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DADDY’S HOME 2

"Christian Love Overcomes Family Divisions"

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What You Need To Know:

In DADDY’S HOME 2, Dusty has married a woman with a daughter from a previous marriage. Also, Brad and Sara, Dusty’s ex-wife, have their own child. Brad and Dusty become upset when Dusty’s daughter and Brad’s stepdaughter says she’s tired of having two separate celebrations. So, the families decide to celebrate Christmas together. These plans are complicated when Dusty’s macho, insensitive father, Kurt, shows up after years of being absent. Meanwhile, Brad’s ultra-affectionate, emotional dad, Don, shows up to celebrate Christmas, but without Brad’s mother. Don’s harboring a secret.

DADDY’S HOME 2 could be more cohesive and take more advantage of its story. It seems to jump from incident to incident. That said, some of the situations are really funny. Also, the third act builds to a nice comical crescendo. Even better, the plot problems are resolved by overt acts of love inspired by the Christmas season. There are even positive references to the Nativity and the birth of Jesus. However, DADDY’S HOME 2 contains some crude language, plenty of light profanities and other bad behavior. So, caution is advised for older children.

Content:

Dominant Worldview and Other Worldview Content/Elements:
Strong Christian, moral worldview and premise where forgiveness and especially overt expressions of love solve the major and minor plot problems of a large blended family trying to celebrate Christmas together, with a couple scenes involving a live Nativity display featuring Mary, Joseph and the baby Jesus, people say Thank God in a couple scenes, family is extolled, and a couple Christmas carols are briefly sung (including “Oh, Holy Night,” one of the more beautiful Christmas carols), mitigated by some bad/immoral behavior that causes or reflects most of the movie’s comical complications and plot problems, plus one minor boy character seems interested in kissing another boy in a brief shot. 

Foul Language:
14 obscenities (one “s” word, “h” words, “d” words, and a** words) and 10 light exclamatory profanities (mostly “Oh my God”).

Violence:
 Comic violence includes snowblower goes awry and starts sucking up outdoor Christmas lights, car gets pummeled with small dents from runaway snowblower, plastic outdoor Christmas decoration lands on man, snowblower lands on car roof, man accidentally cuts down cell tower with tall tree, girl posing as angel in a Nativity display accidentally falls off the roof area, shotgun pellet hits man in upper arm, it’s implied little girl shot two wild turkeys during hunting scene, two men square off against each other to fight, but fight doesn’t occur, older man gets knocked down by icy snowballs. 

Sex:
No depicted sex, but there’s talk about unmarried man going off with married women when his son was younger, character’s unmarried father picks up a woman at the bar of an improv comedy club and doesn’t return until the next morning, father talks to stepson about being in the “friend zone” with girls, but no real romance takes place in the stepfather’s comical scenario which other men comically mock, boy kisses one girl, and then other girls line up to kiss him, one brief shot suggests one boy wants to kiss another boy, and older man starts to tell joke about “two hookers”, but he’s immediately shushed after he utters those two words. 

Nudity:
No nudity but it’s mentioned that a hospital gown doesn’t cover a man’s rear end. 

Alcohol Use:
Briefly depicted alcohol use, implied alcohol use, and an older girl convinces her younger stepsister to drink parents’ rum-infused eggnog, and the two girls show up tipsy and a bit drunk later. 

Smoking and/or Drug Use and Abuse:
No smoking or drugs.

Miscellaneous Immorality:
 Man estranged from macho insensitive father, another father hides secret from his adult son, man tries to cause trouble between his son and son’s friend, two girls are disobedient (one is a troublemaker), and some permissive parenting, but most things are resolved positively in the end.

More Detail:

DADDY’S HOME 2 finds family man Brad and Dusty, the father of Brad’s two stepchildren, having to cope with Dusty’s macho father who wants to create friction between the two best buddies during the Christmas holiday. DADDY’S HOME 2 has some funny and heartwarming moments promoting the Christmas spirit, the birth of Jesus, family togetherness, and love, but there’s some crude language, light profanities and bad behavior that warrant caution for older children.

The movie opens with Dusty having gotten married to a woman with a daughter of her own from a previous marriage. Also, Brad and Sara, Dusty’s ex-wife, have a new child of their own, Griffy.

Dusty and Brad are upset when they learn that Dusty’s daughter, Megan (Brad’s stepdaughter), is tired of having two separate Christmas celebrations. So, the families decide to celebrate Christmas together at one of their homes.

Brad and Dusty’s plan is complicated when Dusty’s macho father, Kurt, a former astronaut and still a ladies man, suddenly shows up for Christmas. After meeting the overly sensitive Brad, Kurt thinks Brad is turning Dusty into a weakling. So, he secretly plans to sabotage their friendship at a large resort cabin Kurt manages to reserve for both Brad and Dusty’s families.

Meanwhile, Brad’s own ultra-affectionate and emotional dad, Don, shows up to celebrate Christmas with Brad’s family, but without Brad’s mother. Clearly, Don is harboring some sort of secret of his own.

DADDY’S HOME 2 sometimes seems to lack comic cohesion to take full advantage of the comic possibilities in the story. It jumps from incident to incident without always building great comic momentum. For example, in the classic comedy structure of the best silent comedies and the best “screwball” comedies of Hollywood’s Golden Age, the jokes and comedy build upon themselves until they reach a comical climax and crescendo in the narrative.

That said, however, some of the comical situations do build nicely upon themselves. For example, there’s a funny sequence where Kurt tries to interest Dusty’s son, Dylan, into hunting, but it turns out Dusty’s daughter, Megan, is more interested. So, Dusty, Brad, Brad’s dad, and Megan’s mother, Sara (who’s now Brad’s wife), all go with Kurt and Megan to hunt wild turkeys. Also, the first and second acts eventually do build to a funny climactic third act where the blended family’s plans to celebrate Christmas together come unglued. How that plot problem resolves itself happily is one of the things that makes DADDY’S HOME 2 worth seeing.

As Frank McConnell writes in his groundbreaking book on movies and literature, STORYTELLING AND MYTHMAKING, the “‘natural’ order of society disintegrates into a carnival atmosphere where social conventions are suspended in a limbo world between complete dissolution and a hoped-for rebirth.” This is sort of what happens in DADDY’S HOME 2. The blended family’s plans for celebrating Christmas together disintegrates, partly because of the machinations of Dusty’s father, Kurt, but also partly because there are unresolved issues between Brad and Dusty, between Dusty and his father, and between Dusty and his own stepdaughter, Adrianna, who turns out to be a troublemaker like her grandfather. Here, it’s important to note that the plot problem within this extended family, as evidenced by all these family conflicts, is explicitly resolved by overt acts of love. In effect, characters choose to forgive other characters and express their love for one another. The thing that inspires them to do this is what the movie calls “the Christmas Spirit.”

Happily, the movie has a couple scenes with a live Nativity display in the center of the resort where the family decides to spend its Christmas together. So, the movie’s references to “the Christmas Spirit” isn’t devoid of religious significance. In fact, when an argument breaks out between Brad and Dusty at the family’s own participation in the live Nativity display, Brad realizes at the end that he forgot to pick up his infant son, Griffy, who’s playing the baby Jesus in the Nativity display. There’s a subtle hint in this moment from the movie, which seems to say, “During Christmas, don’t forget the baby Jesus!”

Despite all these positives, DADDY’S HOME 2 contains some crude language, plenty of light profanities (mostly of the “Oh my God” variety) and other bad behavior. For example, Dusty’s father starts to tell a joke about “too hookers,” but is quickly shushed by Brad, Dusty and Brad’s father. Also, one problem Dusty has with his father is that his father always slipped away during one of Dusty’s school functions with another woman, often a married woman. During a visit to an improv comedy club, Dusty is upset when his father meets a woman at the bar and doesn’t return until the next morning. Furthermore, at one point, Adrianna encourages Megan to drink some of their parents’ rum-laced eggnog, and both girls later turn up tipsy slurring their words. How Brad and Dusty handle that situation (especially Adrianna’s disobedience) becomes part of the movie’s positive resolution of all the conflicts in this extended blended family.

Overall, the objectionable content in DADDY’S HOME 2 warrants a caution for older children. Also, increasing the movie’s positive references to Jesus, the real reason for the Christmas season, could have helped. As always, please consult the CONTENT section for this movie before you decide whether to see DADDY’S HOME 2.

Now more than ever we’re bombarded by darkness in media, movies, and TV. Movieguide® has fought back for almost 40 years, working within Hollywood to propel uplifting and positive content. We’re proud to say we’ve collaborated with some of the top industry players to influence and redeem entertainment for Jesus. Still, the most influential person in Hollywood is you. The viewer.

What you listen to, watch, and read has power. Movieguide® wants to give you the resources to empower the good and the beautiful. But we can’t do it alone. We need your support.

You can make a difference with as little as $7. It takes only a moment. If you can, consider supporting our ministry with a monthly gift. Thank you.

Movieguide® is a 501c3 and all donations are tax deductible.


Now more than ever we’re bombarded by darkness in media, movies, and TV. Movieguide® has fought back for almost 40 years, working within Hollywood to propel uplifting and positive content. We’re proud to say we’ve collaborated with some of the top industry players to influence and redeem entertainment for Jesus. Still, the most influential person in Hollywood is you. The viewer.

What you listen to, watch, and read has power. Movieguide® wants to give you the resources to empower the good and the beautiful. But we can’t do it alone. We need your support.

You can make a difference with as little as $7. It takes only a moment. If you can, consider supporting our ministry with a monthly gift. Thank you.

Movieguide® is a 501c3 and all donations are tax deductible.


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