Vegas Vacation

This time the Griswolds are on a roll.

6.0
19971h 33m

The Griswold family hits the road again for a typically ill-fated vacation, this time to the glitzy mecca of slots and showgirls—Las Vegas.

Production

Logo for Jerry Weintraub Productions
Logo for Warner Bros. Pictures

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Trailer

Trailer

Cast

Photo of Chevy Chase

Chevy Chase

Clark Griswold

Photo of Beverly D'Angelo

Beverly D'Angelo

Ellen Griswold

Photo of Randy Quaid

Randy Quaid

Cousin Eddie

Photo of Ethan Embry

Ethan Embry

Rusty Griswold

Photo of Marisol Nichols

Marisol Nichols

Audrey Griswold

Photo of Miriam Flynn

Miriam Flynn

Cousin Catherine

Photo of Shae D'Lyn

Shae D'Lyn

Cousin Vicki

Photo of Wayne Newton

Wayne Newton

Wayne Newton

Photo of Sid Caesar

Sid Caesar

Mr. Ellis

Photo of Julia Sweeney

Julia Sweeney

Mirage Reception Person

Photo of Corinna Harney

Corinna Harney

Girl at Blackjack Table

Photo of Christie Brinkley

Christie Brinkley

Woman in Ferrari

Photo of Juliette Brewer

Juliette Brewer

Cousin Ruby Sue

Photo of John Finnegan

John Finnegan

Hoover Dam Guide

Photo of Howard Platt

Howard Platt

Maitre'd

Photo of Maria Cina

Maria Cina

Mirage Cashier

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Reviews

S

SierraKiloBravo

6/10

My ten word review:

_Comedy that still holds up, even all these years later._

Click here for a video version of this review: https://youtu.be/QzlQnWap2-g

R

r96sk

7/10

'Vegas Vacation' is decent fare for this franchise, I think I just about enjoyed it. It does go through peaks and troughs, there are some uninteresting moments but by and large what I was viewing was passable entertainment. The Vegas setting and shenanigans keep it watchable, the dam scenes are good too.

Chevy Chase and Beverly D'Angelo are back yet again, as is Randy Quaid. I still don't really rate the latter's character all that much, pretty annoying in fact (and not in the intended sense); Chase's Clark is supposed to be the idiot here, so always feels odd to have an even bigger idiot.

The more sentimental conclusion doesn't totally land, at least in terms of how it's portrayed. It felt watching that it was attempting to be super sensitive about family and love for each other, but these aren't the sort of movies where that fits. The Griswolds are dysfunctional, not lovable or relatable.

Still, this is better than I thought it was going to be; especially with the disappearance of the National Lampoon name and the eight-year gap from the previous entry.

You've reached the end.