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Home Alone

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For the sequels to this movie, see Home Alone 2: Lost in New York, Home Alone 3 and Home Alone 4.
Home Alone
Image:Home alone.jpg
Home Alone Movie Poster
Directed by Chris Columbus
Produced by John Hughes
Written by John Hughes
Starring Macaulay Culkin
Joe Pesci
Daniel Stern
John Heard
and
Catherine O'Hara
Distributed by 20th Century Fox
Release date(s) November 16, 1990 (USA)
Running time 103 min.
Language English
Budget $15,000,000 US (est.)
Followed by Home Alone 2
Home Alone 3
Home Alone 4
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

Home Alone is a classic 1990 holiday film starring Macaulay Culkin as Kevin McCallister, an eight-year-old who is mistakenly left behind when his family flies to France for a Christmas vacation. While initially relishing his time alone, he is later threatened with two house burglars, whom he outwits by rigging the house with booby traps.

Most of the film was shot in the Chicago suburb of Winnetka, Illinois and Wilmette, Illinois. Any other shots, such as those of Paris, are either stock footage or faked.

The film made Macaulay Culkin a celebrity. The film also features Joe Pesci and Daniel Stern as the "Wet Bandits," a bumbling pair of burglars named Harry and Marv who try to rob the McCallister home, believing it to be an easy mark with the family absent. The duo, unfortunately for themselves, run into numerous booby traps set by the resourceful Kevin throughout the house. It becomes apparent, however, that although they may get knocked back, they are getting stronger. Catherine O'Hara, Roberts Blossom, and John Heard also co-star.

Minor roles are played by Gerry Bamman, Devin Ratray, Kieran Culkin (Macaulay's younger brother), Michael C. Maronna, Hillary Wolf, and Angela Goethals. In addition, John Candy, a frequent collaborator of writer/producer John Hughes, has a supporting role as a polka band player. John Williams created the musical score, which was nominated for an Oscar.

Contents

[edit] Plot

After an argument with his family the night before, Kevin McCallister is accidentally left behind when his family leaves suburban Chicago to go on a Christmas vacation to France, and experiences what it is like to be independent for the first time. This independence has some good sides (such as being able to sleep in his parents' king-sized bed) and some bad sides (such as having to go into the scary basement alone). He also is wary of his neighbor, Marley, a.k.a. "The South Bend Shovel Slayer", a supposed-murderer who eerily keeps to himself. The two end up meeting at church on Christmas Eve, and Marley turns out to be a good person, who didn't murder his family, but had a fight with them, most notably his son, and now lives in seclusion over the fear of what might happen if he talks to them again. Kevin suggests that Marley try to contact them and make up, since things aren't going to get any better for him or his family if he does nothing.

The last third of the film deals with Kevin's discovery of the Wet Bandits' plans to loot his house and how he stops them from achieving this goal with traps made from household objects, including an iron to the face, a nail through the foot, a red-hot doorknob, and paint cans flung from the top of the stairs, even firing on them with his older brother's BB gun.

Eventually, the Wet Bandits — bloodied, bruised and battered by all of Kevin's traps — are able to get into the house and capture Kevin. Just as they are contemplating how they plan to carry out their revenge on Kevin, Marley arrives to smack each of the burglars on the head with his shovel, knocking them out until the police arrive to take them into custody. Kevin is finally reunited with his family, with his mother succeeding in escaping the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton International Airport during a blizzard. In the last scene, Marley, reunited with his family too, waves to Kevin and smiles, then Buzz shouts about Kevin messing up his room, reflecting one of the events that happened earlier in the film.

[edit] Characters

The main characters include:

  • Kevin McCallister — (Macaulay Culkin) an eight-year-old kid living in suburban Chicago whose parents accidentally leave him at home when they go on a family vacation to Paris.
  • Harry Lyme — (Joe Pesci) the smarter of the two criminals known as the "Wet Bandits," whose plan it is to loot every house on the McCallister's wealthy suburban neighborhood before the residents come home from their Christmas vacations.
  • Marv Murchens — (Daniel Stern) the sillier of the two "Wet Bandits." He foolishly leaves the water taps running in every house he and Harry rob (hence the Wet Bandits name) in order to become famous. But his smart side also comes to the surface at one point when he tries to persuade Harry not to try robbing the McCallisters' house with Kevin there.
  • Old Man Marley — (Roberts Blossom) the neighborhood salt man who is viewed as the alleged "South Bend Shovel Slayer."
  • Kate McCallister — (Catherine O'Hara) Kevin McCallister's mother. Loses her son and gets stuck in a blizzard at the airport in Scranton, Pennsylvania. She desperately tries to get back to him at all costs, even if she has to "sell her soul to the devil himself."

[edit] "Battle Plan": Injuries suffered by the robbers

[edit] Harry

  • Shot in the crotch with a BB gun.
  • Slipped twice on the slippery front concrete steps.
  • Burned his palm on the red-hot door handle, leaving a burn mark in the shape of the monogrammed knob.
  • Head burnt by a blow torch.
  • Walked straight into a glue-covered piece of Saran Wrap, then blasted in the face by feathers.
  • Tripped over a wire and hurt his back.
  • Whacked in the chest with a crowbar by Marv, who was trying to kill Buzz's tarantula.

[edit] Marv

  • Shot in the forehead with a BB gun.
  • Slipped down the icy concrete stairs that led to Kevin's basement.
  • Smashed in the face by an iron.
  • Stepped on a long nail barefoot, after losing his shoes and socks on the tar-covered stairs leading upstairs from the basement.
  • Crowbar dangling from basement door falls on his head.
  • Steps on baubles and sharp christmas ornaments barefoot.
  • Whacked three times by Harry in the arm with the same crowbar Marv had already hit him with.
  • Had tarantula put on his face by Kevin, which presumably bit him.

[edit] Both

  • Slipped on Micro Machines at the foot of the stairs.
  • Hit in the head by paint cans while climbing the stairs (Harry winds up losing his gold tooth, which infuriates him).
  • Hit against the outside wall after Kevin cuts the rope they were hanging from.
  • Whacked in the face by Marley with a snow shovel.

[edit] Taglines

  • A Family Comedy Without The Family.
  • When the McAllister family left on their Christmas vacation, they forgot one small thing...

[edit] Video games

Home Alone video games were released for eight video game systems: NES, Sega Genesis, SNES, Sega Game Gear, Game Boy, Sega Master System, Amiga and PC.

  • The first Home Alone game was released in November 1991.
  • The Home Alone NES game is a cult classic game beloved in vintage game circles for its odd gameplay, quirky glitches, and near-impossible difficulty.
  • The Home Alone game on the SNES system was the first to use screen captures and character's voices from the movie in its gameplay.
  • There is also now a new 'Home Alone' game coming to the PS2, due to be released on the 8th of December 2006.

[edit] Sequels

Culkin, Pesci, Stern, and most of the McCallister family members only appeared in the first sequel. Home Alone 3 had an entirely different plotline and cast, whereas Home Alone 4 was a continuation of the first two movies, but with completely different actors.

[edit] Box office

In its opening weekend, Home Alone made $17 million from 1,202 theaters, averaging $14,211 per site and just 6% of the final total. In total, its cinema run grossed $477,561,243 worldwide.<ref>Home Alone at BoxOfficeMojo.com</ref>

[edit] Trivia

  • The gangster movies watched by Kevin in Home Alone (called Angels with Filthy Souls) and Home Alone 2: Lost in New York (Angels with Even Filthier Souls) are not real movies but rather specially created footage, inspired by 1938 Oscar-nominee Angels with Dirty Faces.
  • The film that the family is watching while at their Uncle Rob's house in France is It's a Wonderful Life (1946) in French. The scene shown is when George Bailey tells Mr. Potter he doesn't need 24 hours to think over his offer and the answer's no.
  • The issue of Playboy magazine that Kevin finds in Buzz's room is from July 1989. The centerfold for that month was Erika Eleniak.
  • The car that "Santa" (the guy Kevin talks to about getting his family back) starts before it stalls out is a 1980 Honda Civic hatchback.
  • The posters and DVD cases for the movie had Culkin with his hands on his face and screaming, based on the famous painting "The Scream" by Edvard Munch.
  • In Kevin Smith's 1999 film Dogma, Salma Hayek's "Muse" character claims that, while she was responsible for nineteen of the top twenty highest-grossing movies of all time, she had nothing to do with this film's success (going further to claim that someone sold their soul(referring to John Hughes, who was mentioned by Jay earlier in the film) to get the grosses up.
  • In an episode of Seinfeld, George (Jason Alexander) weeps when watching Home Alone at Jerry's apartment, claiming that the old man character "got to him."
  • Home Alone is one of the films parodied in Spy Hard.
  • The McAllisters' house is in Winnetka, Illinois on Lincoln Avenue.

[edit] References

<references/>

[edit] See also

  • Uncle Buck - has similar characteristics (e.g. Macaulay Culkin, similar house, etc.)

[edit] External links

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:

hr:Sam u kući it:Mamma, ho perso l'aereo he:שכחו אותי בבית nl:Home Alone ja:ホーム・アローン nn:Home Alone no:Alene hjemme pt:Home Alone ru:Один дома (фильм)

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