The 18 Hap-Hap-Happiest Secrets About Christmas Vacation
5 Holiday Movies That Get Us in the Spirit
It’s hard to make a sequel as good as the first movie. And it’s even harder to make the third installment the best in a franchise.
But National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation managed to do just that, with the movie becoming an instant holiday favorite and one of the highest grossing films in the franchise after its release on Dec. 1, 1989.
Chevy Chase and Beverly D’Angelo reprised their roles as Clark and Ellen Griswold while then-unknown actors Juliette Lewis and Johnny Galecki made their film debuts as their kids.
Made with $25 million, Christmas Vacation—which was penned by the legendary John Hughes and directed by Jeremiah Chechik—went on to gross over $72 million. While its box office performance wasn’t going to win Clark a bonus, the movie has gone on to become a modern Christmas classic in the 35 years since its debut. In other words, much like the Griswold family tree, it’s a beaut, Clark, it’s a beaut.
Still, that doesn’t mean everything was holly and jolly while making the movie. One director exited the project after clashing with Chase, telling Chicago Magazine, “To be completely honest, Chevy treated me like dirt” (thirsty for more holiday spirit, he landed in another major franchise), and Chechik, the man who eventually helmed the flick, later revealed he fought on set with another star.
Plus, there was a somewhat pivotal scene-stealer that died during filming and the studio was this close to cutting one of the most iconic scenes.
So before you kick off your fun, old-fashioned family Christmas by heading out into the country in the old front-wheel drive sleigh to embrace the frosty majesty of the winter landscape and select that most important of Christmas symbols, read up on these 18 secrets you might not know about Christmas Vacation.
This story was originally published on Tuesday, Dec. 1, 2020 at 1:55 p.m. PT.