ReportWire

Great Thanksgiving movies to watch while you digest your turkey – Detroit Metro Times

Thanksgiving movies don’t get the credit they deserve. We get a ton of Christmas, Halloween, and other holiday movies canonized as classics and added to the yearly viewing rotation, but Thanksgiving has always remained the day when people slowly food-coma themselves into oblivion in front of football or parades. 

Still, I think it’s time to spotlight a few pretty great Thanksgiving movies for those of us who prefer cinema to sports and celebrate the genius it takes to build a movie around a problematic holiday where the most excitement involved is usually how many deviled eggs one can eat before things go south.

Steve Martin and John Candy in Planes, Trains and Automobiles. Credit: Paramount

This is the obvious one for people of a certain generation, but I’ll always bring this 1987 film up when younger folks are around to keep the appreciation of John Candy alive for a thousand years to come. This classic follows an uptight ad exec (the wonderful Steve Martin) and a talkative but affable salesman (Candy) as they go on a very circuitous journey from New York to Chicago (by way of Kansas and a few other states) to try to make it home for Thanksgiving. It remains endlessly quotable (“Our speedometer has melted, and as a result, it’s very hard to see with any degree of accuracy exactly how fast we were going.”), genuinely heartwarming, and a good reminder that the holiday isn’t about pilgrims as much as a celebration of the people we love and choose to share our lives with.

The cast of Knives Out. Credit: Claire Folger/Lionsgate

While the film isn’t specifically set on Thanksgiving, Knives Out is still the perfect viewing antidote for those of us who have complicated relationships with our family. From writer-director Rian Johnson, Knives Out is a classic cinematic throwback to detectives like Marple, Poirot, and Holmes, but all centered around a profoundly dysfunctional family played by a murderers’ row of great actors including Michael Shannon, Chris Evans, Jamie Lee Curtis, Don Johnson, Christopher Plummer, and Toni Collette. Watching these characters sit around a table and squabble over petty insecurities reminds me of too many Thanksgivings to count and, for good or ill, feels pretty nostalgic.

A scene from Fantastic Mr. Fox. Credit: 20th Century Fox

This also isn’t set on Thanksgiving necessarily, but with the autumn leaves filling almost every frame and the focus on community, food and families both fond and otherwise, it’s not only the perfect film for kids to watch on the holiday, but grown-ups will find their eyes getting awfully moist as well. What on the surface seems like a simple story about securing food for the winter plays quite differently at a time when food security is in question. Big-hearted, warmly optimistic and filled to the brim with calls for goodness and charity, Fantastic Mr. Fox should be canonized as the Thanksgiving movie closest to the spirit of the holiday.

Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan in You’ve Got Mail. Credit: Warner Bros.

While only briefly touching on Thanksgiving, You’ve Got Mail is still a perfect romance to watch with your person after dinner. With a chemistry that I’m not sure any actors have achieved since, Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan are so effortlessly charming and dreamy that it’s hard not to fall in love with them, too. Even if some of the story points feel a little sexist now, the film is still the equivalent of a rich dessert shared with a special someone.

The cast of Big Night. Credit: Allstar

Not connected to Thanksgiving in any way other than in how it celebrates family and food, Big Night should still be played as an appetizer to the Thanksgiving meal since I’m not sure food has ever looked more delicious onscreen before or since. Stanley Tucci, Tony Shalhoub, Minnie Driver, Ian Holm, and Isabella Rossellini cook up something truly delicious here that makes my mouth water just thinking about it.

The Fellowship of the Rings. Credit: New Line Cinema

There are so many other solid Thanksgiving canon choices. For the horror movie fanatic in your life, you could show Eli Roth’s turkey slasher Thanksgiving. For the Boomer in your life. There’s The Big Chill. The little ones will always appreciate A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving. If you’re after a heartwarming dramedy, don’t forget about the Jodie Foster-directed Home for the Holidays. Or if you want to focus on the historical perspective, Terence Malick’s The New World is an underseen classic. Spike Lee’s She’s Gotta Have It has one of the tensest Thanksgiving dinners committed to film. And Pieces of April reminds us to forgive and find gratitude in the small things.

Me? My go-to movie for Thanksgiving is Fellowship of the Ring. Why, you may ask? Two reasons: 1) It’s the coziest movie ever made. The shire is all vibes and I want them religiously. 2) Hearing Sam Gamgee exclaim, “Po-ta-toes! Boil ’em, mash ’em, stick ’em in a stew” makes me hungry, happy, and full of thanks.


Jared Rasic, Last Word Features

Source link