Mercy Christmas

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Directed byRyan Nelson
Screenplay byRyan Nelson
Beth Levy Nelson
Produced byBeth Levy Nelson
Ryan Nelson
Tarquin Alexander
Everardo Goyanes
CinematographyKenneth Neil Moore
Ryan Nelson
Mercy Christmas
Directed byRyan Nelson
Screenplay byRyan Nelson
Beth Levy Nelson
Produced byBeth Levy Nelson
Ryan Nelson
Tarquin Alexander
Everardo Goyanes
CinematographyKenneth Neil Moore
Ryan Nelson
Edited byMatt Evans
Music byMark Leonard
Chris Bills
Daniel Lepervanche
Production
companies
No Mercy Pictures
Other Paw Films
Distributed byGravitas Ventures
Release date
  • November 28, 2017 (2017-11-28)
Running time
83 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Mercy Christmas is a 2017 American christmas comedy horror film, written by Ryan Nelson and Beth Levy Nelson and directed by Ryan Nelson. The film was acquired by Gravitas Ventures in 2017 and was released on November 28, 2017.[1]

Michael Briskett thinks that he meets the perfect woman, his Christmas dream comes true when she invites him to her family's holiday celebration. However, Michael struggles to survive once he realises that he will be the Christmas dinner.

Cast

  • Steven Hubbell as Michael Briskett
  • Cole Gleason as Andy Robillard
  • Whitney Nielsen as Katherine
  • Casey O'Keefe as Cindy Robillard
  • D.J. Hale as Eddie
  • Ryan Boyd as Bart Robillard
  • David Ruprecht as Abe Robillard
  • Gwen Van Dam as Granny
  • Dakota Shephard as Denise
  • Joey Keane as Phillip

Production and release

Mercy Christmas was produced by No Mercy Pictures[2] in collaboration with Other Paw Films. The film is Nelson's debut directorial feature.[3][4] Filming was completed in Los Angeles during 2016,[5] and traditional special-effects makeup was used to create the gory scenes.[6] The film was acquired by Gravitas Ventures in August 2017[7] and premiered at the Shriekfest Film Festival in Los Angeles in October 2017.[8][9][10]

It was released on VOD on November 28, 2017.[11]

Reception

The film received positive critical reviews from multiple media outlets following its premiere. Dread Central described it as “without a doubt, among the best the sub-genre [comedy-horror] has to offer.”[12] Horror Freak News called it a “new holiday horror classic."[13] Ink and Code stated: "It might have been the most I've laughed during a horror movie. Or maybe the most revolted I’ve been during a comedy. From the start, it establishes its own bizarre tone and fully commits to it for the rest of the film. It is thoroughly surreal as it oscillates from gut-busting laughs to wince-inducing violence."[14] Film Stage acknowledged its efficacy in the sub-genre of comedy-horror, saying, "Nelson effectively mixes genre tropes with the mundane life of an office worker. He combines a psychological horror scenario (office work futility) that's ripe with humor and a graphic horror aesthetic (prisoners of a cannibalistic clan) to embrace the absurdity inherent to both."[15]

Awards and nominations

References

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