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Sony might release 'The Interview' on its own streaming service for free

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Sony shelved the release of The Interview last week, but unnamed sources told the New York Post on Sunday that the film will end up on Crackle, Sony's streaming service, for free. 

Sony CEO Michael Lynton said last week that he really wants people to see the film and Sony lawyer David Boies told Meet the Press host Chuck Todd today that The Interview will be distributed, but he wasn't sure how. YouTube was also mentioned as a possible distributor. 

Interestingly, with only four days until its original Dec. 25 release date, the controversial film has achieved something no movie has done: a perfect 10 rating on IMDb.

And the reviews for the film are overwhelming positive. It might not have been a contender to win an Oscar, but more people want to see it than ever. Reviews from the critics who managed to see it are mixed at best, but moviegoers are giving it all of the praise, some in protest. Since they can’t see it, how are they supposed to know how it actually is?

“Despite only watching the trailers, I am giving this film a 10/10 out of pure protest,” jmcd88 wrote in a 10-star review.“It's such a shame to know that freedom of speech can be censored based off actions from another country. Was this movie offensive? Sure it was. In fact, it was offensive enough to where North Korea responded by mercilessly hacking Sony Pictures, but Sony themselves should not have let the North Korean government get to them.”

Prior to The Interview’s rise to the top of the IMDb charts, only the Breaking Bad episode “Ozymandias” achieved the honor in recent memory. It’s beating classic films on IMDb’s Top 250, such as The Shawshank Redemption, The Godfather, and The Dark Knight.

The Internet’s attempt to troll the movie rankings started and ended at IMDb. When looking at Rotten Tomatoes and Metacritic, two sites that rank movies and television with a combination of critic reviews (and sometimes user reviews), the numbers are a lot lower—and probably more accurate to what The Interview would have received had it been released in theaters on time.

Update Dec. 21, 7:43pm: Sony spokesperson Lauren Condoluci told Re/code that "Sony is still exploring options for distribution." 

H/T New York Post | Screengrab via MOVIECLIPS/YouTube


'Serial' and the power of a slow story

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Last week, the hit podcast Serial concluded its first season. The success of Serial was unprecedented, and unlike its “parent” podcast, This American Life, Serial transcended the general NPR-listening demographic and exploded into the mainstream.

Fans raved about it to friends and family on Facebookcomedians tweeted out jokes about the series on Twitter; and on Reddit, a subreddit spawned nearly 30,000 subscribers who discussed endless hypotheses about who really killed Hae Min Lee nearly 16 years ago.

Why exactly did Serial grip our collective attention? It hooked us with the power of slow.

We live in a culture prone to bingeing. With the advent of streaming entertainment services like Netflix and Amazon Prime, we have access to a previously unfathomable volume of content. Entire seasons of programs are released in one fell swoop and we, in turn, have become content junkies, tearing through episodes and seasons without pause for reflection.

However, the things we’re devouring aren’t necessarily junk. I tore through season 1 of the superbly scripted and acted Transparent in a matter of days and was painfully deflated when it was over. I had simply started and could not stop. With so much access to content, we’ve made binging part of our routine. We rely on quantity to sate us, even when quality is on the table.

Serial upended this pattern. As listeners waited for new episodes each week, they re-listened to the series. They savored the details and gained a deeper appreciation for the story at hand.

Doling out healthy portions of storytelling in each episode is This American Life’s meat and potatoes, and creators Julie Snyder and Sarah Koenig honed the craft for years before creating Serial. And while Serial may seem like a departure from the typical podcast format, in many ways Koenig and Snyder have taken us back to the basics of good storytelling: speak clearly, rest on the details, and make sure something juicy happens.

Regardless of whether Serial delivered on its initial promise, the series created a powerful experience that is rarely accessible for a contemporary audience. When my grandmother listened to the series at my urging, she enjoyed it immensely and told me it brought back memories of listening to stories on the radio when she was a child. If we want to know what the future of podcasting looks like, we may actually want to look to the past.

Serialized storytelling is not an invention of the modern podcast. While we do have to credit Serial for reviving the form in a new medium, the practice was established in the 17th century and thrived in 19th century Victorian England. It was economical to produce and affordable to purchase, much like the podcast. Eventually, serials faded away because magazines gained favor and cheap reprints of novels became available. 

But the form had a lasting effect on the English novel. Authors had to hook their readers’ attention with each installment and attention to craft was heightened. Each chapter had to stand as a unique piece while fitting the whole.

Contemporary television dramas adapted this “serialized" form. American Horror Story effectively follows this model with a narrative arc that ends with each season. In season 1, the setting is a house where we discover many, many murders have taken place. As we watch the Harmon family’s trial with adultery unravel into something more sinister, we also visit unique stand-alone murders that occurred in the house.  These scenes work as an opening hook, but they also transport us to unique times and worlds, and cement new layers and texture into the evolving dramatic discord in the Harmon family.

Now in its fourth season, American Horror Story has honed a style that edges audiences between fast thrills and slow reveals. There is no forward rush to an imaginary destination because we know the end of the season will also be a farewell to its characters. The series compels us to savor what’s there while it lasts.

Similarly, True Detective hooked viewers with its anthology structure: detectives Rust (Matthew McConaughey) and Marty (Woody Harrelson) trace the crimes of one serial killer for eight episodes. Audiences were drawn to the anti-hero detectives, the macabre crimes, and the promise of a resolution. In anticipation of the final episodes, fans pondered the identity of the killer and relished theories as much as the episodes themselves.

Serial, unfortunately, could not deliver the definitive conclusions of its fictional counterparts. It did, however, draw us into a world and its details with remarkable finesse and a knack for creating moments of true intimacy. 

Though a visual medium can certainly wow viewers with artfully realized scenes, audio demands we slow down and process the smaller details so we can assimilate them into the whole. Some of the most compelling moments on Serial are the silences, pauses, and in-betweens, as well as emotional moments buoyed by Nick Thorburn’s terrific soundtrack.

If future podcasts wish to cash in on the success of Serial, they’ll need to harness the power of slow. In his novel Empire Falls, Richard Russo elucidates this idea:

Things happen slow... if they happened fast, you'd be alert for all kinds of suddenness, aware that speed was trump. 'Slow' works on an altogether different principle, on the deceptive impression that there's plenty of time to prepare, which conceals the fact, that no matter how slow things go, you'll always be slower.

Life may feel like it is happening at warp speed, but the greater mysteries, the more fascinating and exciting occurrences in our world, are the result of subtle shifts and changes over time.

Given our rapidly evolving technology and our endless thirst for more content, we are not likely to slow down on our own. We want it all and we want it now. The power of Serial is that it trained us to take our time. And yes, at times all that waiting felt like agony, but it yielded high returns.

If anything, we can hope to hear a good story, and if we’re lucky the storyteller will take things slow. 

Photo via nsolop/Flickr (CC BY 2.0)

The best streaming series of 2014

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2014 felt like a year of transition for webseries. Netflix, Hulu, Amazon, and Vimeo all stepped up their original content offerings, but that also left webseries without a big online network attached in an precarious position. Can a series still flourish organically in 2015? 

It was also a year in which webseries were picked up by big networks: Broad City, a former YouTube series, quickly become one of Comedy Central’s most popular shows. The channel also recently picked up another webseries, Idiotsitter, and partnered with online sketch duo BriTANick. 

The case has been made that online networks are killing the webseries, but the 2015 Golden Globe nominations show how the streaming series is only becoming bigger a contender. Here are the 2014 webseries that also deserve a nod. 

1) High Maintenance

Vimeo’s first investment in an original series might seem like an odd choice: It centers around the daily life of an anonymous weed delivery man in New York City (Ben Sinclair) and his customers. The series technically debuted in 2012, but it found a bigger audience this year with Vimeo’s financial and marketing push. High Maintenance arrived at just the right time, too: State legalizations are changing how people view marijuana usage, but creators Sinclair and Katja Blichfeld have also scripted characters with real depth beyond stoner jokes. The Dan Stevens episode felt particularly transitional. New episodes are behind a paywall, but it's worth shelling out for.

2) BoJack Horseman

The first time I watched this Netflix original, I didn’t find it funny. The second time I watched, at the behest of a trusted friend, I realized it’s not necessarily supposed to be. The animated premise might throw some people off, but BoJack’s humor comes from its satire of Hollywood’s fame machine and the washed-up bits of humanity it spits out. Will Arnett’s BoJack is sufficiently self-absorbed, though the moments of clarity (sometimes within drug trips) are the real gut-punchers.

3) Transparent

When Amazon announced its original pilot slate back in February, Transparent was already getting buzz. Jill Soloway (Six Feet Under, United States of Tara) has created a show not just about a father (Jeffrey Tambor) transitioning to life as a woman, but a family struggling with their own intimate question marks. The show was just nominated for a Golden Globe for Best Comedy, and Tambor got a nod for Best Actor in a Comedy. As Six Feet Under proved, Soloway knows how to make family dynamics compelling, funny, and heartbreaking.

4) The Hotwives of Orlando

Hulu premiered this new faux reality show from Dannah Phirman and Danielle Schneider in July, and while the first couple episodes of their Real Housewives spoof take a while to gain momentum, the last half is actually sort of subversive. Casey Wilson and Andrea Savage especially nail their roles as smize-addled “bizarro Disney princesses,” as Phirman called the characters back in July.

5) Short Poppies

Flight of the Conchords’ Rhys Darby plays eight different characters in this show, which could originally only be found on New Zealand’s TVNZ. Netflix scooped it up earlier this year and brought season 1 to an American audience, but it was mostly a sleeper hit. There’s a peculiar charm to Darby’s characters: He excels, much like in Flight of the Conchords, at playing oblivious and insecure. That resulting awkwardness is channeled through the confused looks of real reporter David Farrier, who’s doing a story on the small New Zealand town where these characters live. The humor here is quick and dry and not for everyone, but Darby’s collection of oddballs is endearing.

6) Tough Love

Slacktory kicked off 2014 with its own original series, which focuses on two best friends and roommates living in NYC. While this premise has certainly been done before, Blaire Wendel and Steven Bell’s dialogue is relatable, their struggle to be adults familiar. Fingers crossed for season 2.

7) F to 7th

The first season of this series flew under the radar, but season 2 was helped along by Spike Lee. This "homoneurotic" series by Ingrid Jungermann features guest stars like Janeane Garofalo and Amy Sedaris, and explores what it means to be gay and "pre-middle age" in New York City. 


Three webseries to look forward to in 2015

1) Casual

Director Jason Reitman (Juno) is bringing a dysfunctional family comedy to Hulu. The cast hasn’t been announced yet, but it’s centered around a “bachelor brother and his newly divorced sister” both wading through the dating pool.

2) Difficult People

Hulu is also soon to be home to Julie Klausner and Billy Eichner’s new comedy, produced by Amy Poehler. Klausner and Eichner might just be our Nichols and May, and 2015 cannot get here fast enough.

3) Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt

Netflix is right where Tina Fey needs to be. The company just picked up two seasons of Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, a show produced by Fey and Robert Carlock (30 Rock) and starring The Office’s Ellie Kemper as a woman who’s rescued from a doomsday cult and must start over in NYC. As of May, the show was still scheduled to debut on NBC, but the channel likely didn’t know how to market it. Netflix’s niche market is a much better fit.

Screengrab via Janky Clown Productions/Vimeo

'Salad Fingers' creator David Firth returns with a new animated short

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David Firth—the artist behind Salad Fingers—has just made another of his series a trilogy with the release of "The Unfixable Thought Machine."

This new short continues his five-year-old and frustratingly slowly updated Health Reminder series, which takes the surrealistic and philosophical sensibilities of Salad Fingers and directs them at the healthcare industry. Specifically, the arena of mental health:

The animation is busier and more erratic than that found in Salad Fingers, which suits the fast-paced, stream of consciousness narration of its main character—an unnamed doctor that seems hellbent on destroying the health and minds of his patients. (In the first 90 seconds of the five-and-half-minute short, he turns a man with a simple stomach ache into a regular a junkie, so get ready for some satire.)

This latest installment is the first in the series to be released in 1080p, and Firth's painstakingly crafted work looks beautiful. The peaceful, ambient music behind the animation is from Locust Toybox—another of Firth's projects—proving that, while the auteur theory may be debatable in cinema, it's absolutely alive and well in the world of experimental animation.

You can check out the massive stockpile of Firth's other great work (totaling over five hours!) on his YouTube channel

Screengrab via David Firth/YouTube

Relive the year in TV and movies in just 6 minutes

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If we asked you for your favorite movies of 2014, how many could you even remember? What about TV shows? Guardians of the Galaxy and True Detective certainly made an impression, but not everything was as memorable. Luckily, this mashup video takes all of the most influential TV shows and movies of 2014 and reminds us what a great year this was for pop culture.

Created by fanvid artist Pteryx, who made a similar mashup last year, the video uses clips from 166 movies (!), 84 TV shows, and five animated works. It's like a trailer for the entire year.

Only the most ardent of movie fanatics will recognize everything in there, but there's definitely something for everyone—especially if you're a sci-fi fan. It's interesting to see what themes were popular this year, as well as the hoary old cliches that get reused again and again. Perhaps unintentionally, this video does highlight the negatives along with the positives. While 2014 brought plenty of iconic movie moments, the vast majority of those scenes focused on white characters. When you see everything edited together like this, it's difficult to argue that Hollywood still has a diversity problem.

That being said, we challenge you to watch this video and not feel a twinge of emotion for the many, many awesome TV and movie moments we saw this year, from Doctor Who to Gone Girl to The Walking Dead.

Photo via Marvel.com

The 'Orange Is the New Black' cast totally shanked 'The 12 Days of Christmas'

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Nobody celebrates the holidays quite like the "Orange Is The New Black" cast. For 2014 the ladies of Litchfield recreated the "12 Days of Christmas" and it is an instant holiday classic. 

Piper starts the whole thing off joyfully singing, "On my first day at Litchfield my bunk mate gave to me ...," followed by Black Cindy, Big Boo, Pennsatucky, Crazy Eyes, Nicky, Morello, Taystee, Gloria, and of course Alex singing about a bunch of Pipers piping. Red steals the show with her less than enthusiastic ending, where she sings about ... a chicken in the yard, of course.

It seems like just yesterday the Netflix darlings were preparing the Christmas pageant which ended Season 1. Fans will remember this is when Piper has a hard time enjoying the holiday season since Pennsatucky basically has it out for her life. 

The episode is full of great moments like the pageant auditions, where Black Cindy beatboxes, Gina moonwalks and Crazy Eyes' insane dance moves take center stage. Madness is created as Pennsatucky steps into her dream role of an angel and Piper reaches her breaking point. 

Of course it wouldn't be the holidays without a little crazy. Check out the OITNB edition of the "12 Days of Christmas" above. 

Screengrab via Netflix/YouTube

When John Belushi impersonated Joe Cocker on 'SNL'

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Soul singer Joe Cocker passed away Monday at 70 after a long battle with cancer. The Sheffield, U.K.-born singer was blessed with pipes that could wave like curtains in hurricanes. Cocker is most known for his cover of the Beatles' "With a Little Help From My Friends," and in general for covering other people's material in hungry, soulful fashion. 

As such, it's most fitting to play out Cocker with this unbelievable John Belushi impression from Saturday Night Live circa 1975. 

For a comparison, here's Cocker performing the Box Tops's "The Letter" with the Grease Band.

Cocker reportedly enjoyed Belushi's impression, by the way, and showed up a year later on SNL to perform another cover, "Feelin' Alright," alongside Belushi.  

H/T Joe Warminski | Photo via Namaan Saar Stavy/Flickr (CC BY 2.0)

The worst of the worst films of 2014

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Looking across a healthy sampling of worst movie of the year lists leaves filmgoers with the impression this was one lousy year for movies.

Comparing lists from RiffTrax, Hitflix, Richard Roper (Chicago Sun-Times), Moviefone, and Yahoo reveals that there is no overlap in selection of cinematic flops for 2014. The worst three flicks on five lists nets a total of 15 must to avoids or fodder for professional lampooners.

Rifftrax, which collects votes from its fans (including the Daily Dot’s Aja Romano, full disclosure) has the most credibility as it represents a diverse set of opinions. Its worst three are:

3) Dumb and Dumber To

Jim Carrey and Jeff Daniels prove that most sequels should be left unmade.

2) Transformers: Age of Extinction

Director Michael Bay should have quit this series while he was ahead. Yes, another Transformers movie is in the works.

1) Teenage Ninja Mutant Turtles

Who could imagine Corey Feldman’s irritating voice would ever be missed? This dud received a whopping 32,140 votes beating out No. 2 by 6,000 tallies.

From the rest of the group, here are the worst of the worst:

Hitflix

Transcendence

Johnny Depp and Morgan Freeman together should yield a masterpiece. Here, not so much.

Richard Roper, Chicago Sun-Times

Before I Go to Sleep

Nicole Kidman needs to find a new agent. Golden Globe winner Colin Firth seems willing, of late, to do anything for a paycheck. 

Moviefone

The Pyramid

Warning: take that trip to Egypt off your 2105 travel plans.

Yahoo

This Is Where I Leave You

Whoever thought a movie about sitting shiva was a good idea needs to have his head examined. Debbie Downer.

All told, it was a bad year for such generally reliable box office stars as Adam Sandler, Colin Farrell, and Cameron Diaz, each of whom was featured in one or more of these disasters. For Rifftrax, the offspring of MST3K, this bad news is good news. With lots of new ammo, Mike Nelson and his buddies Kevin Murphy and Bill Corbett will find that 2015 should be a very punny year.

Screengrab via Paramount Movies/YouTube


New 'Better Call Saul' trailer finally gives us something to work with

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It's only a 30-second spot, but the latest trailer for Better Call Saul, the hotly anticipated Breaking Bad spinoff, finally gives fans something to work with.

Hey there's comedy legend Michael McKean looking interesting and profound. There's Saul being called by his real name, Jimmy, and dealing with a great deal of unpleasant noise on the road toward professional development. Feb. 8 will be the first Sunday since August without the NFL's warm glow in the living room—but it'll be OK.

Screengrab via AMC/YouTube

Jimmy Fallon and Chris Pine drink and sink in alcoholic version of 'Battleship' game

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Fire when ready, boys.

On Monday's episode of The Tonight ShowJimmy Fallon and Chris Pine brought to life a game most often seen at college parties: Battleship. The twist, however, was that in addition to scoring hits on each other's miniature flotillas, Fallon and Pine also forced each other to take a shot of tequila each time they scored a hit.

"Battleshots" played much like the board game it was based on: Pick a square and learn whether you missed or hit a ship. A hit ship resulted in a shot of alcohol, adding new meaning to the phrase “bomb’s away.”

Between Fallon and Pine, one of them opens up a strong lead and doesn’t look back. But with the punishment and shot in hand at once, is it really losing?

Screengrab via The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon/YouTube

The 9 biggest YouTube scandals of 2014

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YouTube is bigger than ever—and so is the microscope on everything within it.

In a year when people on YouTube had their own TV showsappeared in major films, became bestselling authors, topped the iTunes charts, competed on reality competitions, and overtook cities in major advertising campaigns, the creators are starting to overtake mainstream media in a big way. Teens now prefer YouTube stars to Hollywood celebrities, and they’re able to inspire and influence people around the world.

Of course, nothing ever runs as smoothly as a professionally edited video. The prank video subculture finally started to see backlash from fans, as creators sexually harassed people on camera and tried to pass it off as a “social experiment.” More people came out to accuse YouTubers of sexual misconduct, sexual assault, and rape. Celebrities are getting called out for what they feature in their videos and how they portray themselves. Former videos have come back to haunt the people who made them—much like older tweets have for some celebrities. And the ongoing debate about authenticity, hoaxes, and who deserves what piece of the cash cow rages on. 

As YouTube grows even bigger in 2015, this will only become even more complicated. Here are the biggest scandals YouTube experienced this year. 

1) Ultra Records sues Michelle Phan—and she fights back

Michelle Phan is one of YouTube’s preeminent beauty vloggers, and her makeup tutorials have racked up over a billion views, which means the music featured in those videos gets some pretty substantial time in the spotlight.

But Phan came under fire in 2014 when Ultra Records claimed she had been using recordings of their artists without permission. The label sued Phan for the unlicensed use of their music, including Grammy-nominated DJ Kaskade. In turn, Phan countersued, arguing that she’d been under agreement with Jason Kilgore, Ultra’s senior new media manager, who had agreed by email to allow Phan to use the music with credit to the artists and links to their iTunes accounts. This agreement began in 2009, but when the label’s lawyers started issuing DMCA notices five years later (with which YouTube complied), Phan claims she lost revenue.

This feud still hasn’t been resolved, and Phan demanded a trial. To abate such disputes in the future, YouTube added measures that show creators which songs they can use and what the use of those songs does to the monetization of their videos. There’s also a plethora of rights-free music creators can use to underscore their vlogs and keep the monetization for themselves.

2) Zoella gets called out for using a ghostwriter

One of Britain's most popular lifestyle vloggers, Zoella, a.k.a. Zoe Sugg, took a leap into the publishing industry in 2014 with her first novel. The book, Girl Online, smashed sales records, outpacing the first releases from big-name authors like J.K. Rowling and E.L. James. Sugg has more than 6 million YouTube subscribers, and they helped her sell 78,000 copies in the first week.

But her triumph was short-lived. Book bloggers quickly took note of a dedication in the book to a mysterious Siobhan Curham, who was thanked in a way that is typical of nods to ghostwriters. They then found now-deleted blog entries of Curham’s that seemed to imply she got the order to write Girl Online on a six-week timeframe for the publisher. Online buzz forced Sugg and her publisher, Keywords Press, to admit that she had “help” with the book, but that the idea and story were original. Despite the scandal, Sugg is headed to the bank with her bestseller, and will release a sequel next year.

3) Matthew Lush vs. JetBlue

What happens online can have real-life consequences, a fact vlogger Matthew Lush learned firsthand this holiday season. After an online glitch accidentally booked him a return ticket on JetBlue, the YouTuber contacted customer service to try and get a refund. When the airline refused and wouldn't allow him to rebook without a penalty, Lush decided to suck it up, take the overpriced flight, and then badmouth the customer service representative using his weapon of choice: social media. 

The rep in question was named Regina, and Lush decided to play up the Mean Girls memes using her name and customer reference number, tweeting, “One time Regina treated @MatthewLush badly, I punched her in the face, it was awesome #ByeRegina87346,” among other things. When Lush arrived at the terminal, he was denied access to the flight and flagged as a security threat to the airline. After being removed and flying home on another carrier, Lush took to YouTube and encouraged his 580,000 followers to boycott the airline until he was allowed on flights. 

For JetBlue’s part, they stand by their ban, saying in a statement, “The decision to remove any customer from a flight is made after careful and informed decision by local airport officials and flight crew. It’s based on an individual’s actions and our assessment whether further actions during the flight would lead to further disruption or non-compliance with crew member instructions, which could lead to diversion and delays for all customers.” While Lush wasn’t the only digital star who got into hot water with the airline industry this year, a lifetime ban from JetBlue definitely makes him the most notorious.

4) Sam Pepper vs. the YouTube community

When YouTuber and former Big Brother U.K. contestant Sam Pepper released a prank video that featured him pinching the behinds of unsuspecting women, it opened a floodgate in the YouTube community about what is and isn’t acceptable video behavior. After a year full of sexual abuse and misconduct accusations, Pepper’s video didn’t sit well with the community. They called for an apology, to which Pepper, after some radio silence on the matter, replied, claiming his video was part of a series meant to bring attention to domestic abuse. He released another video with women pinching men’s behinds, and then a video explaining the series, which also tried to refocus the attention back to male victims of domestic abuse. 

At the same time, several young women began accusing him of sexual misconduct, from inappropriate behavior during dates to claims of non-consensual sex. Several police reports came to light in Los Angeles, where Pepper lives, with formal complaints of rape against Pepper: one in July and another in October. Laci Green, who stepped up to help organize the YouTuber reaction against Pepper, claimed she received threatening messages from him during that time. Pepper was dropped from Collective Digital Studio, his multichannel network, but that hasn’t stopped the creator from remaining active on YouTube and other social media. He still boasts 1.1 million Twitter followers and 2.3 million YouTube subscribers in the wake of the scandal.

5) Jimmy Kimmel dupes us (again)

For those of us who watched the Winter Olympics in Sochi from home, they were often full of amusement at the expense of others. The hotel conditions were less than ideal—athletes got stuck in hotels and elevators, cats fell through ceilings—so when U.S. luger Kate Hansen posted a video of a wolf roaming the hallway of her hotel, we were ready to believe her

Unfortunately, it was all the dastardly work of Hansen and YouTube hoaxer Jimmy Kimmel, who already pulled one over us with last year’s twerking fail. The video easily cemented Kimmel as a serial hoaxer (even though at that point he had only duped us twice) and if something seemed too good to be true on YouTube, people would joke that it was another Kimmel hoax. As Daily Dot tech editor Molly McHugh wrote back in February, “What [Kimmel is] doing is endangering any sense of wonder there is left in the Internet. We’re all so critical, so skeptical of anything even moderately fantastical we find online. We’ve been conditioned to call hoax before letting ourselves laugh or gasp or stare at something amazing.”

6) Katy Perry’s music video problem

Katy Perry came under fire after dressing up in “geisha drag” at the 2013 American Music Awards, but this year she received criticism yet again for cultural appropriation. First, the Muslim community called for YouTube to take down Perry’s video for “Dark Horse” in February. In one scene, a man is shown burning while wearing a pendant with the word “Allah” on it. Although a Change.org petition got more than 30,000 signatures, the video still remains online. In July, she released the music video for “This Is How We Do,” which featured Perry wearing cornrows and demonstrating stereotypical black mannerisms. When asked about her history of cultural appropriation, Perry got defensive and said that her intentions were pure. Others thought it was racist.

7) Nicki Minaj and Nazi symbolism

Lyric videos are rarely more controversial than the actual video, but Nicki Minaj’s lyric video for “Only” proved everyone wrong. Released in early November—just before the 25th anniversary of the Berlin Wall coming down—the animated video appeared to feature Nazi symbolism. It illustrated soldiers in uniform, drapes with the Young Money logo that echoed a Swastika, and even a gas mask with the word “CHAMBER” written across it. 

The musicians who performed the song were portrayed as people in positions of power: Minaj as a dictator, Drake as a pope, Lil Wayne a business mogul, and Chris Brown a military leader. Minaj was quickly accused of anti-Semitism and people called for the music video to come down. A few days later, Minaj took responsibility and apologized for the video, noting that the artist was influenced by Metalocalypse and Sin City and the people in charge of making the video were Jewish. The subject matter for the actual “Only” music video seemed rather tame in comparison.

8) Drunk girl hoax

On the heels of that viral catcalling video, another social experiment took the Internet by storm. A girl pretended to be drunk in Los Angeles as part of a “social experiment” and the majority of men who approached her tried to take her home. The video quickly sparked debates about whether the video was staged, at least until the actors involved revealed that it was. So far, three of the men shown in the video have spoken out, after they were made to look like sexual predators. They said they were told it was for a comedy skit and that there would be a disclaimer on the video. The actress involved also spoke out and apologized for her role. The video’s producers have yet to comment.

9) Sex scandals

The YouTube community has been hit with a handful of scandals, in which creators took advantage of their (mostly female) fans. But this year, more alleged victims spoke out against their abusers. Musician Kelly Montoya was called “a rapist and sexual abuser” back in January by someone who talked to some of Montoya’s former partners. However, a larger conversation about abuse came after creators and fans called out Tom Milsom, Alex Day, Danny Hooper, Alex Carpenter, and several others who were dropped from record labels such as DFTBA Records and driven off social media. 

In September, another wave of accusations came out against Pepper and Jason Sansome (better known as VeeOneEye), and Craig T. Dillon was among the latest to receive accusations. Some of these creators are still making videos, and many of them have received backlash from former fans who feel the accused shouldn’t be allowed to come back to the community. The website Unsubscribe Together allows viewers to unsubscribe from “up to 45 accounts” with just a click of a button.

Photo via Michael/Flickr (CC BY 2.0) | Remix by Jason Reed

How Robin Williams and Ben Stiller got their teenage costar a prom date

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Months after Robin Williams’s death, we’re still learning just how much the legendary comedian helped his friends. Here’s the latest: the inside story of how Williams and Ben Stiller helped his teenage Night at the Museum: Secret of the Tomb costar land a date to prom.

While filming Secret of the Tomb, actor Skyler Gisondo—who plays Ben Stiller’s son in the film—wasn’t able to ask a girl to prom in-person, like his other friends at his high school, because he was away filming. With two famed comedians at hand, he asked Williams and Stiller to help him ask his friend Hillary to prom.

Gisondo told the Hollywood Reporter that Williams, a “bottomless reservoir of kindness and hilarity,” was incredibly enthusiastic about the promposal and kept pitching ideas to him. The result of all that brainstorming is some comedy gold while the two actors try to sell Gisondo to Hillary with a persona assist from Crystal, the monkey featured in the films.

She said yes.

“I realized that was the most awesome three minutes of my life and I’ve accepted it will go downhill from there,” Gisondo said.

H/T Daily Mail | Screengrab via jgoal10/YouTube

One Direction and Jimmy Fallon grant your Christmas music wish

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For One Direction fans, Christmas has come early.

Sadly, we don't mean that Larry Stylinson sent out an adorable Christmas card professing their love for one another. Instead, 1D fans will have to settle for the next best thing. During a stop at The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, Harry, Liam, Zayn, Niall, and Louis donned some adorable gay apparel and partook in one of Fallon's beloved classroom instrument sing-alongs.

With the help of The Roots, a banana shaker, and some mean triangle playing from Zayn, these lovable Brits turned “Santa Claus is Coming to Town” into a cacophony of Christmas cheer. 

Sorry Idina, but One Direction just melted your  classroom instrument version of "Let It Go" with their cuteness.

Screengrab via TheTonightShowStarringJimmyFallon/YouTube

A YouTube guide to celebrating Festivus

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Since airing as a subplot on the 1997 Seinfeldepisode "The Strike," the celebration of Festivus has returned, popular as ever, each holiday season. In the years since Seinfeld's finale in 1998, its strong presence in syndication introduced more and more people to Frank Costanza's bizarre protest against Christmas commercialization and, as a result, many folks adopted its unique practices.

Here are some of the best ways Festivus's various traits, from erecting the traditional Festivus Pole to even the "feats of strength," have been carried out by everyday folks and celebrities alike—and preserved forever on YouTube.

Festivus Pole

The Festivus pole is Festivus's answer to the Christmas tree: a decoration-free aluminum pole. According to Frank Costanza, aluminum is key since it has a "very high strength-to-weight ratio" and, also, he finds "tinsel distracting."

In 2013, not only was a 6-foot-tall Festivus pole erected from leftover cans of Pabst Blue Ribbon beer...

...but it was also erected alongside several other holiday shrines in the rotunda of the Florida Capitol Building in Tallahassee.

If you're tired of singing "O Christmas Tree," try out a few verses of "O Festivus Pole." YouTube user hyrax was gracious enough to provide us with a rendition of the original tune that was likely created once they had enough material for the PBR pole, if you get my drift.

Airing of grievances

Perhaps the most popular of the Festivus traditions, the airing of grievances is celebrated by letting everyone know how they have let people down in the past year. In Seinfeld, Frank Costanza exemplifies this by screaming "I got a lot of problems with you people!" to everyone at his dinner table, including those he had never before met. He then insults George's boss to his face.

In a truly terrific YouTube example of this, we are treated to an airing of grievances by celebrity chef and television host Anthony Bourdain.

In another video, Dale, co-host of the LGBT YouTube series Flaming Freedom, directs his list of grievances toward his co-host Neil.

Feats of strength

The feats of strength marks the close of Festivus; the holiday cannot end until the male head of the household is pinned. It only makes sense that this would follow the airing of grievances; after basically being roasted for several straight minutes, you would want nothing more than to pummel someone.

The Bourdain family really seems to be into Festivus. In this clip, Ottavia Bourdain dislocates the shoulder of Big Gay Ice Cream Truck cofounder Douglas Quint.

A much more informal feats of strength matchup takes place in a random living room between two friends of YouTube user robsterh99.

Miscellaneous

While the number of Festivus songs may not match the number of Christmas tunes out there, they nevertheless exist. And, unlike traditional holiday fare, true passion goes into anything considered a "Festivus song."

And if you're looking for one more reason to celebrate, there's this Festivus carol straight from Seinfeld the Musical: A Broadway Show About Nothing.

Finally, here is a 2010 CNN interview with Jerry Stiller, who played Frank Costanza throughout Seinfeld's nine-season run. He discusses the legacy of his character's holiday and how it has crossed over into the mainstream—even venturing into the political arena.

Photo via Eva Marley / Flickr (CC BY-ND 2.0)

Breaking: 'The Interview' is coming out after all

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A tweet sent out by the Tim League, the founder of the Texas-based cinema chain Alamo Drafthouse indicates that Sony has decided to allow screenings of The Interview.

The Plaza Theater in Atlanta has also announced Christmas Day showings of the movie on its Facebook page.

Earlier this month, Sony announced it was abandoning plans to release the film after a group of hackers calling themselves the Guardians of Peace breached its computer systems and released a massive trove of internal emails online. The group, which the U.S. government insists is working as part of the North Korean government, also threatened physical violence reminiscent of the 9/11 attacks if any theaters showed the film.

The Wrap is reporting that Sony also plans to release the movie through video on demand on Christmas Day.

The Interview drew the ire of the North Korean government for its depiction of the assassination of the country's leader, Kim Jong-un.

After President Obama insisted that Sony's decision to scrap the film was a "mistake," Sony executives began saying that they did eventually plan to release the movie in some fashion.

A group of independent theaters called the Art House Convergence, which includes the Alamo Drafthouse, has circulated an online petition calling on Sony to release the movie.

After Sony initially pulled the film, Alamo Drafthouse attempted to replace it with a showing of Team America: World Police, a movie that featured previous North Korean dictator Kim Jong-il as its primary antagonist, but Paramount Pictures similarly blocked that film from screening.

The Interview's Twitter account, which was taken down when all other advertisements for the film were also pulled, has since reappeared, but has yet to tweet anything.

Tickets for the Alamo Drafthouse screening of the of The Interview at its theater in Richardson, a suburb of Dallas, are on sale here.

Update 11:55am CT: Sony has confirmed the "limited theatrical release" in a press release.

The statement further implies that there could be additional release news on the horizon, so stay tuned for more information as it becomes available.

Photo by waferboard/Flickr (CC BY 2.0) | Remix by Jason Reed


LeBron Jr. shows why he deserves to be heir to the throne

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You can see it now: A backcourt of LeBron and his son, Bronny, starring for the Cavs in 2024. Will one ball be enough?

There are many father-son tandems that have graced the hardwoods: Dell and Stephan Curry; Tim Hardaway Jr. and Senior; Joe and Kobe Bryant; and Rick Barry and his four sons, Scooter, Jon, Brent and Drew. None of these instances of genetic athletic prowess has the projectable prowess of the future pairing of LeBron James and his 10-year-old son, LeBron James, Jr., a.k.a Bronny. Fast forward 10 years, and the senior James will be 40 when his son turns 20, which raises the dream scenario of a basketball James Gang that would be a huge draw for the NBA.

Sure, we are going a bit overboard here, but a video taken during the Ronald Searles Holiday Classic shows Bronny with some truly mad hoops skills, including a mean crossover dribble, no-look passes, and dead-on short-range jumper. The grade-based tourney, played in Houston, shows an unselfish player who has great court presence and a sense of style that surely has the folks at Nike dreaming up a new line of kids footwear and future viral videos of dad and son playing one-on-one.

The spotlight has been on Bronny for some time, with clips that show the young man’s skills gaining confidence over the past few years as he grew up. The spotlight began to grow on this young talent earlier this year with a video showing the younger James hitting a one-handed half-court shot during a Cavs practice.

Screenbrab via TakeMyTalent.com/YouTube

YouTube threatened with $1 billion lawsuit over music rights

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A group of high-profile musicians has demanded that Google remove 20,000 songs from the newly announced YouTube streaming service Music Key or face a $1 billion lawsuit.

The problem stems from publishing rights. According to claims, YouTube has made deals with record labels and many publishers, not with recently formed music rights organization, Global Music Rights (GMR), reports Time. The company, helmed by music executive Irving Azoff, has so far signed 42 musicians to its roster, including Pharrell Williams, Smokey Robinson, The Eagles, and Chris Cornell, among others. The group controls the 20,000 songs that Azoff demanded the platform remove via letter, but YouTube has yet to comply.

Azoff says he's not at lawsuit stage just yet, but a letter from GMR's counsel Howard King to YouTube general counsel Kent Walker outlines the company's grievances and demands that YouTube comply with their takedown wishes, or produce documentation that proves they are within their rights.  

"Obviously, if YouTube contends that it has properly licensed any of the songs for public broadcast, a contention we believe to be untrue, demand is hereby made that we be furnished with documentation of such licenses," writes King.

YouTube may believe it is covered under multiyear licenses from publishing houses like ASCAP, BMI, or SESAC. In the communication from King and Azoff, none of the actual songs or content are named, something necessary for YouTube to identify potential infringing material among the countless hours of content uploaded to the site daily. Instead, it's a blanket demand for the takedown of the songs under GMR's umbrella. 

In the recent Viacom ruling over Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) rights, the courts upheld that Internet service providers must have actual knowledge of infringement and must be provided "specific instances of infringement" by complainants. The Azoff letter could be a negotiating tactic to get YouTube to the table to hammer out better terms for his 42 artists.

If the dispute does progress further, the bill could rack up to the $1 billion mark thanks to $150,000 in statutory damages per willful copyright infringement.

"We've done deals with labels, publishers, collection societies and more to bring artists' music into YouTube Music Key beta," a YouTube spokesperson told The Daily Dot via email. "We'll keep working with both the music community and with the music fans invited to our beta phase."

H/T BusinessInsider | Illustration by Jason Reed

What's Bro and what's Not Bro in the 'Entourage' movie trailer?

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The trailer for the upcoming Entourage movie dropped on Tuesday like a frat pledge after hitting a gravity bong, and bros nationwide are a-buzz. For the millennial bro, the HBO comedy defined a generation. It taught them important lessons like how to act like a douchebag, how to objectify women, how to dress like an idiot, and, most importantly, how to be a bro of the highest caliber.

But the trailer begs the question: Is Entourage still representative of the Modern Bro? Are the bro lessons of the mid- to late aughts still applicable to today’s brociety?

Let us break down how Bro (and Not Bro) this new trailer is.

An establishing shot with fancy skyscrapers and signs in a foreign language:Bro.

EDM and a DJ in a hoodie:Bro.

Guyliner:Not Bro.

Police and heavy artillery:Bro.

Violence and bodily functions:Bro.

Cool-looking gadget with unspecified function: Bro.

YELLING:Bro.

Insisting you did the right thing, even though you did the wrong thing (subtext: “ACTUALLY”):Extremely Bro.

Making a joke about banging your girlfriend’s hot sister:Bro.

Boats and babes:Bro.

Trying to figure out if this chick is from the TV series:Not Bro.

Wanting to bang her anyway:Bro.

Billy Bob Thornton: Not Bro

(Though he made a valiant effort to be a bro in Love Actually.)

Haley Joel Osment with a gun:BRO.

Going to counseling with your annoying wife:Not Bro.

Lloyd: So Not Bro that he’s Bro.

Punching shit:Bro.

Complaining about the weather:Not Bro

Fuck the Polar Vortex.

Getting your ass kicked by a girl: Not Bro.

Mark Wahlberg surrounded by his best bros: Bro.

Mark Wahlberg’s “Get Marked” shirt: Bro

Any bro worth his weight in Jäger loves a good graphic tee.

The fact that this movie was produced by Warner Bros.:OH MY BRO.

So there you have it: 17 Bro, 6 Not Bro. It's safe to say this movie will be bro legend for years to come.

And the most bro thing of all about this trailer? It provides no clues for bros as to what this movie is actually about. Bro Info, Bro problem.

Screengrab via YouTube

Kanye West's 'Yeezus' is now 'Kreezus'—the perfect Christmas album

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Yeezus, the best hip-hop album of 2013, has been made into Kreezus, the best Christmas album you'll hear in 2014.

Sketch comedy trio, Local Business Comedy, took Kanye West's latest hip-hop classic and rewrote all of the songs with Christmas-themed lyrics. They then recorded an excellent Kanye impersonator rapping each of the re-written tracks in the same flow and cadence that Kanye used on the originals. The final product is an immensely entertaining parody album that may be a more fun listen than anything else you'll hear this holiday season. The musicality of Kreezus is a testament to how awesome and transcendent the beat production on the original Yeezus was. 

Sure, a Kanye parody Christmas album titled Kreezus may sound like a cheesy idea, but give it a chance and you'll be rewarded with lyrics like 

"Billions of gifts that I lift / In my red vest — I'm so swift / 24 hours —all on shift / 24 blu-ray — ah-ha gift / Rudolph we leaving in a moment / Your nose is glowing red I know it / I'm real excited, 'cause it's snowing / Ho-ho-ho'ing! Ho-ho-ho'ing!" and "I just talked to Jesus / He said, ‘What up, Kreezus?’/ I said, ‘Climbing buildings, trying to gift these children"

If you can forgive Local Business's parodying of Nina Simone's "Strange Fruit" for "Lights On The Trees" then 'Kreezus' may end up being your go-to record while sitting around the yule log with your family this year. You can stream the entire project below. 

Screengrab via Local Business/YouTube

The best (and worst) Christmas horror films on Netflix

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Stressful situations have always been fervent breeding grounds for horror movies, which probably explains the abundance of horror films that take place around Christmas. After all, when you're experiencing yuletide-related anxiety, a horror film can be a healthy reminder that things could be much worse. This is a particularly blessed holiday season on Netflix Instant, with a whopping five horror films to remind you that your December is pretty good. 

That last sentence is actually a lie, because of two of these movies are bad enough to make make a crummy holiday season even worse. Which ones are they? Well, for starters...

Jack Frost* (1997)

This is a fairly standard tale: On his way to the electric chair, a serial killer—Jack Frost—gets mixed up with a barrel of molecular-bonding acid. His soul becomes attached to snow cells, making him an immortal snowman, and he decides to terrorize the town of Snowmonton and the sheriff that originally apprehended him. A macho FBI agent gets involved, and also a really nerdy scientist. Most of the townspeople look like Wilford Brimley

Not much can be done in the way of avoiding this movie—you’ve already read the previous paragraph or at least watched the trailer—and you probably remember the awesome cover from when Blockbuster still existed. Now that you know it’s streaming on Netflix, you’ve probably already stopped reading this to go watch it.

Which is too bad, because it really is a movie with no redeemable qualities. Well… that’s not entirely true. The antifreeze used to kill Jack Frost (sorry, spoiler alert) has a snowman on the front that’s kind of cute. A guy’s killed by an icicle going through his head and the wall behind it, and the icicle pulses on the other side of the wall. That’s stupid enough to be fun. As previously mentioned, it has a great cover, although it also warrants mentioning: The killer snowman on the cover does not appear in this movie. The movie’s snowman is much like a normal snowman, but with evil eyebrows. 

Other than that, it’s not particularly scary, funny, or exciting. Like a Troma movie, it looks like you’re watching reality TV that’s shot on 16mm film. Unlike a Troma movie, Jack Frost doesn’t take advantage of its micro-budget to go truly apeshit and have a good time. The most entertaining bit is trying to figure out how they’re going to pull off the next kill with the giant, immovable snowman prop. The answer’s usually that they just don’t show it happening. They also have a great way of avoiding the need to show Jack coming through doors: Due to the incident with the acid, he can just make himself melt and then reform on the other side of them. Here’s a drinking game: Take a shot every time the movie creates suspense by showing water gushing underneath a door. (Warning: You’ll die if you actually do that.)

“If he can reform, why does he always reform as the same snowman?” you ask. “Wouldn’t he be more effective just killing people as snow?” Because fuck you, that’s why (not my words; I’m just interpreting the film). 

The most memorable scene—I didn't say best—might be when Shannon Elizabeth (in her first role!) is raped to death by the snowman in a bathtub. The cinematographer deserves credit for shooting the entire scene without letting any nudity whatsoever hit the frame (in fact, these might be the only shots in the film where any attention was paid to the frame at all). And this raises an interesting thought: Somebody, at some junction, must have decided that they didn’t want something gross, like nudity, to spoil the decency of a scene in which a snowman makes his carrot-nose a penis and rapes somebody to death with it. The logic there is a good indicator of the brainpower put into Jack Frost, and it’s also probably an indicator of what’s wrong with the world at large.

*In case of confusion: This is not the Jack Frost with Michael Keaton in it. That film is legitimately terrifying.

Dead End (2003)

The first thing you’ll notice about Dead End is “Holy shit, Ray Wise!” And rightfully so. By showing Ray Wise’s face, Dead End is automatically better than Jack Frost within its first 10 seconds. It’s a movie about a family and a fiancé on their way to Grandma’s house for Christmas. The family is dysfunctional, and everybody’s mouthing off to each other in the car. Think You’re Next, but in road trip form.

Ray Wise usually takes the freeway on the family’s annual trip to Grandma’s, but this year he decides to take his Jeep Cherokee through the back roads. That turns out to be a mistake, because he ends up on a back road that’s a lot more haunted than back roads usually tend to be. The family eventually runs into a mute woman in all white that’s carrying a baby. It's a suspect situation, but they decide to take her to a cabin they passed a couple miles back, and the daughter decides she’ll let the woman have her seat and just walk to the cabin. That seems like an insane move, until you realize that she just wants to smoke a cigarette and is actually a genius.

Back at the cabin, Ray Wise and Lin Shaye (who’s incredible as the family's matriarch) go inside to look at torture devices on the walls while their son goes off into the woods to look at a porno-mag and masturbate (this was 2003; no iPhones yet). This leaves the fiancé of the closeted-smoker daughter and the mute woman alone in the car. They chat a little, and then she tells him her baby is dead, and shows it to him: It’s really, really dead. He screams, and when the whole cast gets back to the car, him and the woman are both gone. A super cool black vintage sedan drives by with the fiancé inside, and everybody piles into the Jeep Cherokee so Ray Wise can attempt to catch up to it. He ends up running over the fiancé’s mutilated body in the road, and this becomes the skeletal form of the plot structure: Weird stuff happens, mute woman appears, somebody disappears, black car, body in the road, and so on. 

Because the fiancé dies first, and only the daughter cared for him, anyway, we get a whole lot of time with the nuclear family arguing with each other and being hilarious. As the film progresses, we learn all sorts of fun family secrets. I'm going to refrain from spoiling anything past the first act, but I'll say that the second act has some very nicely done gore for a film that I wouldn’t necessarily describe as gory. Also: Ray Wise eventually breaks out a bottle of scotch and takes large pulls from it while driving, and it’s as great as it sounds. It’s a major credit to writers/directors Jean-Baptiste Andrea and Fabrice Canepa that the comedy ramps up right along with the horror. I expected the comedy to stall out once things switched into Scary Mode, and I was glad to be wrong about that.  

The ending… Well, it’s fine. I think. It explains the rules of all the wackiness on the road in a way that I felt was satisfying, but I read The Stand recently, so I’m not sure if I’ll ever be able to experience major disappointment from an ending ever again. I feel like Lost really knocked it out of the park after finishing that book.

Saint Nick (2010)

This is a film made in the Netherlands that was distributed stateside by IFC, but don’t let these things fool you. This is an extremely silly movie (with some extra silliness added by the unfortunate English language dub that you're stuck with here). Saint Nick—originally Sint and also sometimes called Saint—reimagines the [possibly] historical figure of Saint Nicholas as a fallen bishop that went around on a ship with a bunch of rotten scoundrels and bullied small villages. The story opens with Nick delivering one of these villages a message, demanding that stuff like gold, meat, and virgins be delivered to him by dawn. The villagers think things over and decide to just set Nick’s boat on fire, and him and his men all burn alive. Things were a real thrill in those days.

We jump forward to 1968, where it appears the boat fire didn’t finish off Nick and his men after all, because Nick is sucking three kids up into a chimney and killing their father. A fourth kid has gone to his family’s barn to service the plot, and he sees Nick on top of the roof. He’s on horseback—a good indicator that this movie might be really good. The kid goes inside to find blood everywhere and his mother stumbling around with her eyes gauged out. Then she dies. This is definitely in his top five worst Christmases. 

We jump to a high school classroom in present-day Amsterdam, where the students are participating in an anonymous, class-wide gift exchange. The teacher happily announces they’ve reached a new class record when a fifth dildo is unwrapped at the front of the room, and then class is dismissed and everybody goes outside to their mopeds. This sets high stakes for our protagonists: It’s always a shame when high school kids die in horror movies, but leaving lives that are filled with this many dildos and mopeds makes things so much worse. The kids all moped off to get ready for various Saint Nicholas Day celebrations, which generally means that they’re either going to dress up like Santa Claus or put on blackface. 

This is probably a good time to point out that the traditional Netherlands mythology of Saint Nick, or Sinterklaas, includes a large crew of helpers that are all called “Swarte Piet,” which is roughly “Black Pete” in English. By “roughly,” I mean that they’re literally men that are all black and named Pete. So when high school kids in Saint Nick start putting on blackface, don’t be offended; it's just tradition.**

Anyway, the kid whose family was murdered by Nick in 1968 is a cop now, and he’s still pretty upset about the whole thing. After seeing a Christmas present on his desk and shooting it four times, he's told by his chief to take a month off to get himself sane again, which is roughly the same punishment a cop gets for killing a minority in the United States. He knows there’s a full moon tonight, which means Nick’s coming to steal children and murder people, so instead of getting sane, he just goes rogue. Meanwhile, the high school kids are attacked by undead Black Petes.

This movie has some pretty great gore, and it’s probably the most expensive one on the list; it can’t be cheap to create scenes where zombie Santa Claus runs around Amsterdam rooftops on a white horse. It’s never really scary, but it’s fun enough to make up for that. For instance, the third act goes into full-blown zombie pirate territory, with a big ghost ship and fog and Black Petes all over the place, so there’s more action here than horror. The plot’s pretty stupid, with most characters dying before you really remember they’re even in the movie, but again, it’s fun enough to make up for that. It leaves room for a sequel, and—unlike Jack Frost 2—I wouldn’t hate myself for watching it.

** That's a joke. Of course you should be offended; it's a fucking horrible tradition. To anybody that thinks rednecks are limited to America: Remember that there are people in the Netherlands who are absolutely appalled by dirty liberals trying to take away their Black Petes.

ATM (2012)

ATM is a confined space horror movie that mainly takes place inside of one of those ATM rooms that requires a card-swipe to get into. It stars Alive Eve, Josh Peck, and Brian Geraghty (fun fact: Geraghty also appeared in Jarhead along with Scott MacDonald, who played Jack Frost). They all work at a stock company that does various things involving stocks. Geraghty’s always wanted to ask Alice Eve out, and this is her last day at this stock company before she leaves for a different stock company. Josh Peck convinces Geraghty (I hope you’re having fun trying to imagine how that name sounds in your head) to go to a Christmas Eve stock company party. At the party, Alice Eve accepts his invitation to drive her home, but Josh Peck intrudes because he wants a free ride. Once in the car, Josh Peck insists they stop for pizza, because he’s really just a complete dick in this movie. The pizza place only accepts cash, so they need to stop at an ATM first. You know something bad will happen there, because the movie is titled ATM. This is the most boring paragraph I’ve ever written, and this is the worst movie on the list. 

ATM is labeled as a “horror-thriller.” Note: Whenever a hyphen is used to add the word “thriller” to another genre, it’s generally being used a euphemism for “boring.” Even the parka-wearing killer that’s terrorizing the three people stuck in the ATM room looks bored by the whole ordeal, despite the fact that he must be ecstatic with his good fortunes: A car pulls up with three people in it, and not only do all three of them go into the room, but they also park a half mile away and don’t have a single working phone between them. It's a real Christmas miracle for a maniac.

You might think that the victims' occupations have something to do with the plot or the ending or really anything at all. They don’t. Evidently, the filmmakers just felt that hanging around three stock analysts was the most exciting way to spend the movie’s first 20 minutes. Ironically, the stock company Christmas party is the film's most engaging element; things get so boring at the ATM that the killer gets a lawn chair out of Geraghty’s trunk and and has a sit-down.

You won’t find gore, humor, pathos, or anything else worthwhile in this movie. The only thing you’ll find is an ever-escalating amount of plot ineptitude. There can’t be more than three or four logical events or decisions in ATM's 90 minutes, and every dumb thing is exponentially dumber than the last one. If you think the ending might somehow retroactively effect the rest of the movie: It doesn’t. It’s one of those reveals where the big shocker is that the whole incident was just an act of random targeting. Is the fact that there’s nothing to spoil a spoiler? Just in case, uh, spoiler alert.  

This was the only movie on the list distributed by a major studio—thanks, Universal!—and the only one that made me furious that I had to finish it. If you time traveled back to 1986 and showed this to an audience, they’d demand that you shut it off and show them that movie about the train pulling up to the station again. 

Stalled (2013)

Like ATM, Stalled takes place in a confined setting—in this case, a bathroom stall—but that’s where the similarities end. The logo for Phase 4 Films at the movie's start lets the audience know that they’re about to see something extremely British (the Netflix description says the main character is “appropriately named W.C.,” and I had to use Google to find out that bathrooms are sometimes called “water closets” across the pond). This is good news for a movie that takes place during a zombie attack at an office Christmas party, because the British have distinguished themselves as masters of zombies, offices, and especially Christmas parties. 

The film begins when a janitor—indeed, “appropriately named W.C.,”—goes into a woman’s restroom to fix a faulty speaker. As his watch beeps to remind him it’s Christmas Eve, he finds a dead rat in the speaker and flushes it down a toilet. He closes the door and takes a nap, and things brighten up for him a bit when he wakes up to two women from the office deciding to take a break from the party to make out at the bathroom sinks. Then one becomes a zombie and bites the other’s throat, and he’s forced to crush her head in with a toilet seat. In a British production, you can always tell that things are about to go horribly awry if the protagonist is experiencing a moment of joy. 

It’s a remarkably funny movie, which makes it impossible to not compare it to Shaun of the Dead, but it manages to stand apart in the zom-rom-com genre. And yes, it does include some romance: W.C. strikes up a relationship with a woman two stalls over that remains unseen, drawing an estimation of her face on the wall that the camera cleverly cuts to when she speaks. But the themes tackled aren’t the same ones as Shaun: W.C.’s journey is more concerned with him facing the fact that he’s walled himself off from society and love through a combination of pride, shame, and shallowness. He spends his time primarily learning to not hate himself, and in turn to allowing himself to like others. Like Shaun, though, Stalled knows that being a hilarious character study is fine and dandy, but that if you’re going to add zombies in the mix, you need some really great gore effects in there, too. And it doesn’t disappoint in that department. The gore is fantastic, fun, and 100 percent practical. 

Looking at the user reviews on Netflix, this was the worst-rated film on the list. I’m not sure why. I watch a lot of British television (I like to feel cultured, but I’m too lazy to learn another language), and maybe the humor just doesn’t quite click with many people who don’t. Indeed, is it very British—it even manages to include a short ecstasy-induced sequence—but I still don’t think any fan of good horror could be disappointed with it, regardless of the amount of time they’ve logged with the BBC.

So, I’m calling it: Stalled is the best Christmas horror film that’s streaming on Netflix. Dead End is a very close second, and Saint Nick is a solid third. And if you find yourself in strange doomsday scenario in which you're forced to choose between watching Jack Frost and ATM, go with the former. 

Screengrab via YouTube

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