To accept our youthful admirations in the headspace of an experienced adult, I find it necessary to deal with the strange reality of time. A certain need arose in the children of my generation to overthrow the influence of the grown-up world, and many of the youth-focused live action movies of the early 90s reflected that prospect with alarming cognizance. Many of them were hardly films at all, playing more like excursions into the lurid fantasies of daydreamers who grew tired of the influence of grown-ups. The same mindset that inspired “Home Alone” would eventually give birth to a subgenre of endeavors in which kids and teenagers would break out on their own to escape the structure (or rules) of parental guidance, and a handful of them even turned the tables on them with very horrific intentions (“The Good Son” being one of the more extreme examples). Was there something about the older generation that conflicted with our youthful passions in those days? Why hadn’t the concept been as blatant in the years preceding, especially after the 80s had clogged the release schedule with countless endeavors about the abuse and suffering of children at the hands of irresponsible guardians?
In many ways, “Home Alone” was the watershed that announced the arrival of a new breed of young characters intoxicated by the idea of doing very bad things. Its young star, the very energetic Macaulay Culkin, turned out to be the most ideal facilitator of that modern philosophy; his routine eye contact with the camera brings a devious blend of charm and confidence to his agenda, and he smirks audaciously through most of his delivery like a cat eyeing its next live meal. He plays young Kevin McCallister, a boy in a relatively large family based in Chicago who is constantly being bullied and punished by the authorities above him, including aunts and uncles, older siblings, mean cousins and parents who fail to recognize that he is, in reality, a fairly mild-mannered kid until everyone else gets thrown in his direction. There is a great moment early on that frames this reality with underlying foreshadowing, when Kevin stands atop the landing of a staircase, stomps his foot and announces loudly that when he grows up, “I’m living alone!”
If the dialogue was meant to be prophetic, then the ensuing situations help propel the inevitability of his impending conflict. After an encounter with an older brother that forces him into the attic as punishment, he is forgotten about the following morning when the rest of the family rushes off to the airport, eager to begin a holiday vacation in Paris. Their lack of concern with his general presence is played up by the mad rush of being late, and when they finally get around to acknowledging that he didn’t make the trip, the plane is already halfway across the Atlantic. Kevin awakens to make this startling discovery soon after, but his brief alarm is instantly replaced by enthusiasm; no longer will he have to bow to the rules of his adult oppressors, who tend to take the side of others and look upon him not as a normal kid, but as a nuisance more easily tossed aside. But what hope does a boy who doesn’t even know how to pack his own suitcase have when it comes to fending for himself in such a big and lonely house, especially when outside threats start circling the property like vultures staking out a fresh meal?
The great capabilities of underdogs often rise to the surface in the most paralyzing of situations, and “Home Alone” supplies Kevin with a lifetime’s worth of scenarios to test his endurance. The primary plot concerns an elaborate cat-and-mouse game he plays with two bubblehead bandits played by Joe Pesci and Daniel Stern, who have strategically scoped the neighborhood in order to burglarize all the houses where families have taken distant Christmas vacations; because the McCallister residence is of particular note, it becomes the crown jewel of targets for them, and poor Kevin spends the duration of the movie coming up with creative ways to throw them off the scent. Meanwhile, his mother Kate (Catherine O’Hara), so racked with guilt over leaving her youngest behind, attempts to make a mad dash back home to be with her son before the impending holiday, and just as her trip is stalled by the reality of busy times in airport terminals, her son’s ruse against the two eager burglars is undermined by their gradual realization that he has been abandoned by the family, and probably poses no major threat against their plan to strip the house of all its valuables.
The centerpiece of the movie – indeed, the primary selling point – is a 20-minute climax of elaborate traps and ambushes that Kevin sets up to counter their home invasion, ranging from blow torches to exposed nails to falling paint cans and even tarantulas. As victims of his devious plots, both Pesci and Stern, fully committed to their characterizations, show a great dexterity of comedic flair that fills the screen with great energy. What happens to them during their descent into the house is often painful and shocking, but they play up the humorous underpinnings by offering the camera a variety of precious reactions, as if victims of falling anvils dropped on them by Bugs Bunny. Viewers looking at them from more literal perspectives will find them too violent to be at all funny, of course, but such ideals undercut the cartoonish thrust of the source. The screenplay by John Hughes is a celebration of an ambitious child’s perspective, and to hold it to any grandiose standard beyond that frame of reference violates the principal of the direction, which is no more serious than any Saturday morning cartoon of the same time period.
Does the depth of my admiration change in the more informed context of a 30-something, though? In some regards, yes it does. The premise is a logic loop that would never fly for any other sake, and many of the adult characters are drastically downplayed in the logistics of the plot. But none of that diminishes the value (or the enjoyment) of any of what works, either; I still laugh hysterically at most of the painful sight gags, admire the brilliant humor and chemistry of Pesci and Stern, and am humbled to admit that the ending, a good blend of nostalgia and important emotional insights, does inspire a moment of joyous reflection. There are peaks and valleys worth of sensations in “Home Alone” – some of them momentary, others silly, some totally miscalculated – but neither Columbus nor Hughes ever pretended to be achieving something more than a parade’s worth of surface reactions. When you get right down to it, their agenda reflects that of the animators of the Looney Tunes shorts, who too bent the rules of plausibility for the sake of inspiring one to respond jarringly against the flow of gradual consideration. 25 years later, here is a movie that sticks out in the memory not because it is cynical or completely ridiculous in its angst, but because it portrays it all with an over-the-top orchestration that creates a routine of pleasure and enjoyment. And somehow, someway, we still come to accept young Kevin as the hero we always desired to be: an adolescent brave enough to stare back at the nonsense of the world, embrace his rebellious immaturity and teach all the older sorts a lifetime’s worth of important lessons.
Author's Note: This article was originally started in December of 2014, but has since been tweaked and finished for publication.
Written by DAVID KEYES
Comedy (US); 1990; Rated PG; Running Time: 103 Minutes
Cast:
Macaulay Culkin: Kevin McCallister
Joe Pesci: Harry Lime
Daniel Stern: Marv Merchants
Catherine O’Hara: Kate McCallister
John Heard: Peter McCallister
Roberts Blossom: Old Man Marley
Produced by Tarquin Gotch, John Hughes, Mark Levinson, Mark Radcliffe and Scott Rosenfelt; Directed by Chris Columbus; Written by John Hughes
1 comment:
Great review!
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