The New York Times by A.O. Scott
Takes all the Christmas season's bad vibes and converts them into an achingly funny and corrupt dark comedy.
✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
United States, Germany · 2003
Rated R · 1h 32m
Director Terry Zwigoff
Starring Billy Bob Thornton, Tony Cox, Brett Kelly, Bernie Mac
Genre Drama, Comedy, Crime
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A miserable conman and his partner pose as Santa and his Little Helper to rob department stores on Christmas Eve. But they run into problems when the conman befriends a troubled kid, and the security boss discovers the plot.
The New York Times by A.O. Scott
Takes all the Christmas season's bad vibes and converts them into an achingly funny and corrupt dark comedy.
First-rate talent and a uniquely dyspeptic mood separate this effort from more routine, populist stabs at tasteless yukkage.
Bad Santa is a one-joke film; to his credit, Thornton embodies that joke with vicious, vaguely insane conviction.
ReelViews by James Berardinelli
It has two modes: dark and darker, and dares to do some things with the Christmas motif that haven't been done since Norman Rene's "Reckless."
Los Angeles Times by Manohla Dargis
It unapologetically exults in its characters' glorious imperfection. It's good to know that oddballs, outcasts and people who don't look like Barbie and Ken still have a place in American movies and that not everyone in Hollywood pays lip service to the nice and polite.
The foulest holiday movie I've ever seen -- and the funniest.
The Hollywood Reporter by Michael Rechtshaffen
Happens to be extremely funny -- at times sidesplittingly so -- thanks to Zwigoff's way with raw irreverence and Thornton's perfectly pitched, ready-for-anything performance.
Entertainment Weekly by Owen Gleiberman
Isn't up to much of anything besides pretending that swearwords and snot-nosed insults, served up by Santa with an almost institutional monotony, aren't just naughty. They're -- big joke! -- incorrect.
Rolling Stone by Peter Travers
If you've had it with all that feel-good holiday sludge, hook up with the combustibly nasty Bad Santa. It could become a Christmas perennial for Scrooges of all ages.
Much like "School Of Rock," Bad Santa salvages a tired, paint-by-numbers formula by resisting it every step of the way, stubbornly refusing to stop its juvenile fun until the last possible moment.