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Though it has been a long while since the end of the war, and everyone must keep living peacefully in peace and harmony, things seem to be quite different for Danny and Sandy. They are an unlikely pair of friends who have lived near each other all their lives. But this is where everything changes when Stephen King's classic horror film "IT" appears on Danny's doorstep one evening asking him to come back to Derry because something bad has happened. "IT" quickly becomes part of the family as old secrets are told and new ones begin to manifest themselves slowly before his eyes, bringing with them both frightful visions and unfathomable truths. But that is not the only problem that the Losers' Club will have to face. A new foe shows up in town, an evil force born of an unknown dimension which feeds on fear known as It. The horror will be unleashed in the form of a clown called Pennywise who is about to surface and lead his circus troupe to terrorize the children of Derry once again. "Home Alone 4" was released on September 12, 2002 in 3,212 theaters across America and Canada with $17 million opening weekend gross panning #1 at box office over "The Rookie", "Lethal Weapon 4", and "Deep Blue Sea". During its sixth weekend it made $4. 6 million, bringing the total to $100 million. "Home Alone 4" is also the highest grossing film in the Home Alone series. It netted $173 million domestically and $111.6 million internationally for a world wide total of $284.6 million, making it the tenth top-grossing film of 2002. The original "Home Alone" became the most rented video in America with over two billion rentals by June 15, 1996 - topping even "Toy Story" at 1.3 billion rentals. The sequel "Home Alone 2: Lost in New York", sold only 603 million copies by November 1996, but remained in second place behind "Titanic", which sold 615 million copies at that time. The three original "Home Alone" films were released theatrically by 20th Century Fox, but today they are distributed by 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment (formerly known as Tristar Pictures). When the fourth installment was released, Fox decided not to release it theatrically. This decision made the film ineligible for Academy Award consideration. The film was subsequently released on videotape and DVD with an edited version of the theatrical trailer playing at the beginning of the tape. The film received mixed to negative reviews, with Rotten Tomatoes giving it a score of 36%. The site's critical consensus reads: Critics also felt that Tim Allen was miscast as Peter Thorpe. "Variety" gave it a negative review, saying "The raunchy sequel, which he wrote and directed, is pretty hideous; the one-joke gore-fest should be left to wannabe horror filmmakers." Based on 50 reviews collected by Metacritic, tied with "Rock Star" and "Murder 4", it has a score of 46%. However, Quentin Tarantino defended the film in 2009: "It's a good movie. It's not perfect. cfa1e77820
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