I Believe In Santa Quiz – Which Character Are You?

<span class="author-by">by</span> Samantha <span class="author-surname">Stratton</span>

by Samantha Stratton

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Respond to these rapid questions in our I Believe In Santa quiz and we will tell you which I Believe In Santa character you are. Play it now.

The young child presents Santa with a pickle ornament made of wood.

“How come it’s brown?” Santa inquiries. Why did you not color it green?

The youngster claims, “It’s not painted.” “That’s blood from when I cut my hand constructing it for you,” the maker said.

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Santa is an alcoholic, melancholy safecracker. Consider Thomas the Tank Engine as a member of the Addams Family instead of one of those adorable movie youngsters; the youngster is a ferocious and needy stalker. Oh, and Marcus is the name of another elf. The elf is an irate dwarf who has spent the last eight years breaking into a new department store’s safe every Christmas while working with Santa. The elf is fed up. Santa becomes inebriated while on the job; he is boozing customers in the Plus Sizes dressing room, and it’s unclear if the kids will spew up on Santa or on him (no pun intended).
But you shouldn’t waste any more time and start this I Believe In Santa quiz.

“Bad Santa” is a deranged, twisted, absurdly humorous piece of comedy kamikaze style, starring Billy Bob Thornton as Santa in a performance that’s unapologetically rude. Willie T. Soke is the name of his character; W.C. Fields would have approved. Throughout the entire film, he maintains his theme of being a foul-mouthed, disheveled, drunken louse. The conclusion is joyous, but not in the way you might imagine when a man hears from his physicians that his legs were lost but they were able to salvage his shoes.

“Bad Santa” transgresses every one of the unwritten rules that govern popular American films. When was the last time you witnessed Santa kicking a retail reindeer to death in a motion picture? or more often than Eddie Griffin uttering the f-word? Or getting a partner who has a Santa fetish and forces him to wear his little red hat in bed? In addition, when was the last time a loser Santa met a little child in a movie, and the child didn’t save the loser by being kind and simple, but instead clung to him like those leeches did to Bogart in “The African Queen”?

I Believe In Santa Quiz

Because we get tired of seeing the same old movies, movie critics have been accused of favoring bizarre films. That does serve some justice. But I didn’t like this movie only because it was strange and unique; I liked it because it doesn’t hold back and doesn’t spare anyone. Additionally, it is humorous.
Also, you will find out which character are you in this I Believe In Santa quiz.

Terry Zwigoff is the director. He produced the outstanding documentary “Crumb” about the devoted misanthrope cartoonist R. Crumb. (Crumb illustrated the comic books “American Splendor” on Harvey Pekar, who was equally misanthropic as him.) Zwigoff also directed the eccentric film “Ghost World,” which featured an odd romance between a teenage girl (Thora Birch) and a bitter recluse who was around 40 years old (Steve Buscemi). This director specializes in creating bitter, antisocial oddballs. It takes more bravery for him to accomplish it in comedy than sadness.

John Requa and Glenn Ficarra’s original screenplay served as the basis for Zwigoff’s work. And how have they performed in the past, you ask? They co-wrote the 2001 film “Cats & Dogs,” which featured ninja cats who parachuted, and their upcoming film is “Cats & Dogs 2: Tinkle’s Revenge.” Perhaps many screenwriters who pen cute PG-rated films like “Cats & Dogs” also have a script for “Bad Santa” stashed away somewhere—possibly in a lead-lined box in the desk’s bottom drawer.

About the quiz

Billy Bob Thornton must have read the script after receiving it and concluded it would be a career-ending move. He then held the gun to his head while reading the script. He lacked the confidence to play Hamlet, but he possessed the courage to portray Willie T. Soke. Willie, who is in the terminal stages of alcoholism, relies on the willpower of Marcus, a thief who views stealing to be a job and puts on his elf ears every morning to go to work. Marcus is portrayed by Tony Cox.
Also, you must try to play this I Believe In Santa quiz.

Willie and Marcus always follow the same strategy: they enter the store using the Santa persona, stay past closing time, and break the safe. Unfortunately, this year’s shop security chief (Bernie Mac, who is generally furious) is aware of their scheme and wants a piece of the action. He doesn’t report minor instances like the reindeer-kicking to the store manager, who was played by the late John Ritter, because it serves his purpose to maintain Bad Santa in the business.

Willie becomes preoccupied when Sue, a Santa fetishist, enters his life and picks him up in a pub. Sue is played by Lauren Graham. Then there’s the young child (Brett Kelly), who sits on his lap, adamantly declares that he is not Santa Claus but still expects to be treated as such. The child is terribly lonely because his parents are away for reasons that are more obvious to us than they are to him, and his unconscious grandmother is caring for him (Cloris Leachman). Yes, I am aware that only the week prior I had expressed my disapproval of the brutal treatment of the unconscious babysitter Mrs. Kwan in “The Cat in the Hat,” and now here I am endorsing how the grandmother of the little child is treated in “Bad Santa.” This movie is funny, although that movie wasn’t, and that movie was made for family audiences, whereas this movie wasn’t.

If ever, that is. Despite the “R” rating, I assume a few unaware families may enter, and I envision terrified children fleeing hysterically down the aisles. Who will watch this movie is something I have trouble picturing. Anybody? This kind of film is a taste test. You can break free from the idea that a movie’s quality is decided by its subject matter if you can explain why “Kill Bill” is a good movie while “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre” is not, and why “Bad Santa” is a good movie while “The Cat in the Hat” is not. A movie’s focus is on how it is about something, not what it is about, as you intuitively realize. You’re eligible to be “Bad Santa.”

For more personality quizzes check this: Which Overwatch Character Are You.

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