Eagerly anticipating this week ... (15-24)

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John Crowley's We Live in Time (2024)

3/25/2022

Home Alone (1990) - Columbus, Hughes, Culkin and co. take Christmas and home defense to the next level

 

The charm and instant likability of Macauley Culkin sells the whole movie on this poster for Chris Columbus' Home Alone

Kevin McCallister's monstrously large family forget him in Chicago, when they head off for Christmas in Paris; meanwhile two mean crooks plan a mass-burglary scheme in their neighborhood!

 

Home Alone is written by John Hughes (Pretty in Pink (1986)) and directed by great Pennsylvanian filmmaker Chris Columbus (Adventures in Babysitting (1987)).

Macauley Culkin's (Richie Rich (1994)) charm and talent as a performer makes this otherwise somewhat grotesque film a celebration of entertainment for all ages, and particularly for the young. The slapstick humor that becomes dark comedy strikes some, but it is funny!

Joe Pesci (Raging Bull (1980)), Daniel Stern (Viva Las Nowhere (2001)), John Candy (Splash (1984)) (hilarious as the leader of a polka band that Kevin's mother comes into contact with) and Roberts Blossom (Always (1989)) as Marley, the old next-door neighbor are also terrific. Probably unintentionally the Home Alone films also show that meaning is best found outside of the family bonds, a point which I rather like. This is especially because Kevin's family is so awful, and his parents so negligent and stressed out as to virtually prick adult viewers in their eyes.

Home Alone is wildly unrealistic. - But jump on anyway. This wacky contraption is a ball!

 

Related posts:

 

Home Alone franchise: Home Alone 2: Lost in New York (1992) - The coolest kid in the world incites kiddie bellylaughs once again

Chris ColumbusHarry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (2002) - Potter and Co. return for handsome if overlong first sequel

Top 10: Best family movies reviewed by Film Excess to date

Top 10: Best dramedies reviewed by Film Excess to date 
Mrs. Doubtfire (1993) - Columbus and Robin Williams score with a truly great family jewel

Home Alone 2: Lost in New York (1992) - The coolest kid in the world incites kiddie bellylaughs once again 

The Goonies (1985) - Sweet child performances drive Donner's beloved, uneven adventure (writer)
Gremlins (1984) - Dante's 1980s puppetry classic (writer)

 






 

Watch a trailer for the film here

 

Cost: 18 mil. $

Box office: 476.6 mil. $

= Blockbuster (returned 26.47 times its cost)

[Home Alone premiered 10 November (Chicago) and runs 103 minutes. Hughes had promised Warner Bros. that he could make the film for 10 mil. $. When it turned out to be impossible, he had made a secret deal with Fox already, and they went in and paid for finishing the film - and thereby snatched the extremely lucrative distribution rights for the Home Alone franchise before a competing studio that must have regretted their refusal to pay up for years after. Culkin was paid 110k $ for his performance. Shooting took place from February - May 1990 in Paris, France and in Illinois, including in Chicago. Candy did his cameo as a favor to Hughes and shot his scenes in one 23 hour-long day for just 414 $. The film opened #1 to a 17 mil. $ first weekend in America, where it remained #1 for 11 consecutive weekends and then stayed in the top 5 for another 4 weekends (#3-#4-#4-#5), grossing 285.7 mil. $ (59.9 % of the total gross). It was the highest-grossing film of the year in North America, where it sold 67.7 mil. tickets, and the 3rd highest-grossing of all time (at the time), after E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial and Star Wars. It was also the highest-grossing live-action comedy until The Hangover Part II (2011) and highest-grossing Christmas movie until Dr. Seuss' The Grinch (2018). It was nominated for 2 Oscars: Best Score (John Williams), lost to John Barry for Dances with Wolves, and Song (Somewhere in My Memory, Williams and Leslie Bricusse), lost to Sooner or Later (I Always Get My Man) by Stephen Sondheim from Dick Tracy. It was also nominated for 2 Golden Globes and a Grammy, among other honors. Roger Ebert gave it a 2.5/4 star review, translating to a notch under this one. It also made 150 mil. $ on video sales in North America initially. The film spun a franchise which continued with the same filmmakers and cast in Home Alone 2: Alone in New York (1992). Columbus returned first with Only the Lonely (1991). Culkin returned first in Only the Lonely; Pesci in The Super (1991)); and Stern in The Simpsons (1991, TV-series)) and theatrically in City Slickers (1991). Home Alone fresh at 67 % with a 5.80/10 critical average at Rotten Tomatoes.]

 

What do you think of Home Alone?

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