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A Very Brady Christmas 1988

Nearly two decades after the original Brady Bunch began, the children are adults with families of their own. They reunite at the family home for a Christmas, but Mike discovers a structural flaw in a building he designed. While inspecting, the building collapses, trapping him under the rubble. The family watches, fearing the worst as they await news of Dad’s fate.

Nearly two decades after the original Brady Bunch began, the children are adults with families of their own. They reunite at the family home for a Christmas, but Mike discovers a structural flaw in a building he designed. While inspecting, the building collapses, trapping him under the rubble. The family watches, fearing the worst as they await news of Dad’s fate.

Does A Very Brady Christmas have end credit scenes?

No!

A Very Brady Christmas does not have end credit scenes. You can leave when the credits roll.

Full Plot Summary and Ending Explained for A Very Brady Christmas

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Read the complete plot summary of A Very Brady Christmas, including all major events, twists, and the full ending explained in detail. Explore key characters, themes, hidden meanings, and everything you need to understand the story from beginning to end.


Mike Brady [Robert Reed] and Carol Brady [Florence Henderson] have a savings account, each hoping to surprise the other with a dream trip—Carol longs for Greece, while Mike imagines Japan. When the planbacks collide, they pivot to a bigger goal: using the money to reunite the entire family for Christmas by buying airline tickets for their children, grandchildren, and in-laws. What starts as a simple holiday gesture becomes a test of family ties, finances, and the willingness to open up about personal struggles.

The Brady kids each face their own crossroads as Christmas approaches. Greg [Barry Williams] faces relationship strain, with Nora [Caryn Richman] spending Christmas with her own family and leaving Greg’s homecoming uncertain. Peter [Christopher Knight] is entangled with his boss Valerie [Carol Huston], and the mismatch between his affection and his modest position at work erodes his confidence. Bobby [Mike Lookinland] has chosen a daring path by leaving graduate school to chase NASCAR dreams, a bold move that his parents have yet to fully understand. Marcia [Maureen McCormick], dealing with the stress of her husband Wally [Jerry Houser] having been fired from a toy company, watches the holiday season through a lens of shifting priorities. Jan [Eve Plumb] faces a rough patch in her marriage to Phillip Covington III [Ron Kuhlman], while Cindy [Jennifer Runyon], the youngest, pushes for independence, masking deeper college pressures with a staged struggle she hopes will be resolved by a ski trip to Aspen with roommates.

Even Alice Nelson [Ann B. Davis], the long-time housekeeper, wrestles with her own heartbreak as her husband Sam has left her for another woman. In the face of these unfolding personal trials, the family makes a concerted effort to be present for one another, and Mike and Carol begin to see how small gestures can have a larger impact when a family pulls together.

As each child wrestles with their issues, the Bradys find ways to support them. Jan mends her relationship with Phillip, Bobby finally shares the NASCAR reality with the family, and Wally secures a new job at a toy company, prompted by the broader support system around him. Nora arrives with a surprise for Greg, but the dinner scene is interrupted by a troubling turn: a ruthless businessman for whom Mike once designed a building has cut corners, triggering a collapse that traps two security guards inside.

Mike acts with calm resolve, freeing the trapped workers, only to be crushed by an aftershock that leaves him buried in rubble. The tension of the moment drives the family to rally, and the sound of their voices lifts the house. Carol leads a chorus of affirmation as the family sings O Come, All Ye Faithful, a direct nod to Carol’s past on the show and a turning point that ushers in renewed hope. Back home, the mood shifts again when a Santa Claus arrives at the door, revealing Sam [Lewis Arquette] in disguise, seeking forgiveness and reconciliation with Alice.

The reunion at the dinner table brings forgiveness, and the gathering ends with warmth rather than discord. The family invites Sam to stay for dinner, and the house fills with music and gratitude as they close the holiday with a shared chorus of We Wish You a Merry Christmas. Through a series of honest conversations, reconciliations, and acts of care, the Bradys discover that the true gift of Christmas is the chance to support one another, even when life’s pressures push against the cheer they fight to keep alive.

The film interweaves humor, tenderness, and a sense of nostalgia, anchored by the enduring dynamic of a blended, imperfect family that remains bound by affection. It centers on the idea that the holiday season can bring both resolution and new beginnings, and it situates these personal reckonings within the warmth of a family that continues to grow, adapt, and forgive.

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A Very Brady Christmas Themes and Keywords

Discover the central themes, ideas, and keywords that define the movie’s story, tone, and message. Analyze the film’s deeper meanings, genre influences, and recurring concepts.


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