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Home Alone 3

1997 film by Raja Gosnell


Summary

1997 film by Raja Gosnell

FieldValue
imageHome Alone 3 film.jpg
altA boy equipped with various gadgets and a backpack stands in front a house door, with a parrot and a mouse (both wearing helmets) sitting on his shoulders. Four criminals appear at the four small windows on the side of the door; the first is electrocuted, the second is covered in frost, the third is covered in mud, and the fourth has black paint around his eyes.
captionTheatrical release poster
directorRaja Gosnell
writerJohn Hughes
producer{{Plainlist
starring{{Plainlist
cinematographyJulio Macat
editing{{Plainlist
musicNick Glennie-Smith
studio{{Plainlist
* Fox Family Films<ref name"VarietyFoxRenamedToon"/
distributor20th Century Fox
released
runtime102 minutes
countryUnited States
languageEnglish
budget$32 million
gross$79.1 million
  • John Hughes
  • Hilton Green
  • Alex D. Linz
  • Haviland Morris
  • Bruce Green
  • Malcolm Campbell
  • David Rennie
  • Fox Family Films
  • Hughes Entertainment

Home Alone 3 is a 1997 American crime comedy film, directed by Raja Gosnell, and written by John Hughes. It is the third in the Home Alone film series and stars Alex D. Linz and Haviland Morris. The plot follows Alex Pruitt, an 8-year-old boy who defends his home from a dangerous group of international criminals working for a terrorist organization.

Home Alone 3 was released on December 12, 1997, by 20th Century Fox. The film grossed $79 million and received negative reviews from critics. It was followed by a made-for-television sequel, Home Alone 4, in 2002.

Plot

Peter Beaupre, Alice Ribbons, Burton Jernigan, and Earl Unger are four internationally wanted criminals working for a Hong Kong-based terrorist organization linked to North Korea. In Silicon Valley, California, they steal a $10 million missile-cloaking microchip and hide it inside a radio-controlled car to get the chip past security at San Francisco International Airport. However, a passenger named Mrs. Hess inadvertently takes the criminals' bag containing the car, mistaking it for her identical bag. The criminals arrive in Chicago and systematically search every house in Hess' suburban neighborhood to find the chip.

Eight-year-old Alex Pruitt is given the toy car by Hess as payment for shoveling her driveway. He returns home and discovers that he has chicken pox and must stay home from school. The next day, Alex discovers the criminals while spying on his neighbors and calls the police, but they are unable to help. Alex attaches a camera to the car and uses it to spy on them, leading to the criminals chasing it when they see it. Wondering what they want with the toy car, Alex opens it and discovers the stolen chip. He calls the local U.S. Air Force Recruitment Center about the discovery and asks if they can forward the information about the chip to the authorities.

The criminals realize that Alex has been watching them and decide to break into the Pruitt house. Alex rigs the house with handmade booby traps with help from his pet rat Doris and his brother Stan's parrot. The criminals break in, spring the traps, and suffer various injuries. While the group pursue Alex around the house, he flees and rescues Hess, who has been taped to a chair in her garage by Ribbons. Beaupre ambushes Alex, but Alex uses a bubble gun resembling a Glock to scare him off.

FBI agents and the police later arrive and arrest Ribbons, Jernigan, and Unger, having received a tip from the recruitment center. However, Beaupre hides in a makeshift snow fort in the backyard. Stan's parrot discovers him and threatens to light fireworks, which are lined around the inside. Beaupre offers a cracker in exchange for silence, but the parrot demands two. Since Beaupre has only one, the parrot lights the fireworks, alerting the authorities to Beaupre's location.

That evening, the Pruitts, Mrs. Hess, and the authorities hold a celebration for Alex as the Pruitt house is being repaired, with Alex's father Jack returning home from a business trip. The company the chip was stolen from gives Alex a large monetary reward in gratitude. At the police department, the criminals are shown to have contracted Alex's chicken pox during their mugshots.

Cast

  • Alex D. Linz as Alex Pruitt, an eight-year-old boy
  • Olek Krupa as Peter Beaupre, the leader of the international criminals
  • Rya Kihlstedt as Alice Ribbons, one of the international criminals
  • Lenny Von Dohlen as Burton Jernigan, one of the international criminals
  • David Thornton as Earl Unger, one of the international criminals
  • Haviland Morris as Karen Pruitt, Alex's mother
  • Kevin Kilner as Jack Pruitt, Alex's father
  • Marian Seldes as Mrs. Hess, the Pruitt's elderly neighbor
  • Seth Smith as Stan Pruitt, Alex's 14-year-old older brother
  • Scarlett Johansson as Molly Pruitt, Alex's 12-year-old older sister
  • Christopher Curry as Agent Stuckey, an FBI agent who has been after Beaupre for seven years
  • Baxter Harris as police captain
  • Richard Hamilton as cab driver
  • James Saito as the mob boss/unit leader of the terrorist organization
  • Neil Flynn as a police officer
  • Pat Healy as Agent Rogers, an FBI Agent working alongside Stuckey

Production

Development Home Alone 3 was pitched at the same time as Home Alone 2: Lost in New York (1992), and both films were intended to be produced simultaneously, though those plans fell through. The idea for a third Home Alone movie was revived in the mid-1990s. Early drafts called for Macaulay Culkin to reprise the role of Kevin McCallister as a teenager. However, by 1994, Culkin had taken a hiatus from acting. As a result, the idea was reworked, centering on a new cast of characters.

Filming It was filmed in Chicago and Evanston, Illinois, with the airport scenes at the beginning of the film being shot at two different concourses at O'Hare International Airport. Principal photography began on December 2, 1996, and filming concluded on March 22, 1997.

Fox Family Films was the division of 20th Century Fox responsible for the production on the film. This division was unrelated to the Fox Family Channel, a cable network acquired by Fox and Saban Entertainment in June 1997, which was later sold to The Walt Disney Company in 2001.

Music

Release

Video Home Alone 3 was released theatrically on December 12, 1997, by 20th Century Fox.

Home media and rights

20th Century Fox Home Entertainment later released the film on VHS and Laserdisc in the United States on June 2, 1998. In 1998, it was also released on LaserDisc in Hong Kong and Japan, and subsequently received a U.S. DVD release on November 3, 1998. It was one of Fox's earliest DVD releases; while the DVD presents the film in its original Widescreen format (1.85:1), it is presented in a non-anamorphic 4:3 matte. The U.S. DVD was later reissued in December 2007 (and also as part of Home Alone multi-packs, in 2006 and 2008). In Australia (Region 4) it was released on DVD in 2000 by 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment South Pacific. That same year, Fox also released it on DVD in the United Kingdom (Region 2).

In 2019, Rupert Murdoch sold most of 21st Century Fox's film and television assets to Disney, with Home Alone 3 and the rest of the films in the franchise being included in the deal. It was later made available to stream on Disney+.

Reception

Box office

The film grossed $79,082,515 worldwide, against an estimated budget of $32 million.

Critical response

Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B+" on an A+ to F scale.

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film 3 out of 4 stars and said that he found it to be "fresh, very funny, and better than the first two." Ebert also praised the film in his review on the December 13, 1997, episode of Siskel and Ebert, giving it a thumbs up. His colleague Gene Siskel gave the film a thumbs down and strongly disagreed with Ebert's positive assessment of the film, leading to a heated argument. At one point, Siskel questioned whether Ebert was "okay", with Ebert responding that he was "better than you were the day that you liked Starship Troopers", referring to Siskel's positive review of that film a month earlier. Clips of their Home Alone 3 review later became popular on the internet in the 2020s.

Accolades

Home Alone 3 was nominated for a Razzie for Worst Remake or Sequel at the 18th Golden Raspberry Awards, losing to Speed 2: Cruise Control (another Fox film).

Sequel

Main article: Home Alone 4

A sequel titled Home Alone 4, was released in 2002.

Novelization

A novelization based on the screenplay was written by Todd Strasser and published by Scholastic in 1997 to coincide with the film.

References

References

  1. "Home Alone 3 (1997)". [[Box Office Mojo]].
  2. (January 14, 2016). "What Ever Happened To Alex D. Linz, The Kid From 'Home Alone 3'?". Uproxx.
  3. Petrikin, Chris. (February 18, 1998). "Fox renamed that toon".
  4. (March 30, 2015). "Home Alone 3".
  5. "LaserDisc Database - Search - home alone 3".
  6. Copyright notice on Region 4 DVD packaging for ''Home Alone 3'', 2000.
  7. Copyright notice on Region 2 DVD packaging for ''Home Alone 3'', 2000.
  8. Copyright notice in the credits for ''Home Alone 3'', 1997.
  9. (April 2023). ""Home Alone" Films Removed from Disney+ (US)".
  10. "CinemaScore". cinemascore.com.
  11. Ebert, Roger. (December 12, 1997). "Home Alone 3". Ebert Digital LLC.
  12. (December 13, 1997). "Wag the Dog/Home Alone 3/For Richer or Poorer/Deconstructing Harry/Scream 2". Buena Vista Television.
  13. Castellani, Chris. "Siskel And Ebert's Old Review Of "Home Alone 3" Is Going Viral And It's Absolutely Hilarious".
  14. (April 26, 2012). "Razzies.com - Home of the Golden Raspberry Award Foundation".
  15. {{ISBN. 0-590-95712-0
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