11/25/2023 0 Comments Home sweet home aloneThrough the standard set of far-fetched circumstances, he’s left behind as the family head to Tokyo but initial bliss soon turns (a little too quickly this time) into crushing loneliness. Reviews have thus far been mostly disdainful but there’s an admirable sense of pluck to the film, as if those involved know very well they’re making something that doesn’t need to exist but they’re making the most of it anyway.Īrchie Yates, one of the least awful things about Taika Waititi’s mostly awful Jojo Rabbit, is the latest Kevin replacement, Max, undervalued and underappreciated by his family, headed up by Bea’s beleaguered mother. Their combined involvement has also attracted a funnier cast than anticipated, with This Way Up’s Aisling Bea, Kimmy Schmidt’s Ellie Kemper, Crashing’s Pete Holmes, Veep’s Timothy Simons and Catastrophe’s Rob Delaney alongside SNL favourites Kenan Thompson and Chris Parnell. What prevents the film from being just another limp bot-written recital is a surprisingly sharp sense of humour, with a script from the Saturday Night Live duo Mikey Day and Streeter Seidell and direction from Borat’s Dan Mazer, a more comically adept behind-the-camera team than one would expect from a Home Alone sequel. But dropping on Disney+ in time for its younger target audience to watch, rewatch and then watch again by the big day, Home Sweet Home Alone is a surprisingly entertaining, if wholly unnecessary, sequel, a tangerine where we expected to find a lump of coal. The prospect of yet another one, this time with some vague same universe ties to the first, has created more ire than these things usually do since the trailer dropped last month, a sign of both the original’s enduring fandom and an increased fatigue with revisiting and repeating well-worn property.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |