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Few holiday movies capture the chaos of Thanksgiving travel like Planes, Trains and Automobiles — Steve Martin as uptight Neal Page, John Candy as lovable, chatty Del Griffith, and a cross-country journey stuffed with airport lines, rental car catastrophes, broken trains, burned cars, and the very best ’80s travel frustration.
But imagine this movie unfolding today—in a world where:
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Social media documents everything
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Uber and Lyft have replaced half the taxi industry
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Airlines send delay alerts to your smartwatch
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AI predicts flight cancellations
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Self-driving cars pick you up without a human behind the wheel
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And nobody travels without Google Maps, TripIt, or at least five group chats for moral support
Suddenly, Neal and Del’s misadventures look less like a disaster and more like a high-tech, algorithmically optimized Thanksgiving road trip.
Let’s revisit the film—38 years later—and laugh at how wildly different things would be in 2025.
1. Flight Delayed? In 1987: Panic. In 2025: Your Phone Knew Two Hours Ago
In the original movie, Neal discovers his flight is delayed the same way everyone did in 1981987—by staring hopelessly at an airport monitor with three working pixels.
Today?
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AI-powered systems predict delays before the airline even announces them.
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Travel apps send you route alternatives instantly.
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Social media erupts with “ORD meltdown ????????????” posts.
Neal would have known the storm was coming before he even left his office. His phone would have warned him:
“Your flight is now likely to be canceled. Alternate routes available.”
Instead of sprinting through O’Hare, he might’ve simply rebooked from his Uber.
2. The Taxi Fiasco? Today It’s “Your Uber Is 2 Minutes Away”
One of the film’s most iconic scenes: Neal fights with a New York cab driver for a taxi that Del accidentally stole first.
In 2025, they’d both be staring at their phones, watching two tiny cars inch toward them on a map.
Even better?
They might’ve ended up in the same UberPool, awkwardly sitting side by side while the algorithm tries to be helpful:
UberPool shared ride detected. Estimated savings: $8.57.
Comedy gold.
And much safer than getting punched into the side of a car.
3. No More Lost Rental Cars—Just “Your Vehicle Is in Row 42B”
In the movie, Neal wanders across a frozen parking lot looking for a rental car that doesn’t exist… and delivers one of the greatest PG-13 meltdowns ever filmed.
With today’s tech?
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No shuttle needed—cars drive themselves to the terminal for pickup.
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If there was a problem, the app would show a big “No car assigned” flag instantly.
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And customer service AI bots would offer him a voucher before he said a word.
Neal would still be mad…
but at least a chatbot would apologize to him in real time (“I’m sorry you feel this way, Neal.”)
4. Instead of Setting a Car on Fire, You Just Call Roadside Assistance
The flaming rental car is a top-five comedy moment in the film.
But cars in 2025 are smarter:
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They detect engine failure
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They self-report crashes
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They send diagnostics to your phone
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And they politely refuse to function before something catastrophic happens
The only way Neal and Del could set a car ablaze today is if they asked an AI image generator to produce one.
5. Social Media Would Turn Their Trip Into a Viral Thanksgiving Saga
Imagine Thanksgiving TikTok in 2025 documenting this trip:
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Neal posting “Day 2 of trying to get home. Send help.”
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Del livestreaming from a bus station, cheerful as ever
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A trending hashtag: #FindNealAndDel
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Families following the journey like it’s a Hallmark miniseries
By the time they reach Chicago, millions would be rooting for them.
Airlines would DM them apology vouchers.
Some brand would sponsor their reunion.
Delta would film a commercial about resilience.
6. Self-Driving Cars Would Have Saved the Entire Third Act
Once the car rental fails, the train fails, and the bus fails, the duo hitch rides, walk, and crawl toward Chicago.
In 2025?
A self-driving car would show up, say nothing, and just take them across the Midwest in peace.
No arguments.
No misdirections.
No burned cars.
Just five hours of Neal trying not to fall asleep while Del hums show tunes.
Beautiful.
7. The Heart Still Matters—Technology Doesn’t Replace Connection
Despite the tech glow-up, the soul of Planes, Trains and Automobiles remains unchanged:
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Two strangers learning about each other
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Compassion beating frustration
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Friendship emerging from chaos
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And a surprising, emotional final twist reminding us that holidays are about people, not convenience
Technology could make the trip smoother, faster, or algorithmically optimized…
But it could never replace the emotional punch that John Candy brings to the final scenes.
Even in 2025, Neal and Del would still end the movie around the dinner table—phones put away, grateful for the unexpected friendship forged along the way.
And that’s the Thanksgiving message that never gets old.
Happy Thanksgiving from edCircuit
Paramount Movies – PLANES, TRAINS AND AUTOMOBILES | Official Trailer
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