Macaulay Culkin, the actor whose resourceful young hero Kevin McCallister became a Christmas film icon in the original “Home Alone” movies, has sent shockwaves through the pop culture landscape by expressing his willingness to return to the beloved franchise.

Decades after the first film premiered, the star confirmed that he is not only open to reprising the role that made him famous but has also thought of a modern plot for a potential sequel, immediately fueling fan excitement and speculation about what an adult Kevin’s new, and likely trap-filled, predicament might look like.

The New Face of ‘Home Alone’: Macaulay Culkin Reveals Sequel Pitch

The long-standing fan hope for Macaulay Culkin’s return to the role of Kevin McCallister just moved from fantasy to near-reality. As reported by Variety, the star of the original “Home Alone” films confirmed at a recent stop on his “A Nostalgic Night with Macaulay Culkin” tour that he is not entirely “allergic” to the idea of a sequel.

While Culkin stressed that any potential project “would have to be just right” to earn his participation, he didn’t leave the possibility vague: he immediately unveiled a full, emotionally resonant concept that could successfully bring the beloved franchise back for a new generation.

Culkin’s pitch features a brilliant twist on the classic formula: the tables are turned on the original architect of domestic chaos. The actor envisions his character as an adult dealing with family troubles, explaining, “I’m either a widower or a divorcee. I’m raising a kid and all that stuff.” He said the central conflict sees Kevin preoccupied with work and neglecting his child, leading to a delightful inversion of the 1990 film where the adult Kevin is the one locked out. “I get locked out. [Kevin’s son] won’t let me in… and he’s the one setting traps for me,” Culkin clarified. Instead of Wet Bandits, the adult McCallister must contend with a family member utilizing his own childhood methods in a high-stakes holiday lockout.

However, the idea goes deeper than simple nostalgic role reversal. Culkin explained that the familiar house, which serves as the physical setting for this domestic skirmish, is actually a metaphor for their relationship. The actor clarified that Kevin’s struggle to re-enter his home is symbolic of his need to “get let back into [his] son’s heart.” This emotional underpinning suggests a narrative maturity that Hollywood often misses in reboots. With the original star having provided a solid, workable “elevator pitch” that combines comedy and heart, the window for a legitimate “Home Alone” sequel is now officially wide open.