Nothing Like the Holidays Movie Review
Nothing Like the Holidays Review

"Nothing Like the Holidays" Overview

Rating: PG
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Alfredo De VillaProducer : Robert Teitel,George Tillman,Jr.,Thomas J. Busch
Screenwiter : Rick Najera,Ted Perkins,Alison Swan
Starring : John Leguizamo,Debra Messing,Freddy Rodriguez,Alfred Molina,Jay Hernandez,Luis Guzman,Elizabeth Peña
Caucasians have not cornered the market on festive dysfunction. It may seem
like every Christmas family in freefall is as white as the snow that symbolizes
the season, but that's not true. All ethnicities have their yuletide horror
stories, and it looks like Tinseltown is finally working its way out of the
WASP-ish wilds of the suburbs. Last year, This Christmas focused on an
African-American clan's tell-all Noel. In 2008, it's the Hispanics' turn to
celebrate. Nothing Like the Holidays uses Chicago's Humboldt Park as the
backdrop for a great deal of warmth, a little comic craziness, and a whole lot
of biology-based nerve fraying. The result is something decent, if not
delightful.
For the Rodriguez family, this Christmas is more trying than others. Father Edy
(Alfred Molina) is still trying to talk his way out of the doghouse with wife
Anna (Elizabeth Peña). She's angry over a past infidelity and is hinting at a
divorce. He's angry that their Iraq War veteran son Jesse (Freddy Rodriguez)
doesn't want to take over the family business. Wannabe-actress daughter Roxanna
(Vanessa Ferlito) is anxious over the possibility of landing a prime role in a
television series, while ignoring the local boy Ozzy (Jay Hernandez) who
clearly pines away for her. But the couple's biggest concern is Mauricio (John
Leguizamo) and his non-Puerto Rican wife Sarah (Debra Messing). Their marriage
has yet to produce grandchildren, and for Edy and Anna, family is everything.
Take away the tempting Puerto Rican cuisine and the occasional lapses into
semi-Spanglish, and Nothing Like the Holidays would be any other X-mas movie.
It's formulaic without being completely clichéd, dealing with types and plot
points lifted from a dozen other family reunion retreads. What saves the film,
for the most part, is the astonishing multicultural cast, though it's time to
retire some of the performers who tend to show up once Hollywood decides to
venture south of the border. Indeed, Luis Guzman's ambiguously-oriented Johnny
has to go toe to toe with recent Hispanic heartthrob discoveries Hernandez and
Rodriguez. Thankfully, old pros Molina and Peña help support director Alfred De
Villa's desire for depth.
Our filmmaker has a real way with heritage here, showing as he did in the
Rosalyn Sanchez dance vehicle Yellow that even the most routine material can be
cast in a different, inviting light. He's also capable of bringing an
authenticity to material that should play as either farcical or just plain
far-fetched. Of course, a lot of his success comes from the chemistry among the
actors. There is a wonderful scene between Ferlita, Leguizamo, and Rodriguez
where the trio share shots of tequila in the family attic, a lifetime of
history hashed out in quaint bits of telling dialogue. And as stated before,
Molina and Peña also bring a lot of truth to their turns, especially when
required to infer the couple's longstanding love and impending breakup.
The key question of course is whether Nothing Like the Holidays will become a
welcome yearly tradition, the kind of film that families sit down and enjoy
over bites of figgy pudding and one too many glasses of boxed wine. While De
Villa tries hard to make his movie perennial, this is clearly a one shot,
specialized deal. The minorities who consistently feel underrepresented by the
mainstream's moviemaking ideal will definitely rejoice in this winning, often
witty get together. But simply changing race doesn't make a movie a classic.
Alfred De Villa and the gang can be congratulated for taking the genre out of
its consistently white-bread environs. But just like the gifts one gets every
year, Nothing Like the Holidays is a hit-and-miss entertainment experience.
You got me a pillow? I got you a pillow!
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Review by Bill Gibron
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