Billy Chapman
Silent Night, Deadly Night character
Billy Chapman (portrayed by Robert Brian Wilson)
Created byPaul Caimi
Michael Hickey
Portrayed byRobert Brian Wilson
Danny Wagner (age 8)
Jonathan Best (age 5)
In-universe information
Full nameWilliam Chapman
GenderMale
OccupationToy store employee
FamilyJim Chapman (father, deceased)
Ellie Chapman (mother, deceased)
Ricky Caldwell (brother, deceased)
RelativesUnnamed grandfather
NationalityAmerican

Billy Chapman is a fictional character in the Silent Night, Deadly Night franchise. Created by writers Paul Caimi and Michael Hickey, the character serves as the protagonist and antivillain of the first film, Silent Night, Deadly Night (1984), and is featured in flashbacks in the sequel, Silent Night, Deadly Night Part 2 (1987).[1]

In the first film, Billy is first introduced at age five, when he witnesses his parents' murder on a country road on Christmas Eve by a hitchhiker in a Santa Claus costume. The event leaves him with a pathological aversion to Christmas.[2] Billy is placed in an orphanage under Mother Superior, and experiences abuse there throughout his childhood that compounds his mental state. At age eighteen, Billy acquires a job working at Ira's Toy Store; however, as Christmas arrives, he finds himself under increasing psychological duress, and eventually murders his co-workers at an employee Christmas party. Billy then embarks on a murder spree on Christmas Eve, killing numerous people he encounters. On Christmas Day he arrives at the orphanage where he was raised to enact revenge on Mother Superior, but is stopped by police who shoot him to death.

The character was largely received by critics as offensive due to the violent acts he commits on Christmas, and the film was widely protested upon its theatrical release in 1984.[3]

Appearances

Films

In Silent Night, Deadly Night, Billy first appears at age five in 1971, driving with his parents and infant brother, Ricky, to visit his grandfather in a psychiatric care facility on Christmas Eve. On their way home, his parents stop on a desolate country road where a man in a Santa Claus suit has experienced a car breakdown. The man murders Billy's parents in front of him and beats his mother; Billy manages to hide in a ditch, and the killer flees the scene.

Billy and Ricky are placed in an orphanage run by the abusive and strict Mother Superior. Shunned by his peers, Billy finds companionship in the sympathetic Sister Margaret. At age eight, Billy witnesses two of the teenagers in the orphanage having sex; they are caught by Mother Superior, who punishes them severely. In 1984, at age eighteen, Billy leaves the orphanage and acquires a job at Ira's Toy Store. As the Christmas season arrives, however, Billy is troubled by hallucinations and posttraumatic stress related to his parents' murders. At the store's Christmas Eve party, while wearing a Santa Claus suit, he witnesses his male co-worker Andy attempting to harass his female co-worker/crush Pamela in the stock room; Billy snaps, and murders them both, Andy by strangling him with Christmas lights, and Pamela with a box cutter, then kills his boss and other coworker.

Billy then embarks on a killing spree. He stumbles upon a suburban house where a couple, Denise and Tommy, are having sex. He impales Denise on a pair of antlers on a taxidermy deer head, and throws Tommy through a window to the ground below, killing him. The commotion awakens Denise's little sister, who sees Billy, dressed as Santa, in the living room. He asks if she's been naughty or nice, and then gives her the box cutter he had used when he murdered Pamela. After this, Billy follows two teenagers into the woods where they are sledding, and decapitates one of them with an axe as they sled down a hillside and the other screams in terror.

The next morning, Christmas Day, Billy arrives at the orphanage to kill Mother Superior and reunite with his brother Ricky; however, with the help of Sister Margaret, the police have already determined his arrival there, and lay in wait. He enters the orphanage, where the children are unwrapping Christmas gifts; Mother Superior has been confined to wheelchair. He attempts to kill her, but is shot to death in front of the children, one of whom is his younger brother, Ricky; Ricky looks at the Mother Superior, and utters the word "naughty".

In Silent Night, Deadly Night Part 2, Billy appears in flashback via footage from Silent Night, Deadly Night as Ricky recounts he and his brother's troubled lives.

Merchandise

In 2017, NECA and Scream Factory released a special edition Silent Night, Deadly Night Blu-ray package, which included a Billy Chapman action figure that was exclusive to that particular offering. The 8-inch figure is dressed in a fabric Santa suit with removable sculpted hat and features the authorized likeness of actor Robert Brian Wilson, is fully poseable and comes with an axe and hammer accessories.[4]

Reception

In his review of Silent Night, Deadly Night, film critic Leonard Maltin admonished the character of Billy, writing: "what's next—the Easter Bunny as a child killer?"[5] Further backlash from the public over the "killer Santa" character fueled the film's publicity campaign, but did not lead to generally favorable reception.[6]

Chris E. Hayner of GameSpot ranked the character among the best horror film monsters ever and stated that the character was underrated among film viewers. He also expressed that it is Chapman's character which makes the original film enjoyable.[7] Chad Byrnes of LA Weekly ranked the character at number seven of the greatest slasher killers in films. Byrnes stated that "you'll never look at Santa the same way again" after seeing the film.[8] Zachary Paul of Bloody Disgusting feels that the character is one of the most socially awkward villains in a horror film.[9] Refinery29's Elena Nicolaou placed the character on her list of most iconic movie santas.[10] Entertainment Weekly ranked Chapman as the 15th "scariest big-screen psycho killers" in a horror film.[11] On the other hand Fandango.com listed Chapman as the 8th worst slasher villains in any franchise.[12][13]

See also

References

  1. Grant, Stacey (December 12, 2015). "Why Silent Night, Deadly Night Is the Best Christmas Horror Movie You've Never Seen". MTV. Retrieved January 9, 2017.
  2. Crump, William (2013). The Christmas Encyclopedia (Third ed.). McFarland. p. 378. ISBN 978-1-476-60573-9.
  3. Rockoff 2011, p. 156.
  4. "Christmas Comes Early as NECA's 'Silent Night, Deadly Night' Figure Gets Standalone Release". 23 May 2018.
  5. Maltin 2008, p. 1250.
  6. Kersewelll, J.A. "Ho-Ho-HOMICIDE: The Silent Night, Deadly Night Controversy". Hysteria Lives!. Retrieved January 11, 2017.
  7. "The 12 Best Slasher Movie Monsters Ever, Ranked".
  8. "A Killer List: The Greatest Movie Slashers of All Time". 22 October 2018.
  9. "What a 'Creep' – Most Socially Awkward Psychopaths in Horror!". 26 October 2017.
  10. "The Best (& Worst) Movie Santas".
  11. "Who is the Scariest Big-Screen Psycho Killer? Top 32 rages on with 'Halloween,' 'The Shining,' and more!". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on 2015-11-20.
  12. "The Top 10 Best & Worst Slasher Villains".
  13. "10 Deeply Depressing Origin Stories of Horror Villains". 30 August 2018.

Works cited

  • Maltin, Leonard (2008). Leonard Maltin's 2009 Movie Guide. Signet. ISBN 978-0-45122-468-2.
  • Rockoff, Adam (2011). Going to Pieces: The Rise and Fall of the Slasher Film, 1978-1986. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-78646-932-1.
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