Funny you should ask—my cousin actually worked on the practical effects for 'Fat Santa' back in the day! According to her, there were talks about a prequel focusing on young Santa's burger-fueled rise to power, but it got shelved when the studio pivoted to vampire projects. The closest thing we got was that Christmas crossover episode of 'Truckstop Legends' where Santa's stunt double appears as a fry cook. Honestly? The original's charm lies in its one-and-done insanity. Trying to recapture that magic might've ruined it—like when they tried making 'Bad Santa 2.' Some holiday miracles shouldn't be replicated.
'Fat Santa' definitely caught my attention. From what I've gathered, there isn't an official sequel or series continuation—just that one glorious, over-the-top Christmas special that feels like it was made on a dare. But here's the fun part: the film's cult following has spawned tons of fan theories about potential spin-offs. Some folks swear they've seen references to a scrapped sequel called 'Fat Santa vs. The Easter bunny' in old production notes, while others argue the 2013 short 'Santa's Heavy Helpers' counts as spiritual successor. The lack of follow-ups somehow makes the original feel even more special, like this bizarre little time capsule of early 2000s holiday humor.
What's wild is how the movie's themes—this jolly, unapologetic embrace of chaos—still resonate. I recently stumbled upon an indie comic that totally channels the same energy, 'Krampusnacht: Second Serving,' which feels like it could exist in the same universe. Maybe some stories are better left standalone? Though if anyone ever greenlights 'Fat Santa: Tokyo Drift,' I'll be first in line.
You know, I had this whole weekend deep dive into holiday movies last December, and 'Fat Santa' kept popping up in forums. The director mentioned in a 2018 podcast that they toyed with sequel ideas—something about Santa Crash-landing at a weight loss retreat run by elves gone corporate. Sounds amazing, right? But funding fell through. Instead, the lead actor popped up in that weird 'Snowmageddon' anthology series, playing a similarly chaotic mall Santa in one episode. Close enough?
What's fascinating is how the film's legacy lives on through memes and bootleg merch. My local comic shop sells these absurd 'Fat Santa vs. Zombie Reindeer' stickers that totally capture the original's vibe. Sometimes the fan creations outshine what a studio might've produced.
2026-02-10 16:21:06
12
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
Dirty Christmas
EfuaDreams
0
21.0K
This isn’t your merry little Christmas , it’s your dirtiest one yet. Dirty Christmas unwraps every forbidden fantasy you’ve ever wanted to taste. From strangers under mistletoe to sinful nights by the fire, every page drips with heat, hunger, and raw, unapologetic pleasure. These short stories are filthy, fast, and meant to leave you breathless, one by one, they’ll melt your holiday spirit into desire.
If you’re not into adult, mature, and explicit erotica, don’t open this book. But if you’re ready to sin in red and gold… welcome to your next obsession. You can also check out my other erotica book (Deep inside)
Red Lace Christmas: A Taste Of Sin{steamiest short stories}
Luxe writes
10
4.1K
A holiday of raw, dirty pleasures.
A collection of forbidden desires brought to life.
A Christmas spent in Sin and dirty fantasies.
A collection filled with hot, passionate and steamy sex. Are you ready for this rollercoaster of undiluted and unfiltered tale that'll leave you breathless, aching and sinful?.
If you're not 🔞 kindly scroll past this book.
Deck the halls with daddy issues and scream "yes, Santa" until the neighbors complain.
She sold herself to save her mother. He bought her to settle a score. Neither expected twelve days of captivity to feel like coming home.
Ten years ago, Evangeline Rose fled Willow Creek and the cruel boy who made her life hell. Now she’s back with a new name, a new body, and one desperate choice: enter the town’s secret Christmas auction where wealthy men bid on willing women. When the hammer falls at five hundred thousand dollars, Eva expects a stranger. Instead, she gets Grayson Holt—her former tormentor, now a devastatingly dangerous man in a half-open Santa jacket who just bought twelve uninterrupted nights with the virgin he once swore no one would ever want.
She should be terrified. He's the reason she hid in bathroom stalls and cried herself to sleep.
But the first time he kisses her, his hands shake. The first time she fights back, he groans her name like a prayer. And somewhere between the firelight and the snow and the silk ribbons around her wrists, they both realize the ugly truth:
He didn't buy her to break her.
He bought her because he's been broken without her.
The boy who spray-painted "fat ugly bitch" on her locker is the same man who falls to his knees in the snow on the last morning and begs her not to leave.
The girl who swore she'd never forgive him is the same woman who has to choose: walk away free, or stay with the monster who finally admitted he's been in love with her since the day he made her cry.
Eva spent a decade learning to hate Grayson Holt.
Turns out she's been loving him the whole damn time.
Billionaire heiress Julia Wilson had come to loathe Christmas. Five years ago, it had shattered her life when she walked in on her husband, Ryan Thompson, in what appeared to be a compromising position with his secretary. The heartbreak had forced her into premature labor. By the time her twins, Lucien and Olivia, were born, she’d signed the divorce papers, severing ties with the man she once loved. Ever since, Julia buried her pain behind an iron-clad business persona, working herself and her employees to the bone every holiday season to escape the memories of her ruined Christmas.
For Ryan Thompson, Christmas was no easier. A top-tier lawyer and businessman infamous for his undefeated courtroom record, Ryan’s victories felt hollow compared to the loss of his family. A misunderstanding had cost him his wife and the chance to watch his twins grow. For five years, he’d kept his distance, silently watching over Julia and their children, waiting for the right time to make amends and reclaim what he had lost.
A chance encounter with a stranger leads him to his family’s doorstep, dressed as Santa Claus. Will Julia slam the door in his face, or will she accept him for the sake of their children? Can they rekindle their love and fulfill the twins’ Christmas wish, or will their relationship burn in the wake of his betrayal?
What Julia doesn’t know is that fate—or perhaps the twins’ clever planning—has something else in store.
Aria hates Christmas. It’s the season everyone else seems happy while she pretends she is fine. But everything shatters on Christmas Eve when she catches her boyfriend cheating. Broken and confused, she walks into the cold night....straight into the path of a stranger with blue eyes who saves her from an attack. He is dangerous, mysterious… and a werewolf Alpha.
As she uncovers secrets about her forgotten past and her own bloodline, Aria becomes trapped between humans and wolves, lies and loyalty, love and danger.
Is meeting the Alpha her fate… or the beginning of a new nightmare?
“As within, so without, as above, so below, as the universe, so the soul.” - Hermes Trismegistus. This philosophical perspective outlines the idea that who we are on the inside will be created in the world around us. This Principle embodies the truth that there is always a correspondence between the laws and phenomena of the various planes of being and life. But what happens when your fate isn't sealed, instead, it was altered. The holidays are a hectic time but are also supposed to be a time of joy. What happens when the ghosts of Christmas lead you straight to Hell?
Demons and Angels each have a specific time on Earth to find their mates. Once Damon and Misha find one another, a threat emerges that could alter their fate. Learn how Damon and Misha evolved to deliver a Christmas in Hell that no one would ever forget.
The 'Fat Santa' novel is this wild, darkly comedic ride that feels like a twisted holiday special gone rogue. At its core, it follows this overweight, washed-up mall Santa named Nick who's drowning in debt and alcoholism. When a gang of thieves recruits him to help rob the mall on Christmas Eve, he stumbles into a bizarre heist plot involving stolen toys, a corrupt elf (yes, an actual elf), and a ton of chaotic misunderstandings. What starts as a grimy crime caper slowly morphs into this weirdly heartwarming story about redemption—Nick ends up bonding with a cynical kid who sees through his Santa facade, and their messed-up dynamic becomes the emotional anchor. The novel’s got this gritty charm, like 'Bad Santa' meets 'Die Hard,' but with more existential dread and drunken Santa monologues.
What really stuck with me was how the author balances absurdity with genuine pathos. Nick’s not just a punchline; his backstory about losing his family because of his addiction adds layers to the chaos. The ending’s messy in the best way—no tidy moral, just a bruised, slightly better version of Nick stumbling toward something resembling hope. And that elf subplot? Pure satire gold, poking fun at corporate holiday culture while unspooling a mini-conspiracy. It’s not for the faint-hearted, but if you like your Christmas stories with a side of nihilism and slapstick, this one’s a riot.
I’ve always been fascinated by holiday-themed stories, and 'Father Christmas' by Raymond Briggs is such a gem! The book itself is a standalone classic, but Briggs did create a sort of follow-up called 'Father Christmas Goes on Holiday.' It’s not a direct sequel, more like a companion piece that shows what Santa gets up to during his summer break. The humor and warmth are just as delightful, with Briggs’ signature illustrations bringing the grumpy yet lovable Santa to life again.
If you’re hoping for a full-blown series, though, you might be disappointed. Briggs’ works tend to be self-contained, but the charm of 'Father Christmas' spills over into his other books like 'The Snowman,' which has a similar whimsical vibe. For fans of cozy, visually rich storytelling, these are must-reads—even if they don’t form a traditional sequel chain.