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Home Alone is a very popular family film for the holidays. The film is all about family and has themes that makes the adult think and plenty of humor for the kids. The humor really is solid for a family film. John Hughes does his thing with the screenplay and has plenty of moments for the adults to enjoy with the kids and for the adults to enjoy without the kids.

It's another script to add to John Hughes's wonderful career and helps in his contention as one of the greatest screenwriters ever. Few could find the balance of dramatic themes and flat out humor the way he could. Culkin is impressive at such a young age and Daniel Stern and Joe Pesci have always been able to make me chuckle in this movie. The slapstick gets a little too much during the climax, ranging from stupid to flat out ridiculous with the traps Kevin sets up for the burglars.
Critic Reviews for Home Sweet Home Alone
It makes me feel said how John Hughes would write a movie like this one. Looks like hollywood really did sold him out during this time. Roger Ebert was wrong about this one saying, "it's better than the first two." To me, it just sounded rediculous.

The first two will always be better than this nonsense. Too much of the same thing or just enough of a good thing? Sickly saccharine or expert bringer of the Christmas feels?
Movie & TV News
When individual episodes have scores, they will influence the final season score. Home Alone 3 steers clear of the mistakes of the previous films, and makes all new ones. Whereas 2 went too dark and violent, 3 goes too cartoonish and slapstick. Where the first film thought small, with just a pair of common burglars, 3 goes big, with a team of international terrorists.
There are no featured reviews for Home Sweet Home Alone because the movie has not released yet (). Its endearing story and a charming performance by Culkin make Home Alone a standout among the usual holiday movie fare. This still holds up and is pretty funny despite the bad parenting.
Critic Reviews for Home Alone 2: Lost in New York
After learning to fend for himself, the boy has to protect his house against two bumbling burglars who are planning to rob it. Was moving the action to Manhattan and upping the "ow"-factor enough to justify a second Home Alone movie? We're tossing bricks and taking names in the latest ep of our podcast. Loses a little of what the first one had because the story was so focused on the house but as the story moves to New York City, the scope is much bigger. Still watchable and many funny parts, ya filthy animal.
When bratty 8-year-old Kevin McCallister acts out the night before a family trip to Paris, his mother (Catherine O'Hara) makes him sleep in the attic. After the McCallisters mistakenly leave for the airport without Kevin, he awakens to an empty house and assumes his wish to have no family has come true. But his excitement sours when he realizes that two con men plan to rob the McCallister residence, and that he alone must protect the family home. Max Mercer is a mischievous and resourceful young boy who has been left behind while his family is in Japan for the holidays. So when a married couple attempting to retrieve a priceless heirloom set their sights on the Mercer family's home, it is up to Max to protect it from the trespassers... And he will do whatever it takes to keep them out.
User reviews59
The casts are the same, which is good. When it comes to sequels, I usually don't like it when a character is been replaced with different cast, but you don't see it here. Overall, everything is the same (the story, the soundtrack, actors/characters, etc), but the only thing that's different was the setting. A hilarious family film that everybody will enjoy nonetheless. The percentage of approved Tomatometer critics who have given this title a positive review.

Still, the film's beginning shows some cleverness in setting up a new, original home alone situation, but it quickly devolves into garbage. But basically watching it a bunch of times doesn't make it funny anymore. For the 25th anniversary of the movie, we mostly saw the movie again. It became exactly an overrated Christmas comedy as we most likely saw it again. I respect this movie in one way, but for the other way...
A lot of people love Home Alone around the holidays but I love Home Alone year round. When it's going somewhere, Home Alone is quite funny. But Hughes and Columbus hung too much on the scene-setting slight idea; the film brings too much baggage, and the trip seems much too long. Still highly entertaining despite Kevin's family being very problematic. Daniel Stern and Joe Pesci brought some great comedy to their scenes.

Hilarious hijinks of epic proportions ensue, but despite the absolute chaos, Max comes to realize that there really is no place like home sweet home. With a ridiculous story and an obnoxious main character who's harder to root for than the "villains," Home Sweet Home Alone is no fun for the whole family. The charisma of Macaulay Culkin matched with the intelligent script by John Hughes makes this the definitive holiday story that it is, appealing to all ages.
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