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| Jingle All the Way | |
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| Directed by | Brian Levant |
| Produced by | Chris Columbus Michael Barnathan Mark Radcliffe |
| Written by | Randy Kornfield |
| Starring | Arnold Schwarzenegger Sinbad Phil Hartman Rita Wilson Robert Conrad and Jim Belushi |
| Music by | Brian Setzer David Newman |
| Distributed by | 20th Century Fox |
| Release date(s) | November 22, 1996 |
| Running time | 103 min. |
| Country | |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $60,000,000 |
| IMDb profile | |
Jingle All the Way is a 1996 family comedy film directed by Brian Levant and starring Arnold Schwarzenegger and Sinbad. The name is taken from a line in the Christmas song "Jingle Bells".
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Howard Langston (Arnold Schwarzenegger) is often busy at his job, and has a hard time finding time for his wife, Liz (Rita Wilson) and his young son, Jamie (Jake Lloyd)- especially when compared to next door superdad divorcé, Ted Maltin (Phil Hartman). After breaking his word again by missing Jamie's karate match, Howard resolves to redeem himself and his marriage by fulfilling Jamie's ultimate Christmas wish, a Turbo-Man action figure.
Unbeknownst to Howard, Turbo-Man toys are the must-have gifts of the season, and stocks of Turbo-Man toys are quickly drying up all over the country. Desperate not to disappoint his family again, Howard embarks on an epic city-wide quest to find the toy everyone's looking for. Along the way, Howard encounters Myron Larabee (Sinbad), a postal worker dad with a rival ambition.
The search climaxes with both dads masquerading as live action stuntmen in a department store parade. Posed as the "real" Turbo-Man, Howard uses the opportunity to present a coveted Turbo-Man doll to his son in the crowd. But before he can recognize his dad, Jaime is chased around the parade by Myron (dressed as Turbo-Man's enemy, Dementor) and ultimately saved by Turbo-Man, who reveals himself as his father.
Touched by Myron's undying dedication to his own son, Jamie relinquishes the doll to him and confesses that his dad is the only superhero he needs. In the final scene, Howard happily opens presents with Jamie until he realizes that he forgot to get Liz a gift.
Despite being lambasted by critics[1], Jingle All the Way recouped its $60 million budget and went on to gross $130 million worldwide.[2]