Home Alone 3 (1997) Poster

(1997)

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5/10
Adequate!
TheLittleSongbird5 May 2009
I don't think the film is as bad as the rating suggests, but it does pale in comparison to the first two films, which are holiday classics to me! There were some bits I liked, but some bits where improvements would have been appreciated.

The positives are that Alex D Linz makes a cute and charming lead, though Macaulay Culkin is definitely better. The film does look lovely, and there is evidence of some detailed direction. And the parrot was awesome. Believe me, this film is much better than the vomitous Home Alone 4.

The negatives are that some of the violence, that was classic in the first two films, seemed to have been reduced to cartoon slapstick. Another problem was that I didn't recognise any of the characters, and the uneven script didn't allow them to develop properly. Also, I do miss the antics of the Wet Bandits, the new villains weren't as effective.

All in all, a perfectly adequate, but uneven film, that is much better than its abysmal follow up. 5/10 Bethany Cox
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6/10
Home Alone 3
Toronto8517 December 2012
Home Alone 3 tells a whole different story then the original two. Instead of the McCallisters, we meet the Pruitt family and in particular the main character Alex. A computer chip worth ten million dollars is placed into a toy car by our four villains in an attempt to get through airport security. There is a mix up at the airport, and the toy car ends up in the possession of an older woman who gives it to little Alex as a gift. The four bad guys track the car to a neighbourhood in Chicago and break into a series of houses looking for the chip. Alex (who is HOME ALONE with chicken pox) see's the crooks breaking into the houses an calls the cops, only to look like a prank caller each time. The villains looking for the chip eventually realize that little Alex has it and that's when the fun begins - Home Alone style.

I actually enjoyed Home Alone 3 as a kid and as an adult now. No, it isn't as good as the original films and no Alex Linz is not Macaulay Culkin. But this movie gets points for breaking off from the McCallister storyline. I mean how many times can that family forget the same kid? Young actor Alex Linz who plays Alex in Home Alone 3 does a great job taking on this big role, he manages to not put in an annoying performance like so many child actors can be do these kind of movies. The crooks include three men and one female, and I like that they added a woman into that villain role. They all are good actors and add plenty to this movie.

The best comedic moments come from the crooks, especially David Thornton as 'Unger'. There are some ho-hum funny moments which fall flat such as the talking parrot and a few scenes with Alex's older brother and sister who "torment" him. Another flaw was the actual "home alone" bit, and the fact that Alex isn't really home alone as we've seen in the first two films. His mother leaves him for a couple of hours as he recuperates from Chicken Pox, hardly the same as Kevin McCallister went through. And I don't like that it doesn't take place ON Christmas. But those drawbacks don't take away from the whole movie at all.

Home Alone 3 isn't great, but it takes some risks by moving from the original plot and adds some smarts it with the computer chip story. These aren't your simple criminals like the wet bandits were, they are after far more than some jewellery and expensive silverware. I recommend Home Alone 3 for sure!

6/10
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6/10
New kid, same fun
studioAT15 December 2019
I think this film was always on a hiding to nothing, as the public were never going to accept a 'Kevin clone', so beloved/associated was Macaulay Culkin with this franchise.

But, having said that, 'Home Alone 3' is great fun, and well deserving of a watch with an open mind.

It's got a great script from John Hughes, that actually ups the ante on the scrapes that Kevin got into, and the slapstick is on a par, if not better than what's gone before.

I enjoyed this film, I hope if you give it a chance you will too.
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This movie is not so bad
manofhollywood@aol.com5 November 2002
Everybody says this movie sucks...i don't think that at all. We can't have kevin forever...he's gotta grow up at some point. That's why it was good to go with a new family that would keep the spirit of home alone alive...remember it's for the kids. plus the bad guys were more advanced then marv & harry (not saying that i didn't like marv & harry) but these guys had high-tec equitment that was pretty cool. This movie was new,fresh,well acted & had good direction. (RAJA GOSNEL)

WAY-TO-GO JOHN HUGHES!!!!
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5/10
Not terrible, but Macaulay is gone
SnoopyStyle10 December 2013
Four high-tech industrial spies are trying to smuggle out a top secret military microchip to North Korea. A mixup at airport security leaves Mrs. Hess with the microchip hidden in a remote control car. After Alex shovels Mrs. Hesses' driveway, she gives him the car as payment. The spies have tracked the chip to Alex's neighborhood, and faces off against Alex who is home sick with the chicken pox.

I like the cat and mouse game, but the premise is way too serious. It's not so kid friendly to start. But this is not a horrible sequel. The fact is the kid isn't Macaulay. And the movie doesn't have as much whimsy as the previous two. The bad guys are real bad guys, not the silly Wet Bandits.

For those of us who want to see Scarlett Johansson, she has a minor role as the sister. It's nothing special to write home about. She does have a few scenes.
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5/10
O Kevin, Where Art Thou?
patrick_dunne22 December 2005
Home Alone 3 is an OK movie, but not as good as the original.

The humor isn't as funny, the plot is the same as before, and worst of all... they replaced the main character of the originals: Kevin! Sadly, his substitute is pretty odd, and WAY too smart for his age. Kevin was one of the things that made the original so fun. But, some of the stunts are clever, (like the one with the gun) just not clever enough.

Skip this unnecessary installment.

Do yourself a favor and watch the originals, which are much better than this movie.

5/10

Feel free to send me a Private Message regarding this comment.
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4/10
It's not the same.
emasterslake19 April 2006
Has the same title only this ain't the Home Alone you'd all be familiar with.

No one from the original is in it. And the plot to it isn't as amusing as the first 2 were.

This one has to do with some secret group of agents accidentally misplaced there product at the airport which has some important chip in it that's top secret. They track down where the product is which is in Chicago, and located in somewhere in a neighborhood. 4 agents now have to check every house and find that chip.

A kid who's supposed to be the new version of Kevin has the chip only he doesn't know it yet.

He likes to watch neighbors with his telescope and goof around. When he notices the agents breaking into the neighbor's homes, he calls the police. When they get there they didn't find any of the intruders in the neighbor's home. When the agents plan on breaking into our main hero's home, he has to prepare himself to set up traps and give them hell.

This movie was good at first but it's not the same. Those who like the first 2 Home Alone movies, you might not like this one. Rent it first, and see for yourself.
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3/10
A Lesser Copy of The First Film
MikeMvrd27 November 2020
As the title states we once again see the same type of character with the same type of bad guys in the same type of environment.

The story gives almost nothing new to the sequels. Kid gets left home alone by accident, some Burglars/Crooks/Spies seek to a point go after the kid.

It feels like they really didn't try to make this more exciting or different in any way. It's just a lesser version copy of Home Alone that copied the same antics we saw in the first two films. The overall acting reaches Disney standards but nothing really comical.

It should be a hard pass watching this sequel.
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1/10
One of the worst movies ever made! A total cash grab!
benaboo4 April 2020
Ladies and gentlemen this is the sequel that made me like the original a little less. Yes this movie is in the words of Muffy Crosswire from Arthur "Vomitrocious!" It's a cash grab in every meaning of the word. I would have been okay with another Home Alone movie if Macauley Culkin came back but he refused so the studio got desperate and green lit a piece of crap second sequel that takes away the charm, humor, spirit, and heart of the two classics that came before it. It also takes away the star studded cast. Just scroll through the cast list and see if you recognize any names. The only well known people in the cast are Scarlett Johansson and Neil Flynn and this was before either one of them were a big deal. What made the director cast a bunch of no names!? Raja Gosnell is notorious for making generic movies but I think Beverly Hills Chihuahua and The Smurfs are masterpieces compared to this crap. Skip it altogether I say. If there was a Heaven and hell for movies this one would definitely go to hell.
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7/10
Severely under-rated sequel.
CuriosityKilledShawn1 January 2007
Home Alone 3 has a lot of unfair criticism. I mean, how many of you would really have wanted a 16-year-old Mac Culkin doing the same-old same-old to Harry and Marv. Of course it was a better idea to do in a different direction and with John Hughes still producing and writing you know there's going to be a good amount of imagination and creativity.

This time around we have 8-year-old Alex Pruitt defend his house against international criminals. Stuck at home with Chicken Pox with both his parents tied-up in work matters, Alex suspects foul play on his snowy street when he witnesses strangers poking around in his neighbor's house. Of course, no one believes an imaginative 8-year-old so he has to deal with them himself.

It turns out that a toy car Alex got from the old-lady across the street is actually a Trojan horse to smuggle a priceless defence microchip to the North Korean mob. They really ought to hire better criminals as they fall for every one of Alex's sadistic booby-traps.

Yes, that is basically the whole plot but it gets enough mileage out of it and it's still very funny. Set in January, it lacks the Xmas feel of the first two, but I guess that would have just been a distraction. John Williams' theme only gets a brief recital at the start, but from then on it's an adequate (if not exceptional) score from Hans Zimmer pal Nick Glennie-Smith. Despite these key differences of characters and theme, it still feels like it has enough continuity with the others.

It's a totally worthwhile and enjoyable sequel that has a bad rep for no reason. Home Alone 4 on the other hand...now THAT is BAD!
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2/10
Rubbish
dragandpg30 November 2019
This film has nothing with the original Home Alone 1 and 2. This is some kind of family funny film that didn't achieve much success in its attempt. Bland, empty, boringly dragged to the very end and at the end you have to ask yourself - what I have watched for 1 hour and 43 minutes? My frankly answer to this kind of question is - absolutely nothing!
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9/10
Unpopular Opinion: THIS MOVIE IS GOOD!
usedforpayments9 November 2018
Hi,

Home Alone 3 would be a really great film if they ( the writer/director/producer) didn't name it "Home Alone 3". I saw the 4.4 rating and immediately understood why. Home 1 & 2 were classic Christmas films. Why wait 5 years to complete the potential trilogy? I understand that this film is nothing like the original and that's what people are expecting. If this was a stand alone film, it probably would've been better received. Either way, I think its a great film. The plot, the actors, the acting, the comedy, the scenes, all were good.

(P.S. Home Alone 4 was trash and they were asking for trouble!)
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6/10
Home Alone 3
jboothmillard20 June 2005
Warning: Spoilers
The original is a Christmas classic, while the follow-up Lost in New York is good fun, but when it came to making the third film, Macaulay Culkin was interested, so the makers made a standalone sequel with a new leading youngster, written and produced by John Hughes (The Breakfast Club, Ferris Bueller's Day Off, Uncle Buck, Miracle on 34th Street), directed by Raja Gosnell (Never Been Kissed, Big Momma's House, Scooby-Doo, The Smurfs 2). Basically, Peter Beaupre (Olek Krupa), Earl Unger (David Thornton), Burton Jernigan (Lenny von Dohlen), and Alice Ribbons (Rya Kihlstedt) are most-wanted criminals are working for an international terrorist organisation. In Silicon Valley, California, they steal a $10 million microchip to be used for a missile that cannot be detected by radar. The chip is hidden inside the battery compartment of a remote-control toy car to sneak it past security at San Francisco International Airport. But there is a mix-up at luggage security when elderly passenger Mrs. Hess (Marian Seldes) picks up the wrong bag, identical to hers, which contains the toy car. After the other criminals look around the airport terminal and find nothing, Mr. Beaupre deduces the car is on a plane, determining it is heading to Chicago from a departures announcement. Landing in Chicago, Alice spots the toy car and Mr. Jernigan photographs the taxi picking Mrs. Hess up. They get the address from the taxi driver (Men in Black's Richard Hamilton) and arrive at a suburban neighbourhood on Washington Street. Unable to recognise the house from the description given, they move into a house up for sale, kidnap a neighbour's dog, and plan to systematically search every house to find the car and the chip. Eight-year-old Alex Pruitt (One Fine Day's Alex D. Linz) is given the remote-control car as payment by Mrs. Hess as payment for shovelling the snow from her driveway. Returning home, Alex discovers that he has chickenpox and must stay home from school. The next day, Alex is forced to be home alone while his brother Stan (Seth Smith) and sister Molly (young Scarlett Johansson) go to school, his mother Karen (Haviland Morris) is called to the office, and his father Jack (Kevin Kilner) is working. At home, Alex happens to be looking through his telescope when he sees Beaupre in the Stephans' house, so he calls the police. But by the time the police arrive, the criminals have already left, and there is no evidence of a break-in, and Karen is angry with him. The following day, Alex is alone again, he again sees Beaupre, this time in Mrs. Hess's house, but he is unaware she no longer has the toy car. Alex again calls the police; the criminals are close to being apprehended but evade the authorities. A police officer talks to Alex about the seriousness of calling the police and his siblings tease him that the police will never respond to future calls. Alex works out that the criminals are going from house to house looking for something and determines that the next house will be the Alcotts. The next day, after Karen has left, Alex tapes a camcorder to the top of the toy car and drives it into the Alcott property. He captures Beaupre there intending to implicate him for robbery, but the criminal sees the toy car and chases after it. The criminals realise someone is on to them, but through a series of mishaps, they fail to keep hold of the toy car as Alex drives it away back to his home. Alex finds the criminals managed to take the tape from the camcorder so has no evidence, but he finds the microchip after investigating the toy car. He calls a local U. S. Air Force Recruitment Center to report his findings, he agrees to pass on the information to the right authorities. The criminals watch the footage from the camcorder and realise that Alex, after not being believed by police, is taking matters into his own hands. The criminals call the Pruitt house and Karen confirms Alex has a toy car, but she does not believe him when he says that the person calling is not a neighbour she knows. Alex decides to defend himself and starts setting up booby traps around the house. Alice tries to enter the Pruitt house the following day, but Alex stops her by having the dog trip her and drag her away, and he frees the dog. Meanwhile, the FBI are given information about the chip reported by Alex and travel to Chicago. The following day, after Karen leaves, Alex finishes setting up traps in the garden and the rest of the house. The criminals hold Mrs. Hess hostage before trying to get into the house, all triggering the traps and getting injured in doing so. There is an electrocuted fence and metal chair, marbles placed under a mat, and trunks and a set of weights are dropped on them. Beaupre is spray painted in the eyes and a triggered punching glove goes between his legs, Jernigan is sprayed with a water hose and has a lawnmower go across his head, Alice goes through a muddy pathway and gets hit on the head by plant pots, and Unger is hit by a slingshot with flour and water and his feet end up rolling buckets filled in highly sticky liquid. While the criminals regroup and manage to enter the house, Alex receives a call from Karen that she will be coming home, but he tells her to go and pick up Stan and Molly instead. At school, FBI agents and Chicago PD inform Karen about the danger Alex is in. The criminals run into further tricks, including encounters with Alex's pet rat Doris and Stan's loud-mouthed parrot (voiced by Darren T. Knaus). Alex manages to get out using the dumb waiter, Jernigan and Unger go out the window, falling through the trampoline into the swimming pool below, while Alice falls down the dumb waiter. Alex finds Mrs. Hess tied up with the door left open to let in the cold. Before he can free, Beaupre confronts Alex to give him the microchip, but Alex tricks him into believing he has stolen his gun and frightens him away. Alex's family brings the agents and the police to their house, where Alex returns the chip, and Alice, Jernigan, and Unger are arrested. Beaupre is later found and arrested after being in a snow fort in the backyard and the parrot lighting a series of fireworks inside. Later, the Pruitts, Mrs. Hess, and the authorities celebrate, with Jack returning from his business trip, and he gives Alex a new remote-control car. At the police department, the thieves are having their mugshots taken, and they have caught Alex's chickenpox. Also starring Christopher Curry as Agent Stuckey, Baxter Harris as Police Captain, James Saito as Chinese Mob Boss, Freeman Coffey as Recruiting Officer, and Pat Healy as Agent Rogers. Linz proves himself resourceful and cute as the new kid going against the bad guys, while Krupa, Thornton, von Dohlen and Kihlstedt do alright as the villains, and eleven-year-old Johansson in her first major role is memorable. It sticks to roughly the same formula as the first two films, with the child defeating the crooks with household traps, no family forgetting the child and slightly less Tom and Jerry cartoon violence, and an espionage subplot, the toy car stuff is genuinely funny, I think is a watchable and fun comedy. It was nominated the Razzie for Worst Remake or Sequel (I completely disagree!). Good!
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3/10
Somewhat original, fair music... but that's about it
TBJCSKCNRRQTreviews17 December 2005
The first Home Alone was a decent enough film... the sequel was pretty much the same, at a new setting. This one tries to be original, and succeeds to some degree... of course, the formula is basically the same, so it's like watching the same movie for a third time with slightly altered plot. The new score is quite bad(though the new "setting traps" piece was, if nothing else, interesting and different), especially compared to the grand score of the first, and the almost-but-not-quite-as-good score of the second. It (almost) makes up for it by using some pretty good non-original music, but it's just not the same. The plot is fair, and somewhat original to the franchise, but it's still basically the same movie as the first two, with worse acting and a less impressive example of the 'scary character turning out to be good'. The acting is mostly unimpressive. The characters are mostly caricatures. The new thieves are less entertaining than the old ones(and they make fun of spy-stuff, which is almost criminal, given the limited amount of good spy flicks there are, and how precious few of them are cool). The fact that there are more of them(and thereby more traps) is just a weak attempt at trying to go one higher than the first two films... and it doesn't work. The idea behind the thieves and their mission is a tad too... adult and serious for a children's film(and there was a sexual joke or two, though that isn't the first time in the series). It's also unnecessarily complex, as is the plot in general. I could follow it, but I doubt a kid could. Some of the exposition are delivered so obviously that even children may find it stupid. The animal stuff is generally not amusing. There are fewer siblings, which should mean that those there are get developed more, but they have less personality than the least featured of those of the first two films. All in all, just not particularly good, or worth watching, unless you *really* love watching criminals getting hurt in cartoon-y violence. I recommend this to huge fans of the series only. 3/10
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Tricks & boobie traps more advanced/high tech than 1+2!
mdm-118 October 2004
This is NOT part 3 of "Kevin's Adventures", but rather a brand new "home Alone" situation. The setting is still suburban Chicago during the Christmas season, the family is still "upper middle class", and even the theme music is very similar to the predecessors. This time, however, the "kid" is NOT abandoned by his entire family who took off for their Christmas Vacation. This time our pint sized hero is left unattended only for hours at a time, while he is at home and sick with the measles. A gang of foreign spys is after a top secret multi-million dollar computer chip stolen from the US Air Force. Of course, they hide it in a battery-operated toy that ends up with "the kid".

Although the "boobie trap" routine could be viewed as just another rip-off from the first two films, the "gags" seem a bit more sophisticated and less forced in "3". The mere fact that our hero is not dealing with "wet bandit idiots" this time around makes the whole show less of a "kiddie circus". The third running is also leaving out the mushy side plots which would've gotten tiresome by now. All in all this is a fun show for the whole family. I showed this film to my 4th grade class and they gave it 20 thumbs up. Not for the "grown-up" comedy critic, but definitely a winner with kids.
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3/10
Is this Home Alone? They ruined the name of this movie!
Pierre-Andre-1725 May 2020
I was so disappointed that I found the movie was not performed by one of my favorite kid actors. The plot is quite cliched and is lack of excitement.
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1/10
Recycled plot, uninteresting characters
rebeljenn30 December 2005
'Home Alone 3' is the first of the Home Alone movies not to feature Culkin in the main role and the same villains. However, the plot is very similar to the original 'Home Alone' film. Instead of two comical villains, we get three or four of them. This film involves some traps, but it also has a long scene with a remote-control car. The slapstick humour is consistent as well, but the young boy and the villains really fail to make an impact in this film. (No pun intended.) This film offers nothing new or different than the previous films did, and there really is not the warm, holiday feeling or subplots that the other two films had. It's more of a pure comedy, but it did not succeed in making me laugh as the characters really did not do it for me. I would not recommend this film; it's pretty boring. If you are seeking a good holiday family film with comedy, then watch the original 'Home Alone' movie.
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1/10
Please! Make them stop!
Smells_Like_Cheese1 May 2004
The first "Home Alone" was one of the funniest movies of the 90's. The second was just as funny with the same cast and jokes! Now comes "Home Alone 3". I was curious how they could continue with the same story considering Kevin would've been 17 by 1997. He could take care of himself, right? So, what does the director decide to do? He takes a child just as annoying and makes him sick. The kid is like 6 years old and the mother leaves him alone in the house? What kind of team of burgerlers are these idiots? I don't really want to get too into detail if you want to sadly see this movie. But please, I'd recommend that you'd stay away from it. It's not worth your precious time. Go fold a piece of paper, do chores, balance a pencil on your nose, or take a nap! It's better to do then to watch "Home Alone 3"!

1/10
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1/10
Ten pounds of crap in a five pound bag
ultiren15 November 1999
I would like to say that curiosity got the best of me. If only I saw a trailer, I'd be able to tell you the whole plot of the movie; I could have saved myself the most pointless one hour and forty minutes in my entire life, and about twenty dollars. This movie was a disaster waiting to happen, and it is an embarrassment to Hollywood.

The movie displays a vivid ignorance of reality. For example, this kid's remote control race car goes all over the neighborhood, and even enters this house. It's even covered with clothes. Is it not rational to believe that a remote can no longer transmit a signal under those circumstances? Hollywood obviously did not believe so. Common logic and any concept of electronics dictates the opposite; I doubt the race car could even have reached the street, let alone a house across the street. Another unrealistic trait is the lack of intelligence the criminals possess. Why is it in all these movies, these criminals are rocket scientists until they encounter an eight-year old? The kid is meant to be the most intelligent person in the movie instead of professional terrorists? Please, there's more reality in The Matrix. Also, the leader puts down his real pistol and "accidentally" picks up a plastic pistol; apparently, he could not tell the difference. Even with a glove on, one should be able to do that. Just because they look the same does not mean anything; there is other senses then sight. The traps are unrealistic as well; if any one of them actually worked, the criminals would be dead. But, Hollywood intends for us to "laugh" at the "funny" results of the traps. I did not laugh; I sighed and rolled my eyes.

But, I recommend this movie to anyone who thinks they have seen a really bad movie; the movie they saw will seem like Citizen Kane compared to this one. Otherwise, skip this one for the sake of your pride. Home Alone 3 also raises a question. We all know Alex D. Linz stars in the movie, but did he write it as well?
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3/10
If anyone thought Home Alone 2 was a bad sequel, this was a huge step down from that.
kevin_robbins16 February 2022
Home Alone 3 (1997) is a movie my daughter and I recently watched together on Disney+. The storyline follows a stolen top secret microchip that is accidentally lost at an airport and brought to a Chicago home by an unsuspecting carrier. The carrier gifts the chip to a child thinking it is a remote control car. The people who stole the microchip track it to the Chicago neighborhood and find the kid more challenging than expected in their attempts to steal the microchip back.

This movie is directed by Raja Gosnell (Never Been Kissed) and stars Alex D. Linz (red Dragon), Scarlett Johansson (Black Widow), Marian Seldes (The Haunting), Richard Hamilton (Pale Rider), Kevin Kilner (Raising Helen) and Olek Krupa (Hidden Figures).

The storyline for this was kind of blah and not that great. The characters are okay but not as good as the previous two films. It was fun seeing a young Scarlett Johansson in this, but overall the cast isn't memorable.

The parrot wasn't as funny as they hoped but the butt inspection gloves reference and the boobytraps and hijinks at the end were fun, though a bit too over the top. If anyone thought Home Alone 2 was a bad sequel, this was a huge step down from that.

Overall this was a movie made to capitalize off the greatness of the first film. There's nothing memorable or worth seeing here. I would score this a 2.5/10 and recommend skipping it.
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6/10
Accidentally got hooked...horribly campy and strangely entertaining.
Robert_duder23 August 2009
Warning: Spoilers
As a kid Home Alone one and two were absolutely iconic classics, and I knew that they went ahead and butchered it with two unrelated sequels. It was two am, my fiancé and I were tired and bored and we were hanging out and suddenly the movie started and fifteen minutes later we were smiling, and a half hour later we were chuckling at the sheer stupidity and craziness and silliness. Maybe this review will be biased by the late hour but while Home Alone 3 doesn't hold a candle to the original films for its key demographic which is likely young, young kids...eight to ten perhaps I think it hits its mark. With virtually no big names in the film it has to rely on the other aspect of the Home Alone franchise which is slapstick comedy, kiddie hi-jinks and ridiculously painful pranks that are taken like Wile Coyote. This film has plenty of that. Ironically the amazing late John Hughes did indeed pen the script for this film as silly as it is. The plot is barely that but Home Alone never relied heavily on any sort of plot. You watch it to see the above listed things. Home Alone 3 is sillier, kiddier, but still entertaining.

Alex Linz headlines the cast as the vivacious youngster with ideal traps and toys. Linz is probably the perfect hero for the younger crowd. He doesn't exactly have enormous chemistry but he's cute and does a good job as the antagonist to the bad guys. Character actor Olek Krupa takes the role of head bad guy from the likes of Joe Pesci and the character is not entirely different. He is kind of a quiet dark brooding bad guy, seems out of place in a light fluff piece like this but maybe that makes his role work. He pulls off the silly comedy very well. Rya Kihlstedt does a good job playing the only lady baddie. She probably gets some of the best pranks and traps played on her. Lenny von Dohlen is the half witted bad guy and fills the shoes of Daniel Stern but loosely because something all three bad guys have in common Krupa, Kihlstedt, and Dohlen have very little character or plot. At least Pesci and Stern were fun characters with a story. This is just entirely about torturing the silly bad guys because kids don't care if the bad guys are people with a story. They are adults that are trying to ruin a kid's fun.

This was directors Raja Gosnell's first entry into directing and he seems to be doing well currently having directed some solid family films and hopefully will exceed expectations at bringing The Smurfs to the big screen. He focuses on the comedy though I think and not necessary character development which works better for kiddie comedies than actual mainstream films. Still if you want to watch a silly movie with your kids you could do worse than Home Alone 3 but whatever you do, don't even begin to hold this in the same breath as either of the first Home Alone films which became a holiday comedy classic. This one is just cute. 6/10
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5/10
Moderate sequel
mikavir21 December 2020
Home Alone 3 is a sequel to Home Alone (1990) and Home Alone 2: Lost in New York (1992). Macaulay Culkin who was an original main actor had stopped acting before making this sequel. The movie should have made outside the Home Alone series because original actors were so memorable. This sequel is just some kind of worse copy of its predecessors. Actors and plot of this movie aren't bad but the atmosphere isn't same. The emotional side remains weaker than in the original Home Alone movies. Still you can watch Home Alone 3 once because it's moderate. However part 1 and 2 are christmas classics. After part 3 this movie series should have stopped.
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10/10
Every 90s Kid Loves This.
Movie-ManDan21 February 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Home Alone 3 caught a bad rap because it has not connection at all with the previous movies with Macaulay Culkin. This should not have been called Home Alone 3, but something else. I wouldn't go so far as to calling it the best in the series, but I do stand by this having the best storyline.

The general premise about a little kid being home alone and creating booby-traps to catch the bad guys is the exact point of the first two, but it's what's beneath the surface that is the best. A group of bad guys steal an Air Force computer chip and must deliver it to a North Korean terrorist organization. They hide it in a remote control car where it is unintentionally picked up by a retired lady headed to suburban Chicago. Hr taking the bag was unrealistic; in an airport, who doesn't check to see if they have their own bag? Everybody knows some luggage look alike! She gives the car to her 8-year-old neighbour, Alex (Dinz) who just came down with the chicken pox. The thieves get the whereabouts of the neighbourhood, but break into each house hoping to find the car. Alex is home alone and sees the thieves through his telescope and calls the police. Everybody thinks he's crying wolf, but Alex is determined to catch the thieves once and for all. The thieves want to search in the daytime because they know everybody is either at school or working. What if there's people like Alex sick home from school? Or retirees? Then the place not believing Alex is also a bit unrealistic. He notices odd things happening in the neighbourhood ontop of intruders. The thieves are obviously experts, so wouldn't the cops work to plant hidden cameras or something like that? When it goes to classic Home Alone, the traps and slapstick comedy is just as great (sometimes greater) than the first two. Sure there's some unrealistic traps, but the first two had them also. Maybe it is just because I am a 90s kid, but I don't get why this is hated. Alex is just as good a Kevin, the thieves are cool, the story is better than the others. Home Alone 4 and 5 are the bad ones. I mean reeeeaaally bad.

3/4
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7/10
Cute, cute, really cute but goes a bit overboard with the booby traps
inkblot1125 October 2019
At the airport in Chicago, four international thieves lose an important package and make plans to search a neighborhood where they believe it was delivered. Meanwhile, Alex (Alex D. Linz) is a darling youngest child who, after working for an older neighbor lady, doesn't get paid in money. Instead, she got a remote controlled car delivered to her by mistake and she gives this as payment. Bummer. At home, Alex feels itchy and goes to the bathroom, where, after seeing his reflection, starts screaming. His older brother and sister (Scarlett Johanssen) immediately begin razzing him for what they believe he is screaming about. But, no, its chicken pox. Since mother and father work, Alex will be alone at times, with the neighbor lady keeping an eye on him. This is just the moment the four thieves come into the area, pretending to dogwalk and jog in order to find the package. Inside, you see, is a valuable microchip they could sell for mucho bucks. All too soon, when Alex starts playing with the car, they know what house they want. Will Alex be able to do what Kevin McAlister did and foil the evil adult criminals? This cute third installment of the Home Alone movies has a darling child in Linz and some funny thieves. Watch out for Johanssen, future superstar, as a teen actress. The sets and costumes are great, too. The script, which is indeed from John Hughes, has some funny lines and ideas. But, in truth, how many times can we see the bumbling adults fall into a child's booby traps? Imaginative are the ideas, yes, but they go on and on to almost excess. Nevertheless, for a film with few known actors, this film is a good time for families who want an entertaining choice on movie night.
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1/10
So bad movie
meydiana-6524213 December 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Recycled plot, uninteresting characters 'Home Alone 3' is the first of the Home Alone movies not to feature Culkin in the main role and the same villains. However, the plot is very similar to the original 'Home Alone' film. Instead of two comical villains, we get three or four of them. This film involves some traps, but it also has a long scene with a remote-control car. The slapstick humour is consistent as well, but the young boy and the villains really fail to make an impact in this film. (No pun intended.) This film offers nothing new or different than the previous films did, and there really is not the warm, holiday feeling or subplots that the other two films had. It's more of a pure comedy, but it did not succeed in making me laugh as the characters really did not do it for me. I would not recommend this film; it's pretty boring. If you are seeking a good holiday family film with comedy, then watch the original 'Home Alone' movie.
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