20 of the best Thanksgiving movies of all time, ranked
Universal Pictures
- A number of movies are about Thanksgiving or take place during the holiday.
- Critics like "Planes, Trains and Automobiles" (1987) and "Scent of a Woman" (1992).
- "A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving" (1973) has a perfect score on Rotten Tomatoes.
Lifetime
Critics' score: 60%
This 2015 film is about two kids who embark on a magical adventure while visiting their strange aunt's farm for Thanksgiving. The kids then spend their time tracking down a mythical creature called the Howling Hoodoo.
Touchstone Pictures, Motion Picture Corporation of America
Critics' score: 60%
"The War at Home" follows Jeremy (Emilio Estevez), a soldier who recently returned home after serving in Vietnam.
He lives with his parents and is deeply troubled by everything he did and saw while at war. As Thanksgiving comes around, Jeremy struggles to readjust to civilian life.
The movie has some famous faces, like Kathy Bates, Carla Gugino, and Martin Sheen.
Sony Pictures Classics
Critics' score: 60%
The drama follows the adult children of a New England family as they return home for Thanksgiving weekend.
The holiday forces them to realize how dysfunctional their family is and they start to work through their issues.
Bandeira Entertainment
Critics' score: 62%
An adaptation of Wendy MacLeod's play of the same name, "House of Yes" is about the affluent and dysfunctional Pascal family as they get ready for Thanksgiving dinner.
In the film, Marty Pascal (Josh Hamilton) brings his fiancée home to meet his family, including his twin sister (Parker Posey), who is convinced she is Jackie Kennedy.
Aperture Media Productions
Critics' score: 62%
Ike Barinholtz's indie satire film delves into a bit of politics. The movie is about high-strung news junkie Chris (Ike Barinholtz) and his wife as they learn that people are being asked to sign a loyalty oath to the president.
The Thanksgiving thriller-comedy is packed with political arguments, snappy jokes, and family tension.
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc.
Critics' score: 63%
This film is actually based on a popular satirical Arlo Guthrie song, "Alice's Restaurant."
The movie follows Arlo (Guthrie), who visits his friend Alice for Thanksgiving dinner after he was kicked out of college. When dinner is over, Arlo ends up getting arrested for littering, which inadvertently exposes his hidden criminal past.
Paramount Pictures
Critics' score: 64%
Directed by Jodie Foster, this comedy/drama stars Holly Hunter as Claudia, a single mom whose daughter doesn't want to spend Thanksgiving with her.
Claudia reluctantly spends the holiday with her family at her childhood home and she's not very happy about it until she meets her brother's handsome friend, Leo Fish (Dylan McDermott).
Universal
Critics' score: 69%
"Funny People" is a little more emotional and dramatic than Adam Sandler's usual comedies.
It's about George Simmons (Sandler), a famous stand-up comedian who discovers he has a terminal illness and less than a year to live.
He ends up hiring a struggling comedian, Ira (Seth Rogen), to be his personal assistant and opening act. The two become close friends as Ira helps George come to terms with what's happening to him.
But a lot of drama ensues when Simmons learns he has longer to live than he thought.
72nd Street Productions
Critics' score: 70%
Another film focused on family drama, "The Vicious Kind" is about relationships.
Cale (Adam Scott) gets dumped right before the holiday season and he ends up falling for his younger brother's new girlfriend, Emma (Brittany Snow), on Thanksgiving.
Hello Please
Critics' score: 75%
This romantic comedy follows a group of high-school friends as they reunite during Thanksgiving weekend.
The friends slowly begin to realize how much they've changed and how much everything in the town they grew up in has remained exactly the same.
Getty Images/Paramount
Critics' score: 77%
If you watched "The Addams Family" (1991) to prepare for Halloween, you may want to enjoy the sequel "Addams Family Values" to get ready for Thanksgiving. In this film, the Addams family is up to their usual antics.
Unhappy about having a new baby brother, Wednesday (Christina Ricci) and Pugsley (Jimmy Workman) try to get rid of him.
Eventually, the nanny Joan Cusack) intervenes, only to show she might be even more outrageous than the Addams family.
Miramax
Critics' score: 78%
This comedy is all about 15-year-old Oscar (Aaron Stanford), who falls in love with his stepmother, Eve (Sigourney Weaver).
While home for the holiday, Oscar does everything he can to seduce Eve, but his actions eventually get the attention of her friend, Diane (Bebe Neuwirth).
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc.
Critics' score: 84%
This is a classic early 2000s film starring Katie Holmes as the rebellious April, who lives in New York and doesn't spend much time trying to keep in touch with her family.
When she finds out her mom has cancer, she invites her family to her apartment for Thanksgiving.
TriStar Pictures
Critics' score: 85%
"Avalon" is an autobiographical film about a Polish-Jewish family that comes to live in the United States at the beginning of the 20th century.
The film tells the story of the family as they get settled in Baltimore, Maryland, establish their roots, and try to live the American dream.
Fox Searchlight Pictures/Getty Images
Critics' score: 85%
If you're looking for something a little heavier, you might enjoy the drama "The Ice Storm."
Set in the 1970s, the film tells the story of a seemingly wholesome family who begins to fall apart over Thanksgiving break during an ice storm.
Universal
Critics' score: 89%
If you're more into coming-of-age films, you might like "Scent of a Woman," an award-winning drama starring Al Pacino.
The movie focuses on the relationship between Frank (Pacino), a blind, retired lieutenant in the US army who is difficult to get along with, and Charlie (Chris O'Donnell), a prep school student who takes the job as Frank's assistant for Thanksgiving.
Orion Pictures
Critics' score: 91%
Starring Mia Farrow, Barbara Hershey, and Dianne Wiest, "Hannah and Her Sisters" follows the story of three sisters' Thanksgiving dinners and their confusing relationships.
Paramount Pictures
Critics' score: 92%
This John Hughes comedy starring Steve Martin and John Candy is already a Thanksgiving classic for many.
Neal (Martin) ends up rerouted because of a snowstorm. As he struggles to find a way home for Thanksgiving, he gets stuck with overwhelmingly positive Del (Candy).
Hoody Boy Productions
Critics' score: 95%
"Krisha" is an award-winning independent film that tells the story of a woman who used to be addicted to drugs who decides she wants to spend Thanksgiving with her family after going years without seeing them.
Photo by Walt Disney Television via Getty Images Photo Archives/Walt Disney Television via Getty Images
Critics' score: 100%
A true classic, this Peanuts cartoon gives many viewers a sense of nostalgia and it's no surprise that it's been scored so highly by critics.
The animated film includes plenty of iconic Peanuts moments, like Lucy trying to get Charlie Brown to kick a football.
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20 of the best Thanksgiving movies of all time, ranked
Source: Rappler Buzz
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