10 Most Rewatchable R-Rated Christmas Movies, Ranked

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There is an entire catalog of holiday movies that are a tradition for viewers to rewatch every year. Titles like How the Grinch Stole Christmas, It's a Wonderful Life, Miracle on 34th Street, and more are wholesome iconic movies that teach the values of love and family at Christmas. Hallmark has built an entire brand around their seasonal selections that thrive on corny romances and feel-good stories. R-rated holiday movies kick down the door with their action, language, and explicit scenes all while counting down the days until Christmas. The most rewatchable of that batch shakes up the seasonal streaming with characters and premises for after the children are nestled all snug in their beds.

Many R-rated holiday movies build a foundation on the Christmas season, while others utilize it as a backdrop. From gritty depictions of Santa to holiday horror, these movies are a reprieve from the continuous reminder of what the season is about. They maintain their rewatchability for the debates they spark, the laughs they get, the boundaries they break, and the peak under the veil of an authentic idea of a holiday.

10 'Trading Places' (1983)

Directed by John Landis

Eddie Murphy and Dan Aykroyd in Trading Places. Image via Paramount Pictures

For many viewers seeking a seasonal-themed movie, they don't need an in-your-face onslaught of gift-giving, cookie bake-offs, Christmas tree cuttings, and more. There's a select viewing audience that wants a movie like Trading Places that lets them know it's Christmastime and uses the season to push the narrative in select moments (like that dirty Santa costume bit). The rewatchable 80s comedy stars Dan Aykroyd and Eddie Murphy as two men from opposite worlds, one an investor and the other a street hustler, whose lives are socially reversed as part of a bet by wealthy brokers. Realizing they've been duped as part of a game of entertainment, the pair scheme to turn the tables.

Trading Place's comedic rewatchability capitalizes on themes of greed and flips the holiday standard on its head by the time the credits roll. Many of its R-rated elements have not aged well, but the social satire film remains a staple in holiday rerun lineups. For those seeking a much edgier movie away from the wonder of Santa and the emotional feels of family time, Trading Places is that movie.

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Trading Places

Release Date June 8, 1983

Director John Landis

Cast Eddie Murphy , jamie lee curtis , Ralph Bellamy , Don Ameche , Dan Aykroyd , Denholm Elliott

Main Genre Comedy

9 'Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale' (2010)

Directed by Jalmari Helander

A thin, dirty old man dressed as Santa sitting inside a cage outside in the snow in "Rare Exports" Image via Oscilloscope Laboratories

While most holiday seasons are about rewatching the same movies over and over again, Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale is a unique fantasy horror film that hasn't worn out its welcome in the genre. The movie takes viewers to northern Finland where the reindeer population is being massacred and children are going missing. When a cagey drilling project uncovers a mysterious underground tomb, the local boys from the mountain homestead nearby, Pietari (Onni Tommila) and Juuso (Ilmari Järvenpää), believe it is that of what seems to be an evil Santa Claus.

Unfortunately, there are fan-favorite R-rated holiday classics that get tired year after year, losing their luster and magnetic thrills. Rare Exports is not one of them. It's a unique hybrid of dark comedy and holiday horror. While lesser-known, it is unexpectedly rewatchable by giving horror audiences a solid Christmas-themed narrative that doesn't fall victim to B-movie-style slasher villains, poor special effects, and empty narratives used as filler for violence.

Rare Exports A Christmas Tale Movie Poster

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Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale

Release Date October 3, 2010

Director Jalmari Helander

Cast Onni Tommila , Jorma Tommila , Per Christian Ellefsen , Tommi Korpela , Rauno Juvonen

8 'Violent Night' (2022)

Directed by Tommy Wirkola

David Harbour as a bloodied Santa Claus holding a sledgehammer in Violent Night Image via Universal

Time for some season's beatings with this action-hero Santa Claus. As a wealthy family prepares for their Christmas Eve, a group of mercenaries seeking millions of dollars in the compound's vault take the family hostage. What they don't realize is Santa (David Harbour) has dropped in, and he's in no mood for reindeer games, taking out the burglars one by one. From Harbour's perfect casting of a disgruntled do-gooder to the infusion of comedy into every scene of combat, Violent Night earned its rewatchable holiday status immediately.

R-rated Christmas movies give mature audiences versions of Santa Claus that are designed to entertain instead of wonder. The title suggests exactly what the film entails becoming essentially the R-rated version of Home Alone. Violent Night was a sleeper pick in 2022 and is destined to become a cult classic.

Violent Night Poster

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Violent Night

Release Date December 2, 2022

Director Tommy Wirkola

7 'The Night Before' (2015)

Directed by Jonathan Levine

Seth Rogen, Anthony Mackie, and Joseph Gordon-Levitt as Isaac, Chris, and Ethan in 'The Night Before' Image via Sony Pictures

Even the Christmas movie genre needs an R-rated buddy comedy. The Night Before depicts the chaotic last Christmas Eve three lifelong friends (Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Seth Rogan, and Anthony Mackie) will spend together before moving on to new chapters in their lives. While the movie is rooted in the sentimentality and nostalgia of the holiday, The Night Before is wholeheartedly a stoner comedy about an epic last hurrah.

This rewatchable holiday movie also features the importance and irreplaceable value placed on chosen families. Fans of The Night Before return to it for several selling points, whether that be the Seth Rogan-style humor, being an R-rated Christmas movie to shake up the holiday streaming, an adventure comedy, or simply because it is an authentic portrayal of friendship and flaws instead of a sugar-coated Hallmark-style buddy movie.

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Release Date November 25, 2015

6 'Black Christmas' (1974)

Directed by Bob Clark

Jess Bradford on the phone looking scared in Black Christmas 1974 Image via Warner Bros.

One of the foundational phone-call slasher films happens to be a Christmas movie. Black Christmas is the unsettling story of a group of sorority sisters receiving harassing phone calls that quickly turn into a game of cat-and-mouse as their winter break turns into a fight for survival. Both the 2006 and 2019 remakes failed in comparison to replicate the holiday horror magic of the original movie. Black Christmas remains rewatchable every year during multiple holiday seasons because it is a foundation-setting horror film that originated tropes seen in the slasher genre today.

There are plenty of R-rated holiday horror movies, but they rinse and repeat, failing the originality and execution tests. Black Christmas cultivates a whole new level of holiday tension and anticipation, but instead of Santa down the chimney, it's a slasher at the front door. Of all the emotions audiences willingly invite during the Christmas season, fear is one of them for many cinephiles. Black Christmas delivers, making it a rewatchable choice every year.

Black Christmas 1974 Poster

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Black Christmas

Release Date December 20, 1974

Director Bob Clark

Cast Olivia Hussey , Keir Dullea , Margot Kidder , John Saxon , Andrea Martin , Marian Waldman

5 'Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang' (2005)

Directed by Shane Black

Robert Downey Jr. standing over a man on the ground in Kiss Kiss Bang Bang. Image via Warner Bros. 

When the radiance of holiday lights and family gatherings wears off, Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang is a movie to turn to. The comedy stars Robert Downey Jr. as Harry Lockhart, a New York thief mistaken for an actor who is sent to Los Angeles to train with a real private investigator (Val Kilmer) for his upcoming role; however, the pair are thrown into a real conspiracy case surrounding a murder. Director Shane Black favors the holiday season, setting Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang against the backdrop of Christmas.

While the plot does not feature direct involvement, it plays out over the December season. Besides being a rip-roaring buddy comedy with the strength of its leads, the R-rated noir Christmas movie is a depiction of how crime and conspiracy don't stop for the season. The Christmas atmosphere is a stark and comedic reminder of stories that take place behind the mistletoe and gift wrapping.

Kiss Kiss Bang Bang Film Poster

Release Date November 11, 2005

Director Shane Black

Main Genre Crime

4 'The Ref' (1994)

Directed by Ted Demme

Denis Leary dressed in black pointing a gun off-camera in The Ref - 1994 Image via Buena Vista Pictures Distribution

Before Jim Carrey donned the green suit, Denis Leary's Gus was the ultimate R-rated Grinch, taking his Christmas complaints up with Santa in a fourth wall break. The teaser trailer for The Ref revealed almost nothing about the movie but gave audiences a dark comedy spectacle of Gus and his views on Christmas. He's a burglar who gets more than he bargained for when he takes a couple (Judy Davis and Kevin Spacey) hostage inside their home on Christmas Eve. As the night wears on, he realizes how annoyingly dysfunctional the couple is with incessant bickering.

Depicting a reality regularly avoided in happy-go-lucky holiday movies, the fractured family ties in The Ref provide the ultimate stage for the dark comedy. The anti-holiday holiday feature elicits laugh after laugh with its snappy script and excellent delivery.The Ref is an R-rated rewatchable throwback for viewers who just need an honest break from the joy of the season, preferring something blunt, bold, and brash.

Release Date March 9, 1994

Director Ted Demme

Main Genre Comedy

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3 'Bad Santa' (2003)

Directed by Terry Zwigoff

A man dressed as Santa drinking and smoking in Bad Santa. Image via Miramax Films

In a genre full of heart-warming depictions of Santa Claus, Bad Santa brings an R-rated mall Santa to the mix, giving the adults something to laugh at. For Willie (Billy Bob Thornton), Christmas isn't the season of giving, it's the season of taking, the thief posing as Santa annually before ripping off department stores. This year, something changes when he meets a middle-schooler who desperately needs someone to teach him life skills. Taking the kid under his wing, Willie forms a friendship with him, and along the way, discovers that maybe there is more to the season and life.

The black comedy takes the saint out of St. Nick with its alcoholic leading character. In the season of traditional watches, Bad Santa is one to turn to for self-deprecating humor and an authentic Christmas tale that isn't snowflakes and magical. While there are heartwarming moments, this R-rated comedy never lets audiences forget it's a raunchy, offensive movie about a conman posing as Santa.

Billy Bob Thornton, Tony Cox, Brett Kelly and Bernie Mac in Bad Santa movie poster

Release Date November 26, 2003

Director Terry Zwigoff

2 'Die Hard' (1988)

Directed by John McTiernan

Bruce Willis as John McClane looking down from a broken window in Die Hard Image via 20th Century Studios

Yippee Ki Ya Mothe...well, you know how it goes. It's been the debate since 1988: is Die Hard a Christmas movie? Not only is it, but it's one of the most rewatchable R-rated holiday movies. The iconic action flick stars Bruce Willis as John McClane, a New York City police officer who pulls out all the stops to save his wife and party-goers taken hostage in an L.A. high-rise on Christmas Eve. It's not just a Christmas movie because it takes place on Christmas Eve, it's a Christmas movie because the premise-driving force is the holiday. Without the holiday, McClane wouldn't have been at the right place at the right time to save the day. The Oscar-nominated movie was never marketed as a holiday movie, but it has become a Christmas cult classic.

From its quotable moments, excellent choice of villain by casting Alan Rickman as Hans Gruber, and ongoing debate, Die Hard is completely rewatchable any time of year, but especially around the holidays. Viewers in both camps of is or isn't watch the action flick every year just to reiterate their points, in a clever post-release marketing move to let it remain a yearly topic of debate.

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Release Date July 15, 1988

1 'Love Actually' (2003)

Directed by Richard Curtis

Andrew Lincoln in Love Actually holding a sign that says Merry Christmas Image via Universal Pictures

Forget the Hallmark sugar cookie-coated romances, Love Actually is an R-rated comedy with proper laugh-out-loud moments. The iconic holiday is about love of all ages at all stages, whether platonic, familial, or platonic. Traveling through nine different relationships that are not interconnected but share overlapping characters, there is something for everyone with viewers more invested in one couple rather than another. The stellar star-studded cast features Hugh Grant, Emma Thompson, Liam Neeson, Keira Knightley, Bill Nighy, Laura Linney, Colin Firth, and many more.

Audiences return to this comedy year after year because, as time goes by, there may be a relationship onscreen that speaks louder one year and another more relatable the next year. From R-rated rants of Nighy's character to the awkward, but wholesome nude scenes from Martin Freeman and Joanna Page's onscreen romance, Love Actually is absolutely cliché, but the conflicts onscreen are authentic, making it the most R-rated rewatchable holiday film.

Love Actually Movie Poster

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Love Actually

Release Date November 14, 2003

Director Richard Curtis

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