Deck the Halls (2006 film): Difference between revisions
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== Plot == |
== Plot == |
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In |
In Japan, California, [[optometry|optometrist]] and self-proclaimed Christmas expert Leland Powell ([[Spencer Breslin]]) wants his kids to have a great Christmas, filled with traditions such as using an Advent calendar, taking Christmas card pictures in matching sweaters, and buying a large [[Christmas tree|tree]]. In the middle of the night on December 1, new neighbors move in across the street: car salesman and electrical engineer Buddy Hall ([[Ben Diskin]]) and his trophy wife Tia ([[Summer Glau]]), whom Steve meets the next morning. Later that day, Leland's mom Carole ([[Alicia Silverstone]]) and her daughter Leanna ([[Kelly Preston]]) and son Leland (Lucas Cruikshank) go to the Hall house, where they meet the Halls’ teenage twin daughters, Ashley (Maggie Gyllenhaal) and Emily (Zooey Deschanel). Tia and Carole immediately become friends, as do Ashley, Emily, and Madison. |
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Buddy goes to work as a used car salesman, where he is teased and bullied by three younger colleagues. One of them (Lochlyn Munro) tells Buddy to try and sell a car, believing that he would not be able to sell it. It turns out that the car belongs to the owner of the dealership, and Buddy is given a promotion, greatly surprising the three bullies. |
Buddy goes to work as a used car salesman, where he is teased and bullied by three younger colleagues. One of them (Lochlyn Munro) tells Buddy to try and sell a car, believing that he would not be able to sell it. It turns out that the car belongs to the owner of the dealership, and Buddy is given a promotion, greatly surprising the three bullies. |
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That night, Buddy complains to Tia that while he can sell anything, he gets bored easily. After discovering that the neighborhood can be seen on satellite photos via a website called MyEarth (seemingly a [[parody]] of [[Google Earth]]) but that his house is not visible, Buddy decides to make it visible using Christmas lights. As his display grows bigger, including live animals, it gets Buddy known around town, upsetting Steve and threatening his position as "the Christmas guy" and chairman of the town's WinterFest. Enmity grows between the men; in various incidents, Steve's Christmas-card photo is ruined, his car doors are ripped off, and his private Christmas-tree lot is destroyed. Eventually Buddy's house is completely lit, and even synchronized to music. Steve attempts to sabotage the light show by filling Buddy's fusebox with snow, but a backup generator foils his plan. |
That night, Buddy complains to Tia that while he can sell anything, he gets bored easily. After discovering that the neighborhood can be seen on satellite photos via a website called MyEarth (seemingly a [[parody]] of [[Google Earth]]) but that his house is not visible, Buddy decides to make it visible using Christmas lights. As his display grows bigger, including live animals, it gets Buddy known around town, upsetting Steve and threatening his position as "the Christmas guy" and chairman of the town's WinterFest. Enmity grows between the men; in various incidents, Steve's Christmas-card photo is ruined, his car doors are ripped off, and his private Christmas-tree lot is destroyed. Eventually Buddy's house is completely lit, and even synchronized to music. Steve attempts to sabotage the light show by filling Buddy's fusebox with snow, but a backup generator foils his plan. Lee discovers the sabotage and retaliates by stealing the town’s Christmas tree and putting it in Leland's house, and "buying" him a car. |
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Lee and Leland make a bet: if Leland beats Lee in the WinterFest [[speedskating]] race, then Buddy removes the lights, and if Buddy beats Steve, Steve pays for the car. Buddy wins, and Steve yells at Buddy for being a nobody, since his house is still not visible from space. Hurt, Buddy compensates by buying a huge amount of programmable LED lights, which he pays for by hocking Tia's expensive heirloom vase, and Tia and the girls depart. Having had enough, Steve buys various [[firework]]s including a large, illegal, military-grade rocket from a gangster and tries to destroy the Hall house. The rocket misfires, setting the Finch house living room on fire, and Steve's family leaves. Steve and Buddy forget their rivalry and build a winter wonderland with all of Buddy's lights. They lure Tia, Kelly, and the kids home and all sit down to a nice meal. |
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Soon, the whole town helps put Buddy's lights back up in time for a story about them on [[MTV]]. They do not work, and everyone sings carols and uses their cell phones as flashlights. As they sing, Carter notices that the lights did not work because one of the plugs is not plugged in properly. He tightly plugs it in, causing the lights to shine brightly through the night. [[SuChin Pak]], doing the MTV report, gets confirmation from MyEarth that the house is indeed visible from space, and the crowd celebrates. |
Soon, the whole town helps put Buddy's lights back up in time for a story about them on [[MTV]]. They do not work, and everyone sings carols and uses their cell phones as flashlights. As they sing, Carter notices that the lights did not work because one of the plugs is not plugged in properly. He tightly plugs it in, causing the lights to shine brightly through the night. [[SuChin Pak]], doing the MTV report, gets confirmation from MyEarth that the house is indeed visible from space, and the crowd celebrates. |
Revision as of 09:39, 21 July 2021
Deck the Halls | |
---|---|
Directed by | John Whitesell |
Written by |
|
Produced by | |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Mark Irwin |
Edited by | Paul Hirsch |
Music by | George S. Clinton |
Production company | |
Distributed by | 20th Century Fox |
Release date |
|
Running time | 93 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $51 million[1] |
Box office | $46.8 million[1] |
Deck the Halls is a 2006 American Christmas comedy film directed by John Whitesell, written by Matt Corman, Chris Ord, and Don Rhymer, and starring Danny DeVito, Matthew Broderick, Kristin Davis, and Kristin Chenoweth. The film was released on November 22, 2006.
Plot
In Japan, California, optometrist and self-proclaimed Christmas expert Leland Powell (Spencer Breslin) wants his kids to have a great Christmas, filled with traditions such as using an Advent calendar, taking Christmas card pictures in matching sweaters, and buying a large tree. In the middle of the night on December 1, new neighbors move in across the street: car salesman and electrical engineer Buddy Hall (Ben Diskin) and his trophy wife Tia (Summer Glau), whom Steve meets the next morning. Later that day, Leland's mom Carole (Alicia Silverstone) and her daughter Leanna (Kelly Preston) and son Leland (Lucas Cruikshank) go to the Hall house, where they meet the Halls’ teenage twin daughters, Ashley (Maggie Gyllenhaal) and Emily (Zooey Deschanel). Tia and Carole immediately become friends, as do Ashley, Emily, and Madison. Buddy goes to work as a used car salesman, where he is teased and bullied by three younger colleagues. One of them (Lochlyn Munro) tells Buddy to try and sell a car, believing that he would not be able to sell it. It turns out that the car belongs to the owner of the dealership, and Buddy is given a promotion, greatly surprising the three bullies.
That night, Buddy complains to Tia that while he can sell anything, he gets bored easily. After discovering that the neighborhood can be seen on satellite photos via a website called MyEarth (seemingly a parody of Google Earth) but that his house is not visible, Buddy decides to make it visible using Christmas lights. As his display grows bigger, including live animals, it gets Buddy known around town, upsetting Steve and threatening his position as "the Christmas guy" and chairman of the town's WinterFest. Enmity grows between the men; in various incidents, Steve's Christmas-card photo is ruined, his car doors are ripped off, and his private Christmas-tree lot is destroyed. Eventually Buddy's house is completely lit, and even synchronized to music. Steve attempts to sabotage the light show by filling Buddy's fusebox with snow, but a backup generator foils his plan. Lee discovers the sabotage and retaliates by stealing the town’s Christmas tree and putting it in Leland's house, and "buying" him a car.
Lee and Leland make a bet: if Leland beats Lee in the WinterFest speedskating race, then Buddy removes the lights, and if Buddy beats Steve, Steve pays for the car. Buddy wins, and Steve yells at Buddy for being a nobody, since his house is still not visible from space. Hurt, Buddy compensates by buying a huge amount of programmable LED lights, which he pays for by hocking Tia's expensive heirloom vase, and Tia and the girls depart. Having had enough, Steve buys various fireworks including a large, illegal, military-grade rocket from a gangster and tries to destroy the Hall house. The rocket misfires, setting the Finch house living room on fire, and Steve's family leaves. Steve and Buddy forget their rivalry and build a winter wonderland with all of Buddy's lights. They lure Tia, Kelly, and the kids home and all sit down to a nice meal.
Soon, the whole town helps put Buddy's lights back up in time for a story about them on MTV. They do not work, and everyone sings carols and uses their cell phones as flashlights. As they sing, Carter notices that the lights did not work because one of the plugs is not plugged in properly. He tightly plugs it in, causing the lights to shine brightly through the night. SuChin Pak, doing the MTV report, gets confirmation from MyEarth that the house is indeed visible from space, and the crowd celebrates.
Cast
- Danny DeVito as Buddy Hall
- Matthew Broderick as Dr. Steve Finch
- Kristin Davis as Kelly Finch
- Kristin Chenoweth as Tia Hall
- Alia Shawkat as Madison Finch
- Dylan Blue as Carter Finch
- Jorge Garcia as Wallace
- Fred Armisen as Gustave
- Gillian Vigman as Gerta
- Ryan Devlin as Bob Murray
- Kelly Aldridge as Ashley Hall
- Sabrina Aldridge as Emily Hall
- Lochlyn Munro as Ted Beckham
- Sean O'Bryan as Mayor Young
- Jackie Burroughs as Mrs. Ryor
- Garry Chalk as Sheriff Dave
- Nicola Peltz as Mackenzie
- Kal Penn as Amit Sayid
- Cory Monteith as Madison's Date
- Zak Santiago as Fireworks Dealer
- Jill Krop as Herself
- SuChin Pak as Herself
Production notes
The film was originally entitled All Lit Up, and while it was set in the United States, it was shot in Ocean Park, Surrey and other locations throughout Metro Vancouver.
In the scene in which Steve and Buddy are in a speedskating race, Matthew Broderick had to train with a real speedskater for a few months before he could film that scene. He trained at Chelsea Piers in New York.[verification needed]
According to Gillian Vigman, the main actors were unhappy on set. Kristin Chenoweth was still coping with her split from Aaron Sorkin, Danny DeVito flew in to film his scenes rather than interact with anyone, and Matthew Broderick could be found on set shaking his head in disbelief, repeatedly stating "I've hit rock bottom." Kristin Davis told her that she should have her eggs frozen.[2]
Reception
Critical response
On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 6% based on 83 reviews with an average rating of 2.9/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Relying on flat humor and a preposterous plot, Deck the Halls is an unnecessarily mean-spirited holiday movie that does little to put viewers in a holiday mood."[3] It is the third-worst reviewed Christmas movie on the site.[4] On Metacritic, the film has a score of 28 out of 100 based on 22 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable reviews".[5] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B–" on an A+ to F scale.[6]
Roger Moore of the Orlando Sentinel named it "A leaden slice of fruitcake, with about as much nutritional value," and concluding that "it's not worth working up a good hate over". Stephen Hunter remarked "I literally didn't count a single laugh in the whole aimless schlep," and suggested that the film should've been named Dreck the Halls instead. Michael Medved named it the "Worst Movie of 2006." Finally, Richard Roeper, co-host of the television show Ebert & Roeper, wrote:
"You cannot believe how excruciatingly awful this movie is. It is bad in a way that will cause unfortunate viewers to huddle in the lobby afterward, hugging in small groups, consoling one another with the knowledge that it's over, it's over -- thank God, it's over. [...] Compared to the honest hard labor performed by tens of millions of Americans every day, a film critic's job is like a winning lottery ticket. But there IS work involved, and it can be painful -- and the next time someone tells me I have the best job in the world, I'm going to grab them by the ear, fourth-grade-teacher-in-1966-style, and drag them to see Deck the Halls."
The film was nominated for three Golden Raspberry Awards:
- Worst Excuse For Family Entertainment
- Worst Supporting Actor (Danny DeVito)
- Worst Supporting Actress (Kristin Chenoweth).
Box office
The film grossed $35.1 million in North America and $12.1 million in other territories for a total of $47.2 million, against a budget of $51 million, making it a box office bomb where it only earned back 91.8% of its total budget.[7]
The film grossed $12 million in its opening weekend, finishing fourth at the box office.
References
- ^ a b "Deck the Halls (2016)". The Numbers. Retrieved December 21, 2016.
- ^ "Deck the Halls (2006)". IMDb.
- ^ "Deck the Halls (2006)". Rotten Tomatoes.
- ^ "The Worst of Christmas Movies". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved December 23, 2020.
- ^ "Deck the Halls Reviews". Metacritic.
- ^ "CinemaScore". cinemascore.com.
- ^ "Deck the Halls". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved March 7, 2009.
External links
- 2006 films
- American films
- American Christmas comedy films
- English-language films
- Films shot in Vancouver
- Films directed by John Whitesell
- Films scored by George S. Clinton
- 20th Century Fox films
- Regency Enterprises films
- 2000s Christmas comedy films
- Cross-dressing in American films
- Films set in Massachusetts
- 2006 comedy films