DisneyNOW – Shows & Live TV
Entertainment and Photo & Video
App
-WATCH FULL EPISODES: Watch your favorite Disney Channel, Disney XD and Disney Junior shows,...
Creating a Lean Culture: Tools to Sustain Lean Conversions
Book
Winner of a Shingo Research and Professional Publication Award The new edition of this Shingo...
X-VPN No Log Proxy
Productivity and Utilities
App
Fast servers with No Annoying Ads! You’ll never miss any sports lives or the TV series with X-VPN!...
Video Mate: Music Playlist & TubeMate Audio Player
Lifestyle and Music
App
Welcome to Free Music for Youtube Player gives you access to all of YouTube music videos, music...
Video & TV Cast Pro for Samsung Smart TV + Blu-ray
Photo & Video and Entertainment
App
Watch any web-video, online movie, livestream or live tv show on your Samsung Smart TV or Blu-ray...
Video & TV Cast for DLNA UPnP: Stream Movies to TV
Photo & Video and Entertainment
App
Watch any webvideo or local video on your favorite DLNA certified TV, video game console or blu-ray...
Video & TV Cast for Chromecast: Stream Movies App
Photo & Video and Utilities
App
Watch any web video or local video on your Chromecast 1+2+Ultra or Android TV powered television and...
Video & TV Cast for Samsung Smart TV with Remote
Photo & Video and Entertainment
App
Watch any web-video, online movie, livestream or live tv show on your Samsung Smart TV or Blu-ray...
Gareth von Kallenbach (980 KP) rated Four Christmases (2008) in Movies
Aug 14, 2019
So, why don’t Brad and Kate want to spend Christmas with their families? Well, mainly it’s because they’re products of broken marriages and each of them have two homes to visit. Hence, the title. Brad’s family consists of a bitter old man, played by Robert Duvall and two brothers (Jon Favreau and Tim McGraw) who are amateur cage fighters who take great delight in torturing their attorney brother. His uncoventional mother, a quirky Sissy Spacek, is remarried and Brad has yet to come to terms with a stepfather he knows all too well. Kate’s mother, played by Mary Steenburgen, has found religion and a not-so-angelic devotion to the pastor of her church, while her sister, an earnest Kristin Chenoweth, just can’t say enough about the joys of childbearing.
Brad and Kate, who airily dismiss the idea of marriage and the notion of children, are content to just focus on each other, spicing up their relationship with some sexy role-playing, dance lessons and exotic vacations. But on one Christmas day, traveling from one parent’s home to another, they face their fears four times and discover more and more about each other with each visit. She didn’t know his name wasn’t really Brad. He didn’t know she went to fat camp. She doesn’t know how to give good clues in Taboo. He is inflexible in changing the rules of their relationship. Suddenly, the happily unmarried couple doesn’t feel so happily unmarried.
The movie is good for a few laughs, mainly at the expense of Vince Vaughn’s Brad. I’ve always been a big fan of Vince Vaughn’s rapid-fire stream of consciousness delivery and he certainly has his moments. While it seems like he carries the movie for the most part, Reese isn’t without her chances to shine. Unfortunately, the opportunities are few and far between. Even with it’s stellar cast, the phrase “lighthearted comedy” feels a little generous. It is definitely light, but doesn’t have much heart.