| Errors | Missing | Unverified | Supported |
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| 1 | 0 | 0 | 4 |
The plot of Home Alone (1990) is set in motion by a "perfect storm" of interconnected events that occur the evening before and the morning of the McCallister family’s departure for Paris. The following specific actions are the primary catalysts:
The conflict begins the night before the trip when Kevin gets into a physical altercation with his older brother, Buzz. Buzz purposefully eats the last of the plain cheese pizza (the only kind Kevin likes) and taunts him. Kevin tackles Buzz, causing a chain reaction that spills milk and soda all over the table, soaking the family’s passports and plane tickets.
While Kevin’s father, Peter, is using red napkins to clean up the spilled milk from the table, he accidentally scoops up Kevin’s plane ticket along with the wet trash and throws it into the bin.
During the night, a severe thunderstorm causes a tree limb to fall on a power line, leading to a temporary power outage. This resets all the digital alarm clocks in the house.
While the family is frantically loading into two rental vans, Kevin’s cousin, Heather, is tasked with performing a headcount. A neighborhood kid, Mitch Murphy, has wandered over to the vans to talk to the McCallister children about the trip.
The family is split into two separate vans. Because of the odd number of travelers (15 family members plus two others), each van has a different number of passengers.
By the time Kevin wakes up in the attic, the house is empty, the power is back on, and his family is already boarding a flight to Paris. Because of his earlier wish, Kevin initially believes he has successfully "wished" his family away.
No oversights detected.
The plot is set in motion by a sequence of mishaps: a fight over pizza leads to spilled milk, during which Kevin's father accidentally throws Kevin's plane ticket in the trash. A storm causes a power outage that resets the alarm clocks, making the family oversleep. In the rush to the airport, a neighbor named Mitch Murphy is mistaken for Kevin during a headcount, and the family splits into two vans, with each group assuming Kevin is in the other.