Good Tidings (2016) by Stuart W. Bedford


Director: Stuart W. Bedford
Year: 2016
Country: United Kingdom
Alternate Titles: Blood Tidings
Genre: Slasher

Plot:
Arriving at a homeless shelter, a man joins his fellow homeless members in a closed-down bank for the shelter when they notice a trio of escaped mental patients dressed as Santa Claus is going around killing everyone and forces his friend to rely on his old Army Veteran skills to save them.

Review:

This here was a decent enough though flawed genre effort. One of the strongest elements to be had here is the heartwarming nature of the setup at the shelter. The beginning here brings us into their hardship of the season and what they’re doing to make the best of it in the grandest Christmas traditions despite being unable to enjoy the finer things in life and to notice that everyone here is getting into the holiday spirit before the rampage starts is rather nice. The scenes of the group coming in and taking over the bank killing them off one-by-one carries a nice sense of shock at the audacity to go through the plan the way they do like the scenes of them chasing through the building generate some pretty tense moments. There’s a nice sense of action and brutality between these continuous confrontations taking place throughout the bank as the group tries to outwit and survive the group which leads to some great deaths and some nice gore. These are really all that work here.

There are a few flaws to be had here. The main issue with this one is the decidedly underwhelming killers who provide this one with some troublesome moments throughout here. That they’re clearly unhinged mental patients that aren’t capable of doing anything in a manner that should make people scared of them is a major stumbling block as a gang of them who take a stand against the intruders will overcome them rather easily considering their slow speed and incapacitated mental facilities who can’t fight fair. Anyone who would’ve taken a fight to them would’ve been able to overcome them easily the way they’re addicted to childish toys and games and becomes far more obvious how they’re able to stand up to them later on.

The other issue with this one is the continual reliance on characters getting tied up and dragged away by the killers instead of outright killing them. While this plays into their simplistic nature and toying with them is what they would be comfortable with, that they’re clearly smart enough to come up with the plan and execute it to the point of success as well as they have which shows there’s a level of planning and viciousness to their methods. Yet rather than do something chilling with the killers’ interactions with the captured victims it favors demented gift-giving rituals or just simply standing there chuckling at them. This isn’t scary at all and is repeated far too often to make any kind of impression. Coupled with the off-screen kills whenever something should be happening and this one does come down quite a bit.


Overview: **/5
While this one does have some great moments when it’s stuck on the rampage and senseless slaughter they engage in, the fact that so much of it is undone by the behavior of the killers and their non-threatening nature does a lot of damage. This one is really only for the most diehard slasher fanatics or seasonal horror aficionados while those looking for more competent genre work should heed caution.

Comments