Oct 10, 2014
Remember when Disney used to put out a new live-action kids’ movie every month, like “The Cat From Outer Space” and “Escape from Witch Mountain”? But ever since “The Little Mermaid” and “Toy Story,” it seems that all the effort put into making great family films comes from animated flicks.
Thankfully, the new movie “Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day” is here to save the day, bringing back the sense of gleefully anarchic joy and adventure that’s been mostly missing from live-action family films since “Home Alone.” Starring Steve Carell and Jennifer Garner as Ben and Kelly Cooper, the very happily married parents of four kids, and the very talented young actor Ed Oxenbould as their grade-school son Alexander, the movie follows what happens when Alexander makes a wish about his family that goes really, really wrong.
Alexander’s always prone to bad luck and mishaps, and wakes up with gum stuck in his hair, and has a day filled with disasters the day before his birthday, including the news that the coolest kid in school is going to throw his own birthday party the same night and steal all their friends’ attention. But Alexander’s birthday is also momentous for the rest of his family: his older brother Anthony is having both his drivers’ test and his prom and his sister Emily is about to make her debut as Peter Pan in the school play, while Ben has a big job interview for his best opportunity in seven months of unemployment and Kelly has to decide whether to accept a promotion that would make her spend too much time away from her family.
But when the family won’t listen to him share his frustrations at the dinner table, Alexander makes himself a birthday cupcake at midnight and wishes that everyone in the family could for just once have a bad day too. What results is a wildly funny series of mishaps that include Emily getting buzzed on cough syrup, Anthony having a disastrous driving test, Ben making an extravagant fool of himself in a busy restaurant mid-interview and Kelly racing across town on a bicycle to keep Dick Van Dyke from reading an embarrassing mistake in a children’s book she edited in front of a packed room of kids.