Home Alone 4 (also known as Home Alone: Taking Back the House) is a 2002 American made-for-television Christmas family comedy film directed by Rod Daniel, which first aired on ABC on November 3, 2002, as the first episode of the forty-seventh season of The Wonderful World of Disney, followed by a DVD release on September 2, 2003. The fourth installment in the Home Alone franchise, the film stars French Stewart, Erick Avari, Barbara Babcock, Jason Beghe, Clare Carey, Joanna Going, Missi Pyle, and Mike Weinberg as Kevin McCallister. It follows Kevin spending his Christmas with his father and his new girlfriend as his old enemy Marv and his wife Vera come up with a plan to kidnap a visiting prince with help from an inside person that Kevin least suspects. The film is the first in the Home Alone franchise to not receive a theatrical release.

Home Alone 4 is the first film without any contributions from John Hughes, the creator of the Home Alone series, and it does not include any of the original cast members.[2] Whereas Home Alone 3 featured a standalone plot and new characters, this film brings back several of the main characters from the first two films, including Kevin McCallister, but with all of the roles played by different actors. It was the last film that Rod Daniel directed before his subsequent retirement, and his death in 2016.[3]

Plot

Peter McCallister, finalizing a divorce from his soon to be ex-wife Kate, announces to their children, Buzz, Megan, and Kevin that he and his wealthy girlfriend, Natalie Kalban, are hosting the visit of a royal family at her mansion, and invites them to spend Christmas there. After the three initially refuse, Kevin accepts the offer after being bullied by Buzz, and revels in the mansion's luxuries.

The next morning, Peter and Natalie go out while Kevin stays with Natalie's servants, Mr. Prescott and Molly. Kevin notices his old nemesis, Marv Murchins, and his wife, Vera, scouting the house. After failing to get Mr. Prescott's attention via the intercom, he drives the intruders away by flooding the mansion. When Peter and Natalie return, they refuse to believe Kevin's explanation, especially since Mr. Prescott claims to have seen nothing. Then Kevin discovers that the security cameras had been turned off during the break-in, leading him to believe that Mr. Prescott is involved with Marv and Vera. So to cheer themselves up, Kevin, Peter, and Natalie decorate their Christmas tree, although it is later re-trimmed by professional decorators at Natalie's request.

As the mansion is prepared for a party for the royal family's arrival, Peter and Natalie leave to pick them up, while Kevin notices Marv and Vera disguised as caterers. He traps Mr. Prescott in the freezer, overhears Marv and Vera's plan to kidnap the prince for ransom, and forces them out of a 2nd story window. The royal family is unable to attend the party because their flight was canceled, so Peter and Natalie decide to announce their engagement instead. Marv and Vera run back into the house and pursue Kevin, who accidentally ruins the party by running into the guests and knocking over an ice sculpture that turns out to be a frozen Mr. Prescott. Angered, Peter sends Kevin to his room, refusing to believe his story and accusing him of trying to sabotage his relationship with Natalie, who threatens to evict him if he misbehaves again.

Taking matters into his own hands, Kevin sets up booby traps for Marv and Vera. The next morning, the duo head to the house after Peter and Natalie leave to pick up the royals. Kevin locks Mr. Prescott in the basement, but eventually discovers Marv and Vera's real ally is Molly, who is also Marv's mother. Kevin is locked in the basement with Mr. Prescott & Prescott says with the smart remotes Molly gave the offenders they must’ve shut off the cameras during break-in when he was taking an unscheduled break from his duties because he despises working for Natalie; he and Kevin then apologize for misjudging each other. After several failed attempts to call Kate back, Kevin escapes via the house's dumbwaiter and temporarily traps Marv underneath it. Marv and Vera pursue Kevin through out the house, where they spring the traps and suffer various injuries, while Molly is trapped in the house's elevator.

At the airport, Peter suspects that something is wrong back at the house and takes a cab back to Natalie's to check on Kevin. Meanwhile Kate, Buzz and Megan also drive to the mansion due to the suspicious nature of the calls made by both Peter and Molly about Kevin’s whereabouts. Kevin uses an altered recording of Marv's voice to spark an argument between him and Vera. Then Kevin hits Marv in the groin with a remote-controlled plane causing Marv to fall down flight of stairs taking Vera along with him. The duo is then tricked by Kevin with a secret wall switch, ends up being launched onto a chandelier, and are knocked unconscious by their fall. Molly, having escaped the elevator, grabs Kevin, but is quickly knocked out by Mr. Prescott who also escaped via the dumbwaiter shaft and calls the police.

As Peter, Kate, Buzz, and Megan arrive, Kevin, with Buzz and Megan's help, prevents a final escape attempt from Marv and Vera. The royal family and Natalie arrive, and the offenders' plot to kidnap the prince is revealed to Natalie's shock. Mr. Prescott, per Kevin's advice, resigns from his position as her butler. Realizing that their relationship was built on infatuation rather than love and was affecting his responsibilities as a husband and father, Peter breaks up with Natalie, and reconciles with Kate and their children. Grateful to Kevin for his foiling of the kidnapping plot, the royals spend Christmas with the newly-reunited McCallisters, devastating Natalie.

Cast

  • Mike Weinberg as Kevin McCallister, a nine-year-old boy who defends his house from Marv and Vera
  • French Stewart as Marv, Vera's husband and an old nemesis of Kevin
  • Erick Avari as Prescott, the butler
  • Barbara Babcock as Molly, the maid
  • Jason Beghe as Peter McCallister, Kevin, Buzz, and Megan's father
  • Clare Carey as Kate McCallister, Kevin, Buzz, and Megan's mother
  • Joanna Going as Natalie, Peter's girlfriend, Kevin, Buzz, and Megan's stepmother
  • Missi Pyle as Vera, Marv's wife and Molly's daughter-in-law
  • Gideon Jacobs as Buzz McCallister, Kevin's older brother
  • Chelsea Russo as Megan McCallister, Kevin's older sister

Production

Home Alone 4 was filmed in Cape Town, South Africa.[4][5]

Release

Home media

Home Alone 4 premiered on ABC on November 3, 2002, as the first episode of the forty-seventh season of The Wonderful World of Disney.[6] It was later released on DVD by Fox Home Entertainment on September 2, 2003.[7]

Streaming

In November 2020, Disney began to feature the first three Home Alone films on their streaming service Disney+ in celebration of the first film's 30th anniversary. The fourth and fifth installments were released on HBO Max[8] and were added to Disney+ on December 17, 2021.

Reception

Critical response

Clint Morris at Moviehole gave Home Alone 4 one out of five stars, writing, "From the unappealing cheapish opening titles to the murky production values, it's immediately obvious Home Alone 4 isn't playing in the same park as its beloved predecessor... sad".[9] Joly Herman of Common Sense Media also rated the film one out of five stars and wrote, "recycled gags with none of the original's charm".[10] Jerry Roberts of Armchair Media gave the film one out of four stars.[4] Sue Robinson of Radio Times gave the film one out of five stars, writing that, "you have to wonder why they bothered".[11]

Sequel

Home Alone: The Holiday Heist premiered on that network during the 2012 Christmas season. The film stars Christian Martyn as the 10-year-old main character Finn Baxter. The story centers on the family's relocation from California to Maine, where Finn becomes convinced that his new house is haunted. When his parents become stranded across town and Finn is left home alone with his older sister Alexis, he sets traps to catch his new home's ghosts, which instead prove troublesome for a group of thieves (played by Malcolm McDowell, Debi Mazar, and Eddie Steeples). The film also starred Ed Asner, produced by Fox Television Studios, and directed by Peter Hewitt.[12]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Home Alone 4 (U)". British Board of Film Classification. September 23, 2003. Retrieved March 31, 2025.
  2. ^ "What's the best 'Home Alone' movie? Compare ratings for all six films". USA TODAY. Retrieved February 28, 2024.
  3. ^ Borrelli, Christopher (September 27, 2011). "'Teen Wolf' director's brutally honest commentary (part 3 of 3)". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved April 18, 2015.
  4. ^ a b Jerry Roberts (May 12, 2005). "Home Alone 4: Takin' Back the House (2002)". Armchair Media.
  5. ^ Stanford, Jill (May 5, 2003). "Cape Town: South Africa's tinseltown". Engineering News. Archived from the original on March 22, 2019. Retrieved March 22, 2019.
  6. ^ Margulies, Lee (October 11, 2002). "Television ABC Makes a Home for Home Alone 4 After..." Los Angeles Times. Retrieved March 31, 2025.
  7. ^ "Home Alone 4 (2003) - Financial Information". The Numbers. Retrieved March 31, 2025.
  8. ^ "The Home Alone Trilogy is Coming to Disney Plus Next Week, Just in Time for Christmas". November 9, 2020.
  9. ^ Clint Morris (October 26, 2003). "Home Alone 4". Moviehole. Archived from the original on January 19, 2004. Retrieved January 16, 2020.
  10. ^ Joly Herman (December 21, 2010). "Recycled gags with none of the original's charm". Common Sense Media.
  11. ^ "Home Alone 4 (2002)". Archived from the original on December 22, 2019. Retrieved December 22, 2019.
  12. ^ "New Home Alone Movie Coming to ABC Family". ABC Family. March 15, 2012. Archived from the original on March 20, 2012.
No tags for this post.