It’s a Wonderful Knife – Film Review
Published December 7, 2023
It’s a Wonderful Knife, directed by Tyler MacIntyre and written by Michael Kennedy, attempts to capitalize on the nostalgic resonance of Frank Capra‘s heartwarming holiday classic It’s a Wonderful Life. Yet this attempt proves only to be a seasonal massacre of the film’s time-tested sincerity. An underbaked amalgamation of slasher thrills and Christmas spirit, it wields a blunter edge than expected and packs only sporadic comedic value.
The premise, on paper, promises a much darker version of Capra’s tale, only it barely maintains the slasher comedy tone. Jane Widdop stars as Winnie Carruthers, a teenager plagued by survivor’s guilt following the mass killing in her small town by a costumed murderer, The Angel. On Christmas Eve, in a bizarre, twisted echo of It’s a Wonderful Life, she wishes she’d never been born – and the film dives headlong into a warped alternative reality.
Despite an engaging premise and an above-average ensemble cast, It’s a Wonderful Knife never reaches the razor-sharp hilarity and ingenious thrills promised. At times, the screenplay falters and scenes dawdle, weighed down by an over-explanatory dialogue. Winnie’s earnest musings come off as overzealous in comparison to George Bailey’s wistful self-discoveries. As her character is chased through the snow-dusted town of Angel Falls by a serial killer, we find it difficult to root for her because she seems determined to follow an invisible script of slasher clichés. Even when the film touches upon grief, it does so in the most laughably gruesome manner.
The film aims for edgy, utilizing splatter effects to ludicrous extremes that range from the moderately amusing to outright distasteful. Rather than weaving horror into comedy, It’s a Wonderful Knife treats both elements as opposing sides in an identity crisis, throwing around plot developments in a scramble to remain thrilling or humorous.
The script, which careens from yuletide humor to grisly killings, appears divided between poking fun at the hallmarks of its own genres and offering legitimate plot development. This discord in tone often leaves the audience reeling in an inappropriately lighthearted manner from what should be profoundly disturbing scenes of murder and bloodshed.
In contrast to the oddly executed humor, the horror aspects of It’s a Wonderful Knife tend to be jarringly grim, removing any satirical aspect that could have lightened the mood and complemented the supposed comedy. Even a strong performance by Justin Long as the creepy Mayor Waters can’t elevate this would-be horror-comedy past its schlocky indulgence.
Performances throughout the cast are largely dependable but unfortunately shackled by the screenplay’s pitfalls. Widdop is somewhat admirable in her attempts to inject some character depth into Winnie, but the delivery is inconsistent due to the story’s muddled intent.
Joel McHale and Jess McLeod do their best with what they are given, yet Katharine Isabelle’s character Gale Prescott, for the majority of her screen time, provides only stereotypical teenager fodder. The most exciting character ends up being The Angel, which sums up this film in a nutshell.
While It’s a Wonderful Knife could have cleverly parodied Christmas classics while offering the seasonal cheer wrapped in thrills, it opts instead for messy confusion. By going too broad and only superficially referencing its supposed inspiration, this holiday horror-comedy only succeeds in undermining its ambitions.
Though armed with potential, the film misfires more than it hits its target, feeling less like an entertaining hybrid of disparate genres and more like a wayward patchwork. Regrettably, its not-so-wonderful muddling of themes results in an unfortunate mess of what could have been an amusing twist on a beloved classic. An ironically titled misfire, It’s a Wonderful Knife seems poised to swiftly sink beneath the ice of more solidly-constructed Christmas slashers.