The best Thora Birch’s family movies

Thora Birch

Thora Birch

11/03/1982 (42 años)
If you love cinema, you will share this ranking of the best Thora Birch’s movies, although you may have ordered them differently. In any case, we hope you love it and with a little luck discovering a movie that you still don’t know about Thora Birch.
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Hocus Pocus

Hocus Pocus
6.9/10
After 300 years of slumber, three sister witches are accidentally resurrected in Salem on Halloween night, and it is up to three kids and their newfound feline friend to put an end to the witches' reign of terror once and for all.

Monkey Trouble

Monkey Trouble
5.3/10
Dodger, a criminal monkey, belongs to a crooked street performer but escapes his life of crime only to end up in the arms of Eva, an innocent little girl whose mother has no idea that her daughter is harboring a fugitive.

Alaska

Alaska
5.7/10
Jake Barnes and his two kids, Sean and Jessie, have moved to Alaska after his wife died. He is a former airline pilot now delivering toilet paper across the mountains. During an emergency delivery in a storm his plane goes down somewhere in the mountains. Annoyed that the authorities aren't doing enough, Jessie and Sean set out on an adventure to find their father with the help of a polar bear which they have saved from a ferocious poacher. Conflict ensues.

All I Want for Christmas

All I Want for Christmas
5.9/10
Two New York City children who launch a hilarious scheme to get what they most want this holiday season.

Paradise

Paradise
6.6/10
  • Genre: DramaFamily
  • Release: 18/09/1991
  • Character: Billie Pike
A 10-year-old boy spends a summer in the country with a childless couple and a precocious girl.

Hocus Pocus 25th Anniversary Halloween Bash

Hocus Pocus 25th Anniversary Halloween Bash
6.5/10
Join us for a night of celebration, packed with celebrity guests and Hocus Pocus throwbacks, at the Hollywood Forever Cemetery.

Purple People Eater

Purple People Eater
4.5/10
A kid plays the old novelty song "Purple People Eater" and the creature actually appears. The two then proceed to help an elderly couple who are being evicted by their greedy landlord.

The Dot

The Dot
7.7/10
Art class is over, but Vashti is sitting glued to her chair in front of a blank piece of paper. The words of her teacher are a gentle invitation to express herself. But Vashti can’t draw - she’s no artist. To prove her point, Vashti jabs at a blank sheet of paper to make an unremarkable and angry mark. "There!" she says. That one little dot marks the beginning of Vashti’s journey of surprise and self-discovery. That special moment is the core of Peter H. Reynolds’s delicate fable about the creative spirit in all of us.

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