activate incredible violence upon the viewing of blood, or any such alternate instantiation. And I think that’s worth pointing out.

Erika:

I’m just remembering him now. The fact that Santa’s costume was perpetually covered in blood, I hadn’t really thought about that, the blood. Yeah, that wasn’t what stuck with me. First of all, I just was very confused. So, the boys think it’s Dad being Santa?

Jeff:

[inaudible 00:26:51] Philip does, Philip believes it’s the father, and Harry believes it’s actually Santa.

Sarah:

That’s actually their core, that’s what drives the ethos of the film, this disagreement that separates two brothers, but also, apparently, completely separates mental states between the two brothers.

Erika:

But I remain confused.

Sarah:

Yes.

Erika:

Was it his dad? Was it their dad? I don’t know.

Jeff:

According to the box, it was his father. The description of the film says he witnessed his father dressed as Santa. Now, I’m not a psychologist or a psychiatrist, but I want to dig into this Oedipal complex a little bit more. So, he has this desire for his mother, and Santa, I guess, gets his mother. And so then he becomes obsessed with Christmas 33 years later? Because when we see him next as an adult, his house is like Santa’s workshop. It is decked out. He has a chalkboard counting down the days to Christmas, he has every toy, everything. And then of course his proximity to Santa becomes more and more evident as it goes on. But I’m just curious about what Freud would think about this. He sees his mom, and then is like, “I will become Santa.”

Sarah:

I hate Freud. That’s my bias. I think his theories are fucking useless. I think a better reading than Freud would give, but maybe Freud would be sympathetic too, would be something like Harry is enlivened by the sexual potentiality of specifically Christmas, and begins to associate any kind of sexual action with the prospect of Christmas Eve, without really taking too much time to think it’s possible his parents have also done these actions at other points of the year, and becomes so sexually fascinated by the relationship between Christmas Eve and the lewd acts performed, that he’s just caught in this continuous loop of Christmas, sex, mother, sexiness, Santa, in this recurring spiral of illness?

Jeff:

Which admittedly sounds like a nightmare, if I put myself into that situation of 33 years of weird sexual Christmas tension.

Sarah:

Yes.

Jeff:

Nightmare.

Sarah:

Absolutely.

Jeff:

Yeah, yeah. I also wonder though, why has no one said anything about this to him?

Sarah:

There’s kind of the implication at the end of the movie that this is a somewhat regular argument between the brothers, Phil and Harry, when they’re having their kind of penultimate argument before the punching scene. And he’s like, “You’ve ruined my life. We can’t keep doing this kind of thing.” And calling back to all these occasions where they’ve argued over whether Santa’s their dad, and that inciting incident in the ’30s. And because of this incident, I think instead of causing Harry to question his drawn relationship between repressed sexuality and Christmas Eve or Christmas, it reinforced it for him, right? Kind of the same way if you tell a child you can’t have the Kit Kat bar, they become obsessed with wanting the Kit Kat bar. You don’t even have to like Kit Kat; if I tell you you can’t have it? That’s all you want at this point, even if just to spite me. And that’s a very Freudian reading of our desires, and how desire mechanics work in a psyche. But he seems to be enacting that in his relationship to smut and Christmastime.

Erika:

Yeah, I don’t know if it’s necessarily like… Definitely the film communicates the Oedipal vibe is there, but I think another read of it is not necessarily sexual in that way. That he’s so upset at seeing Santa do what Santa… Santa’s supposed to be innocent, and I think he goes on this life mission of recuperating Santa’s innocence. That, “Santa did it wrong, I’m going to fix this. I’m the real Santa, I’m going to fix this. I’m going to…” And that also kind of wraps in the… He’s obviously upset about the Moss… Moss’s sexuality.

Sarah:

Moss Garcia!

Jeff:

Moss Garcia!

Sarah:

You can’t just say it normally, you have to say it like he says it. Moss Garcia!

Erika:

It’s just like sex isn’t part of Christmas, sex is bad, it is not part of Christmas. And so this kind of brings up that pedophilia question, because I think pedophilia is one read of it, but the other read of it is there’s something paternal, and there’s also something infantile about his relationship, or he’s grasping onto this kind of childhood innocence.

Sarah:

Which is, notably, a trait that many people associate with mental illness.

Erika:

Yes.

Sarah:

Often erroneously. I think he was intentionally written to be childlike, and almost kind of nymphlike, and you laugh at his attempts at interacting with adult society because he’s just so infantile and innocent.

Erika:

But the fact that the pedophilia comes out, it’s almost like they didn’t commit to that. They didn’t commit to us feeling innocence about his sexual conversation with children.

Sarah:

So if he thinks Santa did it wrong, is Santa doing it right for Harry doing it with much younger girls?

Jeff:

An interesting query.

Sarah:

That’s a big yikes from me for Harry.

Jeff:

Fair enough.

Sarah:

The first thing he says to one of the girls in the alley when he meets up with them, he says some inane comment to Moss Garcia, but then to the girl in the group, he goes, “You’re very beautiful.” And I was visibly cringing at that line when he says it.

Jeff:

Yeah. Well, he does the same when he sort of strokes the picture, right?

Sarah:

Yeah.

Jeff:

He’s like, “Oh, beautiful.”

Erika:

Great. Real quick, why does he have a picture of the child?

Jeff:

How did he get this photo?

Sarah:

And it seems to be a school photo.

Erika:

Yeah.

Sarah:

He got that from someone.

Erika:

It sort of gives the impression, when I saw the school photo, I was like, “Did her parents give him that?” Is that part of how he’s perceived by others, is as this mentally ill or disabled older man, who the neighborhood is kind of like, “Oh, we accept him. He’s just the weirdo.”

Sarah:

That was definitely the function of Philip’s wife. Philip’s wife was-

Erika:

Oh my gosh.

Sarah:

… Team Harry the entire film. And I actually loved it, because she comes downstairs and uses her sexuality, which I think is an important element that they did entirely unintentionally, to convince people that Harry is worthy of people’s time. So it was this reversal of the sexuality mechanic that’s working on a higher level in the film, which again, unintentionally, I think they were using in reverse, to try to enforce the message, “I don’t think you should see this guy as some dipshit child. I think he is a man who has struggles like you do, and is worthy of the attention that you give to me or the other people at work.”

Erika:

I think we also need to talk about the office party, and this whole Willow Springs, Willowbrook coming up, because we’re talking about who he is and how people perceive him, but he’s in a management position at work, isn’t he?

Sarah:

Yes.

Jeff:

Yeah, he just got promoted to management.

Erika:

But there’s some dynamic there where he’s sort of being branded as a sucker, right? Because someone’s calling him and asking him to, even though he’s been promoted, can you go and do the lower level work?

Sarah:

Yes.

Jeff:

Yeah, he’s referred to as a schmuck on more than one occasion.

Erika:

Okay. So we’re at this office party, Christmas party, everybody’s having a great time. Looks like typical ’80s office party, as I can imagine, office parties were typical in the ’80s. Why is the Geraldo expose coming up on the TV then and there?

Jeff:

[inaudible 00:36:49], so I have some theories on this. So I think that there’s a practical thing going on here in the film. And then I think there’s actually a more interesting thing that I want to actually talk about. So I think on the very legitimate, practical thing, is that I think they’re trying to point back to things like A Christmas Carol, the idea that Christmas is when you take care of disabled children. And so they were like, “Okay, well, we need to have these disabled children, and that he finds out that the corporation has said they’re going to help, but they actually aren’t.”

And this is where the interesting union politics happen, because as it comes out, they have this announcement, that for every toy that’s made, they’ll then donate a toy to this hospital, right? And Harry comes in and is like, “Wow, we have enough, how many children are there?” And the PR and exec guy was like, “Who cares? We’re never going to do it!” Basically. He’s like, “I don’t need to know how many children there are.” And so I’m like, “Hm, interesting that this is about generating productivity through a charitable appeal.” They’re like, “We need you to make more toys, so we’re going to bait you with this idea that your extra labor will help sick kids.” Whether or not that’s actually true, which Harry finds out it isn’t, and that’s kind of what triggers one of his reasons for killing.

But the fact that they would point back to Willowbrook, the institution in New York that famously Geraldo blew up in 1972 as being a horrendous, horrendous place for people with intellectual disabilities and other diagnoses. They use this, they intersplice clips from that actual documentary with their fake Geraldo, which I’m guessing it’s because that character returns later in the film, so they needed to situate them in the world. But it’s interesting that there’s this pointing to a really significant moment in disability rights history in the United States, rooted in the brutality of institutionalization, but then it’s being leveraged purely as this emotional appeal justification for why he’s going to go off, because of this unexcusable injustice that these children aren’t being given toys. When the actual injustice pointed out by this documentary is nothing to do with toys, and everything to do with state structural problems. But I think probably everyone in New York would know. Everyone knew Willowbrook, especially in 1980.

Sarah:

Okay, can I get you to pause there, because you have delivered an entire essay in the last three minutes, and I’m overwhelmed with things to say. So before you do essay number two…

Jeff:

Yeah, I [inaudible 00:39:54] agree.

Sarah:

I’d like to respond to essay number one.

Jeff:

Right.

Sarah:

Yeah. I think there was a lot going on with the institutionalization scene, and one of the most complicated parts of it was that 90% of that argument, which you so beautifully articulated, was implied, right? There was no dialogue about that whatsoever. You were supposed to see those scenes, and it was like a 9/11 for us in the present day, where there’s about 30 articles that are generated for you upon seeing this, and you don’t get any of that if you are not from an American context, or you have never heard of this incident, or you have not done any reading on institutionalization. So that’s already incredibly complicated.

And I think his relationship specifically to it has a couple competing layers of complications, some of which you’ve pointed out. But Erika did a great job of pointing out that it’s not actually so easy to posit him as this childish learning-disabled character because A, we go back to the potpourri of senseless symptoms that make it really hard to even investigate what he was trying to depict. But B, he is actually really good with children, and they go out of their way to show you that at the Christmas party, that when you get him out of his shell of social anxiety, he is actually brilliant with children, and should not be middle management at a factory, he should have a child-facing job, because he has talents and abilities that are extremely applicable to that.

So you get the narrative about being strung along or pushed into a career choice that people are told are more worthy employment, or more normal employment, and normal’s being used carefully there. But you also get this storyline about maybe it’s not that he is entirely infantile or more relatable to kids, maybe he has a genuine talent with kids, because if Harry was coded as female and had a lot of those traits, we would say, “Oh, she should have been a teacher. She should have been in ECE. She should have been all of these child-facing roles that are often coded as feminine.” And because Harry is a creepy looking, mask presenting guy, we see that, and they complicate this with the pedophilia storyline, we see that as creepy when he’s really good with kids, when he’s a great Santa Claus.

I thought when he was repeating that line like, “Merry Christmas to everyone!” Over and over again, that was a reference to It’s a Wonderful Life? I thought that they were trying to bring that back over and over again, and that has an interesting relationship to the institutionalization storyline, because that film is about, basically, ADA laws, right?

Jeff:

Yeah.

Sarah:

So I thought that that was intentional, where they were doing It’s a Wonderful Life, and they were doing some of the law rhetorics around institutionalizing kids. But then when you brought up, which movie did you say? Could be that one too.

Jeff:

Oh, A Christmas Carol. A Christmas Carol.

Sarah:

A Christmas Carol, yes. But I thought It’s a Wonderful Life specifically because of the legal context.

Jeff:

Yeah, totally. When he arrives at Willowy Springs, I thought for sure we were going to go in, and that he was going to have another moment of realization, another breaking of innocence. I thought that’s where this was going. He had the breaking of innocence with his dad, possibly Santa, and his mom. And then he has the breaking of innocence when he finds out that the corporation is not actually donating toys like they say they are. And then he was going to have this breaking of innocence that the institutions were not all happy places for children. I thought that’s where this was going. But then he just drops off the presents, gets kissed by a nurse, and then [inaudible 00:44:02] off into the darkness.

Sarah:

Counterpoint, I actually loved this. That scene for me was one of the stronger ones in the film, because of what he says to the security guard. So he rolls up as Santa Claus, we’re not sure if he’s actually real Santa or not, but whatever. And he goes, “Okay, I’ve got gifts for children.” And the guy brings up the same bureaucratic rhetoric that stops the toys from being donated in the first place. He says something to the effect of, “Oh, it’s so late at night, you can’t give kids toys now.” And his rebuttal is like, “What a ridiculous argument. Why can’t I donate toys to needy children because it’s past due hours? Just let me drop them off.”

And it was a really nice callback, actually, to his argument at the Christmas party where he’s using that really stupid tune metaphor. But I think it was trying to accomplish something along the lines of, “Everyone here is kind of out for themselves, and only doing something insofar as it helps them climb the ladder, and I don’t understand why no one else wants to help other people climb the ladder.” So the security guard for him is just another instantiation of all the dipshits at his work, and his boss, and all these people who won’t donate, won’t work in community, come up with stupid bureaucratic reasons to not do things. And he’s standing there like, “I am literally the image of charity right now. I am literally Santa holding gifts, and you’re not letting me do this, because it’s after hours. That is bonkers.”

Erika:

After hours, which is literally when Santa comes.

Sarah:

That’s true, yeah!

Erika:

But also, I’m curious, do you think if the security guard hadn’t let him in, would he have killed the security guard?

Sarah:

Definitely. I thought that’s exactly where that was going. I thought he was going to start slaughtering anyone who was too into the bureaucratic method. And that would’ve actually made me love the movie more, if he just went around eliminating people who were too hyper-capitalist.

Jeff:

Bureaucrats, like middle management specifically, is his target.

Sarah:

Yeah. If that was, from the beginning, his intentional targets, and it kept a somewhat coherent mission of just eliminating people who would’ve been the villains in It’s a Wonderful Life, it would’ve been a pretty good social commentary film.

Erika:

But there was also the way that the institution staff were the happiest, most wonderful, gleeful people in the universe.

Sarah:

Oh yeah.

Erika:

They’re overflowing. It was like, “Wow, that’s…” One read of it anyway is along that charity trope, that these must be the absolute salt of the earth humans that are in this wretched place with these others.

Sarah:

Yeah.

Jeff:

Yeah. And that’s this disconnect where it’s like they point to an awareness of what was going on at Willowbrook, the actual Willowbrook, but then also present this completely other world at the Willowy Springs that he actually attends.

Sarah:

Yeah. In fairness to people who actually do take on roles at psychiatric institutions, my bias here is my best friend is a nurse at an adult psychiatric institution. Some of them really are salt of the earth, better than average people. She is doing some incredibly difficult work there, and her job is legitimately beyond most people’s ability, and I really want to acknowledge that. That said, it is complete propagandistic nonsense that every single nurse and staff member that works there is the salt of the earth, my best friend, type employee, particularly in the ’80s, when the core de-institutionalization movement is happening in the US/Canada.

Jeff:

And on Christmas Eve.

Sarah:

And on Christmas Eve.

Jeff:

I think you are not going to find too many people getting paid what we pay support workers happy on Christmas Eve at work, probably.

Sarah:

Yes. There’s a lot happening there with those nurse characters.

Jeff:

Yeah. And then my last question on this one is, is this the moment when the sexy Santa myth is confirmed for him? Because this is the only instance where he, quote, unquote, “gets the girl”. This is the only moment where a woman looks at him with sort of loving eyes, and kisses him, and he lights up as well. Is this sort of the confirmation? And then what does it mean that the confirmation, the sexual confirmation, comes from a nurse, who are typically seen in this maternal kind of way?

Sarah:

I love this reading. I did not think about this at all, because I was too busy dwelling over the myriad institutionalization rhetorics from my own bias. I think, first impression, completely ad hoc, it kind of competes with the sexualization storyline that was already occurring, because that storyline was created to be so deeply problematic. And that’s not to say this is a non-problematic relationship and therefore those things don’t cohere, because it is A, also problematic. And B, problematic things can absolutely cohere.

But having been rewarded for standing up against bureaucracy, I think was, in the basest way, a positive way of rewarding his behavior, which is almost never happening in the movie. This guy spends the first 40 minutes of exposition being shit on for doing things like wanting people to do quality work, or showing up to work at all. He’s all about this community narrative, and he gets shit on for it. So when somebody rewards him for doing something for community, I saw that as a pretty big win for him. But I’m not sure what that’s doing for the sexuality narrative. And I don’t think it did anything demonstrable for him either, because it never came up again, and he didn’t pursue her at all. It was just this little mini reward sequence, like, “You did a good thing for others, well done.” And then he moves on to become a mass murderer.

Erika:

Disagree with me, but I wonder if this is… I don’t know that this was meant to be a film, this is a recurring kind of theme in the podcast, in the films that we’ve watched, this wasn’t meant to be a film about mental health or mental illness. This was meant to be a film that brought sex and murder together, and this psychosis trope was sort of the thing that conveniently bound them together. And so I think that helps to explain some of the chaotic readings, the many, many, many possible readings, is like, yeah, we could read this a lot of ways because the creators were not intentional.

Jeff:

Right, yeah. Yeah.

Sarah:

It’s like “the curtains are blue” problem, where the curtains are blue for any reason you want it to be blue, really, if there was clearly no intentionality to the reason why the curtains were actually blue.

Erika:

Okay, well, that brings me right to the last thing that we absolutely must talk about in this film, which is just the ending. What? What? Because was that in… Help me out here?

Sarah:

This broke me as a film theorist. I’m still thinking about this.

Jeff:

So for my first question, Philip does not narrate any of the other parts of the film, correct?

Sarah:

No.

Jeff:

But Philip narrates the end of this film.

Sarah:

Yeah.

Jeff:

What?

Sarah:

Because Harry has exited this film at this point. And at first, my first impression was when Philip strangled him, the rest of the sequence was actually a dream sequence, and this is what Philip is imagining. And then when the film abruptly ends after, am I allowed to say rape van? Because that is clearly a rape van.

Jeff:

There are no windows.

Sarah:

Okay. So when the rape van takes to the sky, like Santa’s sleigh into the night, where it was like…

Erika:

With Santa’s sleigh spray painted on the side.

Sarah:

Yes.

Jeff:

Yes, it is a Santa rape van, if we’re going to be fully accurate.

Sarah:

It was a very recognizable sleigh, I’ll give them points for artistic integrity on that. So the rape van ascends into the sky. And then I thought it is totally possible, given the other plot lines in this film, that this is not a dream sequence, and Harry actually is ascending to some kind of higher power due to the actions he has taken on Christmas Eve here.

Jeff:

Okay, wait, I need to step back here. Okay, so are you suggesting that after performing the proper blood rituals, you will become Santa?

Sarah:

You may or may not actually become Santa Claus if you are enough of a Marxist and you offer up enough bodies of capitalist hags. I don’t know. I was like, “This has got to be some kind of hazy, dream-like sequence,” which would be a nice reference to the fact that they were trying to deal with psychosis, but they weren’t trying to deal with psychosis. They were trying to deal with this kind of menagerie of illness symptoms, and then somebody said, “What if it was all a dream?” And had they actually committed to psychosis, that would be a really interesting ending. But they didn’t.

Erika:

The way that that scene plays out, it’s almost like symbolically he’s just fully lost it, right? He’s driving into the people, he’s chaotic, he’s haphazard. He’s just fully lost it. But it’s almost like he achieved his… He’s ascending because he achieved…

Sarah:

You will go to heaven if you kill capitalists for the greater good, yeah.

Erika:

Right. He did, he pulled off the Robin Hood, anti-Scrooge… He did it.

Jeff:

Wait, so are you saying that this movie was the original All Good Dogs Go to Heaven?

Erika:

That is what I’m saying, yes.

Sarah:

Yes.

Jeff:

So I think it is time for us to play our old favorite game of name that trope. And this film did have some tropes that we saw that are fairly common, I think, but also some original ones that we haven’t seen yet on the podcast. So, first and foremost, we have obviously this disabling event must be seen, must be filmed. We have this moment, has to be seen. There has to be an origin story, because disability is a thing that happens. You are normal until you’re not. And that is definitely upheld. As far as we know, Harry was normal until he saw his mom getting it on with Santa.

Sarah:

But he didn’t. Okay, this is my problem. He didn’t even see that though. He saw Santa kind of playing with her pantyhose. That’s all he saw. And then he ran upstairs and then they actually resubstantiate that two different times later. If you make the mistake of thinking, “Well, maybe they got really rough after and they couldn’t show that,” because his flashbacks are to Santa feeling the pantyhose.

Jeff:

Yeah. Yeah.

Sarah:

I have a lot of questions about that.

Jeff:

There was a lot of moaning. I will say that there was…

Sarah:

There was a lot of moaning.

Jeff:

Throughout most of this film, there was a lot of moaning. There’s a lot of moaning throughout this film.

Erika:

Okay, this hardly even needs to be stated, but we’ve got the age-old trope of mad people as violent or revenge seeking, murderous. If you’re going to hurt people, it’s obviously because you’re crazy.

Sarah:

Classic, particularly for SMI, or serious mental illness, class illnesses, which is clearly what they were going for. They wanted some variant form of schizophrenia, or psychosis, or bipolar with psychotic features, and the straight line they draw between, “He grew up psychotic, therefore his initial instinct after getting angry is ax murdering,” is just endemic. I could spend every day of my life arguing against this trope, and I would never make a feasible difference.

Jeff:

Yeah, yeah. It’s deployed in the way that we so often just deploy… It’s above reproach, it’s just naturally accepted, so they don’t need to even explain it. It’s like, “Oh yeah, of course that’s why he’s doing this.”

Sarah:

And it’s not even an ’80s thing, which I think is worthy of pointing out. There was a hashtag that went viral, I think it was three years ago now. It was #IAmNotDangerous, and people with SMI class illnesses were posting a selfie and saying, “I have X diagnosis, and I have never once punched a person, nevermind killed a person. I don’t choose violence,” kind of thing. And how viral that went really made me stop and think about how I’m perceived in the general realm. I posted a selfie, and I am a perpetually teenage-looking, white-presenting female with really long hair that doesn’t help the presentation of not looking perpetually 19. And it got something like 1500 retweets of people just saying, “Schizophrenia can look like this too.” As if the image in everyone’s mind was Harley Quinn and Joker until encountering on the internet an image of a normal-looking teenage girl and saying, “Oh shit, there’s also normal people with mental illness.” And that seemed to be, at least on Twitter, this crashing of worlds moment, this hashtag.

Erika:

Well, it’s fascinating that you’re zeroing in on this perpetually 19 look, because that was the other trope that we’ve kind of talked about, but this madness or mad people as this infantile or innocent, you can be a killer or you can be innocent. These are your options.

Sarah:

Definitely. And I’ll tell you one of my trade secrets, I do intentionally lean into that when I’m posting online, because I’m aware of that stereotype. But I’m also aware that playing into people’s confirmation bias is an excellent way to make them believe what you’re saying, right? So if I’m willing to give you that win of, “Fine, I am a bit childish. Fine, I am a bit young looking,” or I’ll lean into that myself, then when I’m making more complicated arguments about psychiatrization, or why forensic mental health methodologies aren’t working, I’ve given you that win to kind of breadcrumb you to follow me along on these higher-level arguments. And I do that completely on purpose. There is a relationship between me looking in the mirror and me presenting myself online, right? I think there are ways to use that… “Against” is the wrong word, but kind of against people in order to get them to complicate their belief against SMI class illness being this pervasive, bad thing that is a fail state condition.

Jeff:

So we’ve talked about the serious stuff, we’ve done some academicizing, if that is a real word. I think it’s time now for us to get a little trivial. So when we look at this film, you might remember me from such films as… Christmas Evil was written and directed by Lewis Jackson, who you’ve probably never heard of, in part because Lewis went on to do predominantly arthouse type pornography films that are very strange, as far as I could understand, and also very difficult to find. Having said that, our main character, Harry, is played by Brandon Maggart, who went on to do a ton of bit parts in television. Honestly, if you have watched a television show, Brandon Maggart has probably been on one episode; a very extensive IMDB. But was also, famously, in Robin Williams’ film, Life According to Garp, which I would like to believe now is a sequel to this film.

Sarah:

To be fair to Brandon Maggart, he was genuinely good in his performance. He was given a terrible script, and he did what he could with it.

Jeff:

Yeah. Oh, he was compelling throughout. Fully different person, contrary to what they looked like, Jeffrey DeMunn, who played Philip, is, I would say, probably the most famous to come out of this thing. It’s stated it has lots of bit roles, but has also been in horror films like The Hitcher and The Blob. Was also in The Green Mile, so we have a little bit of locked up institutionalization, disability, mental illness going on here in the Jeffrey DeMunn-verse.

Erika:

All right, and I guess that brings us onto production facts. So this film was originally titled, You Better Watch Out. I think it would’ve worked well as a subtitle.

Sarah:

Okay.

Erika:

Christmas Evil: You better watch out. Who knows? Maybe the sequel is coming.

Jeff:

Still waiting.

Erika:

We can only hope.

Jeff:

Still waiting. 40 years later, we’re still waiting.

Erika:

Also, apparently this film was confiscated during the video nasty panic in the UK, as a film that was deemed obscene, which I know… I think film representation has come a long way in 40 years, but I think looking back to the ’80s, it’s probably pretty obscene.

Jeff:

Yeah, well, I think the fact that it was also written and directed by someone who predominantly had a background in pornography may have played a role in that. But I also wonder if it’s like anytime you combine sex and violence, I think that was immediately triggering people. But yeah, it was confiscated, not convicted as far as I know. They were like, “You can’t have access to it, but we’re not sending Lewis Jackson to prison.”

Sarah:

I am 98% sure, and I did not backtrack because I just didn’t want to, but that there is a full-frontal muff shot in this movie, which is something that I see…

Jeff:

And she’s wearing pantyhose.

Sarah:

… very, very rarely. And when I read that it was confiscated, my mind immediately went to that take.

Jeff:

Yeah, she’s wearing pantyhose.

Sarah:

Okay.

Jeff:

She’s just putting her pantyhose on, and then she turns to him in a dramatic fashion.

Sarah:

Those are see-through pantyhose, that is… Even among films getting made now, I cannot account for too many full-frontals of female parts.

Jeff:

Yeah, no. I think this movie, if nothing else, one of the things I felt as we were watching it, and I think it’s explained a lot by Lewis Jackson’s oeuvre, is it’s like the film couldn’t decide if it was supposed to be horny or horror, and couldn’t figure it out. And so it just oscillated between the two, which made it very confusing and strange, I think, as we watch.

Sarah:

Sexuality was the horror the whole time.

Jeff:

So as we always do on Invalid Culture, we have to rank our films, we have to rate them, we have to appraise them as academics, as scholars, as scientists, and we have a completely empirical, fully rigorous grading system, which we use to evaluate our films. So as always, we will be ranking this film based on four quadrants, right down a scale of one to five. Like golf, the lower the score, the better it is for the film.

Okay, our first question, on a scale of one to five, with five being the least accurate, how accurate does this film portray disability?

Sarah:

Okay, so I have two different answers to my take on this scale, because the institutionalization scene, I think every time I’ve tried to say that, I’ve bungled it up, that’s amazing, is actually phenomenally well done. It’s really, really accurate to a point where you would’ve had to have completed outside research to really understand what’s going on in that scene. So in that way, that’s a one. But the protagonist of the movie does not make any attempt to adhere to any kind of real life embodiment of mental illness beyond, maybe, if you count his depiction of social anxiety. So generously, it would be a four. It’s probably closer to a five.

Erika:

All right. So I had, basically, a very similar read to what Sarah’s just laid out, but just in terms of scoring, I sort of balanced that out, went middle of the road, with a 2.5.

Jeff:

Yeah, I also tried to balance it out, but I was a little harder on it. I gave it a four. My starting point on this feature was a lot higher on the scale, so I gave it a four out of five. Okay. This one, I am curious about how this one’s going to turn out. Scale of one to five, with five being the hardest, how hard was it to get through this film?

Sarah:

I would say a three, and I’m going to say a three because there were some genuinely interesting moments that we already discussed, like the Marxist labor dialectic side plot, and the whole bit that I don’t think we spoke about, about the torch bearers. That was hilarious, I’m not sure it was supposed to be funny, but that made it more watchable for me. And obviously the bits where he is actually interacting with the children is actually quite heartwarming. I genuinely enjoyed those scenes where he’s not just being relentlessly bullied, or killing people, or being told by his family members that he is worthless and a failure, because he is actually really good at interacting with kids. So I don’t know, I come out in the middle on it.

Erika:

So for me, it was brutally difficult to get through this film. I have a hard time getting through movies anyway, but I was literally checking every five minutes to see how much time was left. And I will throttle back just slightly because yes, the anti-capitalist labor narrative kept me in it. So we’ll give it a four. That’s a four for me.

Sarah:

Particularly the 40 minutes of Tolkienesque exposition. That was a hard decision for this film to sustain, because there was just so little plot to expose in this 40 minutes.

Jeff:

So I’m going to expose something about myself here. So I gave this a one, because I felt it was thoroughly enjoyable to watch this film, because it was so strange and so bad. I thought it was phenomenal. One of the things we haven’t even talked about in this podcast, which is something, is the entire police subplot in which they’re arresting all the Santas…

Sarah:

All the Santas!

Jeff:

… all around [inaudible 01:10:02]. There’s a whole other part of the thing, which was phenomenal, and so funny.

Sarah:

They do The Usual Suspects lineup, and they’re all just yelling, “Merry Christmas everyone”.

Jeff:

Yes! Yeah, there were some things that were really fun. I really enjoyed all of the labor stuff in this, I thought was interesting. And how often do you see someone get stabbed in the eye with a toy soldier, and then someone else get axed to death with a toy ax? That’s a hard one.

Erika:

Don’t forget the throat slit with the tree star.

Jeff:

Yes, also that as well.

Sarah:

Yes. The thematic play of all the weaponry used in this film, I really appreciated the commitment. He worked at a toy factory, he was incredibly invested in making his own toys out of palladium silver in his own home workshop, and he used those abilities to enact incredible ultraviolence, in the Clockwork Orange sense, against people he deemed against the concept of true Christmas.

Jeff:

And become Santa as a result.

Sarah:

And become Santa, yeah.

Jeff:

That’s a one. That’s a one. Okay, so this one I struggled, personally, immensely with answering. On the scale of one to five, with five being the max, how often did you laugh at things that were not supposed to be funny?

Sarah:

Yes, I was laughing all the way through this movie with the person I watched this with, and I don’t think there were any jokes actually written for this movie. It was funny entirely unintentionally. I guess it would have to be a five, right?

Erika:

Yeah. I’m following suit on that. It’s a five for me.

Jeff:

Oh man. So apparently this is the episode where I am fully out of sync with the other judges of this film. I gave this one a three, because…

Sarah:

How is that possible?

Jeff:

I think that a lot of the stuff, I think, was supposed to be funny. I think there were things that we were laughing at that were intended to be jokes, I think. But that’s where I was struggling, because I was like, “Well wait, were we supposed to laugh at Moss Garcia for having negative body hygiene?” Because that is a hilarious thing to say about a child objectively. But was it supposed to be funny? And I honestly don’t know if it was supposed to be funny, but maybe? But I think there was some other stuff that was definitely supposed to be funny.

Okay, our final question, on a scale of one to five, with five being the most, how many steps back has this film put disabled people?

Sarah:

It’s hard to give this movie a rating, because it’s following a strong, and long, and continuous, and endemic tradition of depiction of SMI class mentally ill people, right? So if I condemn this movie’s depiction of it, I’m kind of not being fair to film in general, because in order to get funded, I’m sure it would have to cohere to some norm of how we depict mentally ill people. But it’s also enabling that architecture, right? So when I think of this film alongside films that I think do psychosis really well, like Last Night in Soho, that came out last year at TIF, that is the most accurate depiction of schizophrenia I have ever seen on film. But what it had to do was interrupt 50-some-odd years of schizophrenic depiction on film. So you had to get people like Anya Taylor-Joy on the cast in order to make that realizable. So am I surprised that this was a brutal, atrocious depiction of mental illness, and madness, and SMI class illness? No. Can I indict the film for that reason alone? I think it’s more complicated than that. So maybe a 2.5?

Erika:

I went four on this one. I felt like I gave it a little bit of credit for maybe exposing an unlikely audience, perhaps, to the history of institutionalization, I thought that was a redeeming factor. But by and large, it was just like that repetition of the story, the just painfully familiar tale of madness and violence. That’s where my score came from.

Jeff:

Yeah, I actually also gave it a four for almost the exact same reasons. The film might not have taken us any step forward, which is too bad. But I definitely think if you watch this film, you’re probably not going to have great thoughts the next time you see a mall Santa and are like, “Is he mentally ill? Am I about to get stabbed?” Yeah. So I’m going to give this one a four.

Erika:

I’m dying to find out if this lands in “a crime may have been committed”, please let it be so.

Jeff:

The scores are in, the tally is done. I am proud to announce that with a score of 43, Christmas Evil is “a crime may have been committed”.

Erika:

Woo!

Sarah:

Agree with that. Bad film. Even when we deconstruct it the way we deconstruct it, it really cannot be saved from its fatal anti-heroic flaws of being just so guilty of the most [inaudible 01:16:21], unfair mental illness representations.

Jeff:

I think we’re going to put a big asterisk on this rating.

Sarah:

Really?

Jeff:

Because it was largely carried by the fact that I am a dysfunctional person who likes bad movies. Without my ability to get through the worst of the worst, this would have been the “Jerry Lewis Seal of Approval”. So, “Crimes Have Been Committed”, with a slight asterisk, because Jeff is a broken person.

Erika:

Aren’t we all [inaudible 01:16:57] beautiful [inaudible 01:16:58].

Sarah:

I think you’re a beautiful person. That’s true.

Jeff:

That’s the point of this show, we’re more beautiful for having been broken, which is a reference that you’ll understand come February.

And this concludes another episode of Invalid Culture. Thank you for joining us. I hope you enjoyed it, or not. Do you have a film you would like for us to cover on the pod? Or, even better, do you want to be a victim on Invalid Culture? Head over to our website, invalidculture.com, and submit, we would love to hear from you. That’s it for this episode. Catch you next month, and until then, stay invalid.