Chris Columbus Declares a Winner: “Home Alone 2” is the Superior Holiday Classic
For decades, a spirited debate has raged among movie fans: which reigns supreme, Home Alone or Home Alone 2: Lost in New York? Some champion the original’s clever, more grounded slapstick. Others prefer the sequel‘s escalating, over-the-top mayhem. Now, the director of both beloved comedies, Chris Columbus, has weighed in – and his answer might surprise you.
Speaking on the fade To Black podcast while promoting his latest film, The Thursday Murder Club, Columbus declared Home Alone 2 the winner. his reasoning? A delightfully “violent” sense of humor.
Why Home Alone 2 Takes the Crown, According to the Director
columbus explained that the sequel simply pushes the comedic boundaries further. “Home Alone 2 has this really violent sense of humor,” he said. “It takes Home Alone 1 and takes it to the next level in terms of the third act.”
He admits he doesn’t revisit the films often, but when he does, Home Alone 2 consistently makes him laugh harder. The absurdity is key. “Marv gets electrocuted, he turns into a skeleton. There’s no reason for doing any of this. We just felt we could get away wiht it.”
A Look at the Escalating Slapstick
Let’s be honest, both films feature cartoonish violence that defies logic. The original Home Alone (1990) sees eight-year-old Kevin McCallister (Macaulay Culkin) defending his home against the hapless burglars Harry (Joe Pesci) and Marv (Daniel Stern). His traps, while inventive, inflict injuries that would realistically be far more severe – think the infamous nail-in-the-foot scene.
However, Home Alone 2: Lost in New York (1992) dials up the brutality. Marv endures electrocution,falls from important heights,and receives a barrage of bricks to the head. Despite these potentially fatal encounters, Harry and Marv relentlessly pursue Kevin.
Here’s a quick comparison:
Home Alone: Grounded slapstick, clever traps, painful but (relatively) believable injuries.
Home Alone 2: Over-the-top violence, increasingly absurd scenarios, injuries that defy the laws of physics.
No Remakes on the Horizon
regardless of your preference, it seems the Home Alone universe will remain largely untouched.Columbus has firmly stated his opposition to a remake of the 1990 classic, especially as it approaches its 35th anniversary.
He believes the original film captured a unique cultural moment. “I think Home Alone really exists as… a very special moment, and you can’t really recapture that,” he told Entertainment Tonight. “I think its a mistake to try to go back and recapture something we did 35 years ago.I think it shoudl be left alone.”
Ultimately, the “best” Home Alone film is a matter of personal taste. But now,you have the director’s outlook – and a compelling argument for why Home Alone 2‘s unrestrained silliness takes the prize.
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