Friday, 20 December 2024

Silent Night (2023)













Silent Hunter

Silent Night
USA/Mexico 2023
Directed by John Woo
A Better Tomorrow Films


Warning: Slight spoilers

Not to be confused with the absolutely brilliant movie Silent Night from 2021 (which I reviewed here), John Woo’s identically titled action movie was something I wanted to see last year but, well, it only got a release via the internet in the UK on 23rd December (by which time I’m too busy) and, frankly, I don’t watch Christmas films out of season. I did, however, manage to snag a signed copy of Marco Beltrami’s brilliant score to the movie when it was released early this year and, what can I say, now that it’s actually December I’ll actually be able to play it too (I don’t listen to Christmas music out of season either, folks).

So this one stars Joel Kinnaman as Brian and the brilliant Catalina Sandino Moreno (from the TV show From) as his wife. The credits roll as we see Brian running in slow motion, his Christmas jumper soaked in blood. As the credits end he catches up with a couple of cars who are shooting it out in a gang battle. When he catches up to them... all I can say is, this is the first Christmas movie I’ve seen where, within five minutes, two people have their heads skewered with forklift truck prongs and the main protagonist has his throat shot out at close range.

A month later, when Brian gets out of hospital, you begin to realise that, apart from diegetic sound from sources such as TV or radio plus a few whispered words here and there, the majority of this film exists with absolutely no dialogue whatsoever... which is just as well considering that the hero no longer has a voice box.

It turns out that the son of Brian and his wife was shot dead from a stray bullet in that gangland battle at the start of the picture and, after he spends a month or so trying to drink his pain away and his wife leaves him, he starts training for revenge... physically, with firearms, with a car, with knives etc, so that he can, as he scrawls on the calendar for December 24th of the current year he’s in (2022 it turns out)... Kill Them All.

That’s the plot, It’s simple and there’s a lot of tension and build up before the first, brutal, hand to hand combat scene used as a prelude to an ultra long series of action scenes culminating in the last 25 minutes referencing Bruce Lee’s Game Of Death, in a way, as Brian (and, to a small extent, a policeman played by someone called Kid Cudi) fights his way up to the top of a building block to get to the final villain’s lair.

And it’s nicely shot, has some interesting framing and some nice, slow camera moves and, ultimately, is a pretty solid film. For instance, there’s a lovely moment where the juxtaposition of two shots forming a transition are really poetic... as a falling tear from his wife’s cheek turns ito the ejected shell from a gun range.

Also, I think there’s a big nod to the cinema of Sergio Leone in this... namely the way he references memories with some of the main protagonists in his films. In this case, his dead son’s music box chimes are used to show him both thinking back to his life before the shooting and also as a reminder/focus of his, as the saying goes, roaring rampage of revenge. It very much reminded me of the use of the watch chimes in For A Few Dollars More, for instance. And come to think of it, the silent hero taking silencing damage to the throat could be seen as being influenced by both Charles Bronson’s character in Sergio Leone’s Once Upon A Time In The West and Jean-Louis Trintignant’s title character in Sergio Corbucci’s The Great Silence so... yeah, pretty sure John Woo must be a fan of Italian westerns, for sure.

And, yeah, Beltrami’s score was pretty outstanding in places and certainly supports the movie well (although I found the end credits music a little underwhelming). I’m definitely looking forward to giving this CD a spin or two over the next fortnight, for sure.

And that more or less wraps up this fairly short review of Silent Night so I’ll just add that I could have done without the Hallmark movie moment in the villains lair towards the end of the story (you’ll know it when you see it) and that Brian is, fortunately, not depicted as a complete superman in this... he gets hurt and sometimes only luck saves him from death. And Joel Kinnaman certainly looks like he can do this stuff and does a very convincing job of portraying this guy (perhaps a little less convincing when he puts on a smiling face in the flashbacks but, yeah, these moments are luckily kept to a minimum). Silent Night is definitely one to watch from Woo and maybe I’ll start revisiting his back catalogue at some point and looking at some of his classics on Blu Ray (such as The Killer, Hard Boiled and Paycheck... but not Face Off, that was awful). So, yeah, maybe give this one a go.

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