Muppet Family Christmas holds a special place for me because it's a tradition for a close friend of mine (who housed me for a couple of my worse years), and she shared it with me.
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If Let It Snow is trying to be the Empire Records of Christmas movies, then I think El Camino Christmas (2017) is aiming for that late 90s "saccharine indie" feel that you'd find on HBO at 11pm Tuesday night. Its cast delivers what's expected of them, but maybe another draft or two would nail this one out into something genuinely above average. It's not awful, I've certainly seen worse (and will continue to do so), but it's one that you won't feel the need to watch again.
Eric (Luke Grimes, "Grimey" to his friends) arrives in the little town of El Camino, Nevada, where he books a motel room from innkeeper and local sheriff's deputy Billy (Dax Shepard) before traveling to an address where drunk Larry (Tim Allen) currently resides, under the guise of looking for a man named "Michael Roth." Eric is soon harassed by Deputy Carl Hooker (Vincent D'Onofrio) on suspicion of drug smuggling due to his credit card, nice car (Chevelle SS), and wad of cash in his pocket. Carl has been chastised on and off by Sheriff Fuller (Kurtwood Smith) for drinking on the job, excessive force complaints, and trumped up charges that don't stick; all of which occur during his interaction with Eric, leading to Billy leaving the cell door open and letting Eric leave. As Eric tries to leave town, Carl gives chase, leading to a hostage situation at a local liquor store run by Vicente (Emilio Rivera) and staffed by Katie (Michelle Mylett), whose young mute son Seth is also trapped in. Meanwhile, local fluff reporter Beth Flowers (Jessica Alba) yearns for a chance at reporting on bigger stories, and comes across the standoff ready to go to work.
This is one of those movies where I'm not sure it counts as a Christmas movie. It's the setting, sure, and you could argue that there's a clear Christmas miracle, but the Christmas Eve timeframe has no bearing at all the plot. The story could literally take place at any other time of the year and be the same, as the holiday is only referenced with a handful of visual gags (Santa hats, "Feliz Navidad" written on the liquor store windows, etc.) and some of the rantings by Larry.
The "twist" about Eric and the "Michael Roth" hunt becomes obvious early on, but the reason for "Michael Roth" disappearing holds more weight than this movie really deserves. Tim Allen owns his turn as Larry, which makes me hate that he's apparently such a prick on set. Michelle Mylett playing another character named Katie got a chuckle out of me (as she plays a Katie on Letterkenny), and a heap of praise should be given for the handling of her son's apparent ASD, right down to his body language; Ashton Essex Bright does great work here, and I hope he's as solid in stuff like Uglies and afrAId.
Overall, not a bad movie, something that would have paired well with stuff like Best Men or Suicide Kings, but nothing great. 6.5/10