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        <title><![CDATA[&#x27;Deathcember&#x27; star AJ Bowen shares his top 5 Christmas horror movies]]></title>
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            <media:title type="html">&#x27;Deathcember&#x27; star AJ Bowen shares his top 5 Christmas horror movies</media:title>
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                  <p>In horror circles, actor AJ Bowen is famous for two things: appearing in the bone-chilling likes of <em>The Signal</em>, <em>The House of the Devil</em>, and <em>You&apos;re Next,</em> and being a really big fan of Christmas horror movies.</p>
                
                            
                    
                  
                            
                    
                  
                            
                    
                  
                          
                  <p>&quot;I guess that&#x2019;s my weird kink,&quot; the actor tells EW. &quot;It&apos;s highly satisfying to me when the stakes of a genre film are meshed together with snow and cold.&quot;</p>
                
                          
                  <p>Bowen can currently be seen <em>in</em> a Christmas horror movie, the holiday season-themed <em>Deathcember</em>, which also features <strong>Barbara Crampton</strong> and Tiffany Shepis in the collective cast and a list of filmmakers which includes Lucky McKee and <strong><em>Walking Dead</em> </strong>actress <strong>Pollyanna McIntosh</strong>. Bowen himself appears in a segment directed by Sam Wineman.</p>
                
                          
                   
                
                          
                  <p>&quot;I was working on Chelsea Stardust&#x2019;s movie <em>Satanic Panic</em> and I met Sam Wineman, who did second unit direction,&quot; says Bowen. &quot;We just immediately hit it off and found out that we had a fascination with Christmas horror. He reached out to me and said he was directing a piece for a Christmas-theme horror anthology. I said, &apos;Let me stop you right there, the answer&#x2019;s yes.&apos;&quot;</p>
                
                            
                    
                  
                            
                    
                  
                            
                    
                  
                          
                  <p>But what are Bowen&apos;s all-time favorite Christmas horror movies? Grab a glass of eggnog and check out the actor&apos;s choices below.</p>
                
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                    <em>Jaws: The Revenge</em> (1987)
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                  <p><strong>AJ BOWEN:</strong> It&#x2019;s much maligned. Yes, there&#x2019;s a haunted shark in it, and, yes, it screams like a lion at various moments. But take the haunted shark out of it and it&#x2019;s a pretty compelling family drama about loss. I&#x2019;m not even making a joke about that. Especially at the beginning, when it&#x2019;s cold, and Sean Brody is out on the water, and I believe there&apos;s a children&apos;s choir on the pier for whatever reason, singing &quot;The First Noel&quot; as he&#x2019;s then eaten by a haunted shark &#x2014; I just loved the combo. It&#x2019;s supposed to be a time of safety and love and family and then there&#x2019;s this haunted shark that&#x2019;s methodically hunting them. That was my gateway drug for Christmas horror.</p>
                
                          
                   
                
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                    <em>Black Christmas</em> (1974)
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                  <p><strong>BOWEN:</strong> My favorite horror film of all-time is &#x2019;74 <em>Black Christmas</em>. It&apos;s stacked with really good actors and just seemed so formative for what would end up being the slasher genre, which is one of my favorite subgenres. It&#x2019;s an annual watch for me, which means at this point I&apos;ve probably seen it at the bare minimum 25 times. They play it every year at the New Beverly. Anybody who&apos;s in L.A. &#x2014; when there&#x2019;s <em>not</em> a pandemic &#x2014; that has the opportunity to go see it with an audience, I highly recommend it.</p>
                
                            
                    
                  
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                    <em>Silent Night, Deadly Night Part 2</em> (1974)
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                  <p><strong>BOWEN:</strong> I&#x2019;ll pick one out of the <em>Silent Night, Deadly Night</em> franchise, but it&#x2019;s not going to be the first one. The original <em>Silent Night, Deadly Night</em> is a tad mean for me. But, for whatever reason, <em>Silent Night Deadly Night 2</em> is hands down my favorite of the bunch. I&#x2019;m aware it&apos;s 60 percent original <em>Silent Night Deadly</em> <em>Night</em> recut but it&apos;s kind of a shocking film. The first time I saw it I finished the movie, went back, and rewatched it literally back-to-back.</p>
                
                            
                    
                  
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                    <em>Deadly Games</em>, a.k.a. <em>Dial Code Santa Claus</em> (1982)
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                  <p><strong>BOWEN:</strong> I used to try and argue with people that <em>Home Alone</em> is a horror film, based on character perspective. Because, if you&#x2019;re one of the burglars, it&#x2019;s a nightmare. It&#x2019;s a full-on nightmare. But I don&#x2019;t have to argue that anymore because I learned that <em>Deadly Games</em> exists. That movie is bonkers. It&#x2019;s sort of a horror mash-up of <em>Home Alone</em> and <em>Die Hard</em>.</p>
                
                            
                    
                  
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                    <em>Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale</em> (2010)
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                  <p><strong>BOWEN:</strong> There&apos;s so many I could pick. I could say <em>Christmas Evil</em>. Do you count <em>Night of the Comet</em> as a Christmas horror film? I could rattle off <em>Gremlins</em> and how much I love that movie. But in terms of modern stuff, I&#x2019;ve got to go with <em>Rare Exports</em>. I&#x2019;ve <em>already</em> watched it! Normally, I crap on people who start putting up Christmas decorations this early. But this year, given everything that&#x2019;s going on, I was walking through our rural neighborhood in the mountains, and there&#x2019;s people with Christmas lights already up, and I just had this moment of, thank you, that&#x2019;s so wonderful. It made me go put on <em>Rare Exports</em>. [<em>Laughs</em>] I find that movie highly comforting. If it&#x2019;s Scandinavian, for whatever reason, their filmmaking slays me and so seeing a Christmas horror where, again, a young person is one of the central characters, I felt like I was watching an Amblin movie. It felt like a child of <em>Gremlins</em> in terms of magical realism, things working out. I really love it.</p>
                
                            
                    
                  
                          
                  <p>Shout Studios and Scream Factory&apos;s <em>Deathcember</em> is released on digital platforms Nov. 24 and on cable VOD Dec. 1.</p>
                
                          
                  <p>See the <em>Deathcember</em> trailer at the top of this post.</p>
                
                          
                  <p><strong><em>Want more movie news? Sign up for&#xA0;</em><strong>Entertainment Weekly</strong><em><strong>&apos;s free newsletter</strong>&#xA0;to get the latest trailers, celebrity interviews, film reviews, and more.</em></strong></p>
                
                          
                  <p><strong>Related content:</strong></p>
                
                          
                  <ul>
                 	<li><strong>Barbara Crampton: My life in horror</strong></li>
                 	<li><strong><em>A Creepshow Holiday Special</em> to star Anna Camp and Adam Pally</strong></li>
                 	<li><strong>&apos;Our pitch was, it&apos;s going to be scary&apos;: The making of lockdown horror movie&#xA0;<em>Host</em></strong></li>
                </ul>
                
                        
        
        
          
              
              
              
          
        
        <p>Author:<strong>Clark Collis</strong> - Source: <strong>EW</strong></p>]]></content:encoded>
                <dc:creator><![CDATA[Clark Collis]]></dc:creator>
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