Arts & Entertainment
9 Festive Movies To Watch This Thanksgiving Weekend
Get excited for a Thanksgiving-inspired movie marathon with these must-see festive flicks such as "Tower Heist," "You've Got Mail" and more.

If youโre planning a movie marathon this Thanksgiving weekend, you're in luck. From blistering dramas to infectious comedies, weโve rounded up a list of some of the best Thanksgiving movies that will make your family get-together memorable, fun and adventurous.
Happy Thanksgiving!
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โTower Heistโ (2011) โ Ben Stiller, Eddie Murphy, Matthew Broderick; directed by Brett Ratner
Brett Ratnerโs comedy follows a group of employees (Ben Stiller, Casey Affleck, Michael Peรฑa, Eddie Murphy, Gabourey Sidibe, and Matthew Broderick) who have become victims of their employerโs ponzi scheme. Feeling vengeful and angry, they conspire to rob their employerโs high-rise luxury apartment during Macyโs Thanksgiving Day Parade.
โYouโve Got Mailโ (1998) โ Tom Hanks, Meg Ryan; directed by Nora Ephrom
Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan star as a couple of strangers who meet and fall in love in a cyber-romantic way, thanks to the anonymity of the Internet. But thereโs one big problem: Both are blissfully oblivious of each otherโs true identity as business rivals.
โHome for the Holidaysโ (1995) โ Holly Hunter, Anne Bancroft, Robert Downey Jr.; directed by Jodie Foster
Jodie Fosterโs comedy stars Holly Hunter as Claudia Larson, a single mom who unexpectedly travels back to her hometown to spend Thanksgiving with her dysfunctional family. What happens next? An explosive and riotous holiday dinner erupts. But suddenly, romance is in the air when Claudia meets her brotherโs (Robert Downey Jr.) dashing friend (Dylan McDermott).
โPlanes, Trains & Automobilesโ (1987) โ Steve Martin, John Candy; directed by John Hughes
What if your flight was suddenly diverted to another place due to an unforgiving snowstorm? Well, this is exactly the premise of John Hughesโ hilarious comedy. Steve Martin and John Candy star as an unlikely pair of traveling partners who must bunk up together as they try to get home just in time for Thanksgiving.
โThe House of Yesโ (1997) โ Parker Posey, Josh Hamilton, Tori Spelling; directed by Mark Waters
In this film, Parker Posey shines in her role as a mentally unhinged young woman who suddenly goes into a fit of rage when her brother (Josh Hamilton) makes a big reveal during their familyโs Thanksgiving get-together. Oh โ and did we tell you that she thinks she is the real Jackie Kennedy?
โFree Birdsโ (2013) โ Woody Harrelson, Owen Wilson, Amy Poehler; directed by Jimmy Hayward
In this animated film, Woody Harrelson and Owen Wilson lend their voices as turkeys Jake and Reggie, a pair of polar opposites who must set aside their differences for a history-altering mission: to end Thanksgiving for good. How exactly? They must travel back in time to 1621, the year when the first Thanksgiving took place.
โScent of a Womanโ (1992) โ Al Pacino, Chris O'Donnell; directed by Martin Brest
One of Al Pacinoโs career-defining films, Martin Brestโs searing drama finally earned the iconic actor his first, long-overdue Oscar for his role as a blind U.S. Army vet who meets prep school student Charlie Simms (Chris OโDonnell) over a Thanksgiving weekend. What ensues is an unlikely friendship between the two men that is bound to last for a lifetime.
โAddams Family Valuesโ (1993) โ Anjelica Huston, Raul Julia, Christopher Lloyd; directed by Barry Sonnenfeld
In this sequel to 1991โs โThe Addams Family,โ classic TVโs favorite gothic family is on a rescue mission to save Uncle Fester from his new lady love. Why? Because she is a black widow. Meanwhile, siblings Wednesday (Christina Ricci) and Pugsley (Jimmy Workman) are about to participate in a musical rendition of the first Thanksgiving.
โNobodyโs Foolโ (1994) โ Paul Newman, Bruce Willis, Melanie Griffith; directed by Robert Benton
A story about self-reflection and introspection, Robert Bentonโs drama stars Paul Newman as Donald Sullivan, a 60-year-old man whoโd rather spend his life adrift in emptiness โ that is, until one Thanksgiving day, when his estranged son comes home with a son of his own. Suddenly, he must face the music head-on and stop avoiding adult responsibilities. Can he really do the seemingly insurmountable task?
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