Red One reimagines Christmas as an epic action-adventure. Written by Chris Morgan, based on a story by Hiram Garcia and revised with Jake Kasdan, it delivers Santa, the North Pole, and holiday cheer—with explosions. When Santa Claus is kidnapped, the Head of Security must team up with the world’s most dangerous bounty hunter to save him. The sleigh bells aren’t just ringing—they’re racing.

Screenwriting: Sleigh Bells and Bullet Shells
Chris Morgan, known for Fast & Furious, brings that same energy to Red One. The concept is wild: a covert Christmas rescue op with magical and military stakes. It’s funny, chaotic, and surprisingly heartfelt. Dialogue jumps between hard-hitting banter and soft holiday nostalgia. And yes, there are cookies—and fight scenes.
Studiovity’s Screenwriting Tool is ideal for juggling high-concept scripts like this. With visual scene planning and character arcs in sync, writers can deliver both adrenaline and emotion.

Direction: North Pole Goes Global
Jake Kasdan turns the North Pole into a base of operations. Think candy-cane control rooms, armored elves, and sleigh chases across continents. The action is global, but the tone is tight. It never loses sight of its holiday heart, even during a brawl in Brazil or a rescue op in Berlin.
Studiovity’s Breakdown Tool helps sort action sequences, set shifts, and special effects planning—so even fantasy logic stays grounded.
Production: High Stakes, High Tech, Holiday Style
This film looks like a billion-dollar sleigh ride. From high-tech snowmobiles to ancient Christmas relics, the production mixes tradition with blockbuster flair. Visual effects bring it all together, blending magic with modern spectacle.
Studiovity’s Budgeting Software is perfect for ambitious productions. It tracks large teams, big stunts, and magical assets to keep the project on schedule—and under budget.
Download the screenplay and join the wildest Christmas mission ever imagined.
Final Thoughts
Red One makes Christmas thrilling again. With action, heart, and Studiovity’s suite of tools, it proves the holiday genre has no limits.
