‘The Kranks’ will make you cranky
Allen and Curtis play a couple who decide to skip Christmas
![]() Columbia Pictures Tim Allen and Jamie Lee Curtis star in "Christmas with the Kranks." |
|
Slideshow |
December movies James Cameron’s spectacle “Avatar” hits theaters, along with George Clooney, who is “Up in the Air,” and Robert Downey Jr. as “Sherlock Holmes.” more photos |
Movie news video |
Inside ‘The Morgans’ Dec. 2: Go behind the scenes with Hugh Grant, Sarah Jessica Parker, director Marc Lawrence and the rest of the cast of the new romantic comedy, "Did You Hear About the Morgans?" |
FREE VIDEO |
Tim Allen on 'Christmas With the Kranks' Nov. 15: Comedian Tim Allen talks to "Today" host Matt Lauer about his new holiday flick "Christmas With the Kranks." Today Show Entertainment |
Christmas has so far been a bust at the multiplexes. Ben Affleck’s “Surviving Christmas” opened in October and barely survived Halloween. Tom Hanks’ “The Polar Express,” despite $170 million worth of eye-popping visual effects, had a disappointing Nov. 10 opening. Maybe it’s just too early for Santa Claus fables.
Joe Roth’s “Christmas With the Kranks” at least has the seasonal decency to wait until Thanksgiving weekend to arrive. The former Disney studio chief, who sometimes directs his own productions (“America’s Sweethearts,” “Coupe de Ville”), is back in the director’s chair with this very broad, occasionally grotesque slapstick comedy about an Illinois suburban couple who decide to skip Christmas by going on a tropical vacation.
It’s based on a John Grisham novel, “Skipping Christmas,” although the screenplay by Chris Columbus suggests a rehash of Columbus’ previous Christmas comedies, especially the “Home Alone” series and the unspeakable “Jingle All the Way.”
|
As “Christmas With the Kranks” opens, Luther Krank (Tim Allen) and his wife Nora (Jamie Lee Curtis) have just seen their daughter Blair off at the airport. She’s joined the Peace Corps in South America, and for the first time in 23 years the Kranks won’t be spending the holidays with their only child.
Luther comes up with the idea of going elsewhere for Christmas, but he isn’t smart enough to clear out of town well before Dec. 25. As a result, he gets guilt-tripped into a series of confrontations over his decisions not to buy a Christmas tree, light up his house or pay the repair bills on ornaments. Ostracized at the office and by his neighbors, he’s forced to wonder if his impulsive bid for non-conformity is worth the trouble.
The impact of holiday peer pressure on a wandering adult could have been the subject of a great comedy, and there are moments when the actors do tap into the absurdities of their situation. Allen and Curtis make the pressures on the Kranks’ relationship quite credible, especially when a third-act surprise forces them into improvising a turnaround in their holiday plans. And the image of Christmas carolers appearing at the Kranks’ windows like zombies from “Night of the Living Dead” is surprisingly spooky.
|
But for every insight into holiday madness, there’s a pointless episode about Allen taking a botox treatment or Curtis trying out a tanning machine. For all its occasional subversive charms, “Christmas With the Kranks” leaves you wondering: where is this year’s “Bad Santa”?
- Discuss Story On Newsvine
-
Rate Story:
View popularLowHigh - Instant Message
MORE FROM AT THE MOVIES |
| Add At the movies headlines to your news reader: |
Sponsored links
Resource guide






