Saturday, September 14, 2013

It is Christmas time and the McAllister family is preparing for a vacation in Paris France. But the youngest in the family named Kevin got into a scuffle with his older brother Buzz and was sent to his room which is on the third floor of his house. Then the next morning while the rest of the family was in a rush to make it to the airport on time they completely forgot about Kevin who now has the house all to himself. Being home alone was fun for Kevin having a pizza all to himself jumping on his parents bed and making a mess. Then Kevin discovers about two burglars Harry and Marv about to rob his house on Christmas Eve. Kevin acts quickly by wiring his own house with makeshift booby traps to stop the burglars and to bring them to justice.

Review

In the Eighties John Hughes churned out a handful of movies and scored many many hits. Quite rightly as most of them were seriously funny I'm DEFINITELY not referring to Curly Sue so relax! In one particular scene from Uncle Buck Macaulay Culkin interrogates a babysitter through the letterbox to make sure she's not a baddie. This inspired Hughes to write a whole new movie. Who would have known that this and its sequel would go on to become two of the biggest hits of all time Both Hughes and Chris Columbus seem to prefer setting their movies during the holiday season (Gremlins Planes Trains & Automobiles Christmas Vacation) and manage to pull them off without too much sentiment or sickening amounts of gooey love.

There are two reasons why Home Alone was such a big success. The first is that it's about a kid who outsmarts grownups something that happens every day only there's a worldwide conspiracy of silence. This movie yells it out loud and clear. The second is John Williams's magical score which elevates the movie way above slapstick family fare to something more serious and regarded. It was nominated for an Academy Award along with the Christmas carol Somewhere In My Memory but lost to John Barry's Dances with Wolves. Damn! In a mad rush to the airport one morning the MacCallister family forget one little thing...Kevin (Culkin). He is an eightyearold kid who wants nothing better than a peaceful Christmas and some time to himself. It's hard for him to get this when living in a house with seven other people(the exact same house from Planes Trains And Automobiles don't you know0. With the rest of the MacCallisters in Paris Kevin runs wild doing whatever he wants eating whatever he wants and watching whatever TV show he wants.

But there's one major problem. The Wet Bandits Harry (Joe Pesci) and Marv (Daniel Stern) are on the prowl and have knocked off every other house in Kevin's street. His is next. And seeing that he's manofthehouse now he HAS to defend it.

Using whatever tools are at his disposal (rusty nails blow torches Micro Machines) he sets up a labyrinth of booby traps so that the Wets can't break in. Their idiotproof determination proves to be their downfall as they are tortured and tornup upon entering Kevin's domain.

Although this is not the only point of the film there is an important message that family is what really matters to a child or to anyone and having them home for the holidays is better than wandering a huge house all by yourself.

There are some movies that work best at Christmas and this is one of them. I'm not saying that in a couple of decades it will be the new It's A Wonderful Life but it will be remembered fondly at the very least.

Don't be a Scrooge. It's Christmastime. Go rush to check out Home Alone.