IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,4/10
3295
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuFollows estranged siblings Lindsay and Brad as they travel to Scotland at Christmas to reunite with their mother Jo.Follows estranged siblings Lindsay and Brad as they travel to Scotland at Christmas to reunite with their mother Jo.Follows estranged siblings Lindsay and Brad as they travel to Scotland at Christmas to reunite with their mother Jo.
Chris McHallem
- Angus Ryan
- (as Chris Mchallem)
Tiernan Messitt-Greene
- Charlie
- (as Tiernan Messitt Greene)
Eilidh Murray
- Young Josephine
- (as Eilidh Murphy)
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This is a Hallmark movie and follows the general formula, and is good clean entertainment with actors we enjoy seeing. It is set in Scotland but apparently was mostly filmed in Ireland, and maybe that is why in one scene a pint of Guinness is ordered at the bar.
Lacey Chabert is Dr. Lindsay Morgan with a thriving medical practice. Scott Wolf is her older brother Brad Morgan, he is a thriving tax attorney. They live in different California cities, they were very close as children growing up but had become somewhat estranged as adults. Mending that gap is part of the overall story here.
It is the Christmas holidays and their mother has requested they fit in a trip to visit her in Scotland. She was from there originally but at age 20 had left and moved to the States, married an American, and raised her family there. Both Lindsay and Brad are making the trip somewhat reluctantly, both are very busy.
But it turns out the trip is very important, their uncle, the Duke, had recently died and the disposition of the castle and the vast land holdings are at issue. Will they have it split up and sold, or will Lindsay and Brad (and his wife) decide they are Scottish enough that they can move and live there?
My wife and I found this to be a nicely entertaining movie. A big bonus for me, at exactly the half-way mark of the movie is a large group whisky tasting and, even though it is a fictional movie, brought a certain warmth to my heart.
At home, streaming.
Lacey Chabert is Dr. Lindsay Morgan with a thriving medical practice. Scott Wolf is her older brother Brad Morgan, he is a thriving tax attorney. They live in different California cities, they were very close as children growing up but had become somewhat estranged as adults. Mending that gap is part of the overall story here.
It is the Christmas holidays and their mother has requested they fit in a trip to visit her in Scotland. She was from there originally but at age 20 had left and moved to the States, married an American, and raised her family there. Both Lindsay and Brad are making the trip somewhat reluctantly, both are very busy.
But it turns out the trip is very important, their uncle, the Duke, had recently died and the disposition of the castle and the vast land holdings are at issue. Will they have it split up and sold, or will Lindsay and Brad (and his wife) decide they are Scottish enough that they can move and live there?
My wife and I found this to be a nicely entertaining movie. A big bonus for me, at exactly the half-way mark of the movie is a large group whisky tasting and, even though it is a fictional movie, brought a certain warmth to my heart.
At home, streaming.
The last Lacy Chabert movie we really liked was Christmas in Rome, and this one didn't live up to that standard.
The main draw of this movie was the Scottish setting. Once the main group of characters arrive, the mother tells her son and daughter she was in line to be the Duchess, but didn't want the lifestyle control that went with the title and sticking with her family.
The "sort of" outrage shown by the son and daughter didn't ring true for us. It seems manufactured to put some tension in the story, but it was pretty much the only tension in the story.
From there on, we saw charming scenes of local life and traditions, but they didn't interest us enough to wish to watch this again, and the movie trundled on to its entirely predictable ending.
The main draw of this movie was the Scottish setting. Once the main group of characters arrive, the mother tells her son and daughter she was in line to be the Duchess, but didn't want the lifestyle control that went with the title and sticking with her family.
The "sort of" outrage shown by the son and daughter didn't ring true for us. It seems manufactured to put some tension in the story, but it was pretty much the only tension in the story.
From there on, we saw charming scenes of local life and traditions, but they didn't interest us enough to wish to watch this again, and the movie trundled on to its entirely predictable ending.
The reunion of the Party of Five stars Lacey Chabert and Scott Wolf will attract the attention of many. They play estranged brother and sister Lindsay and Brad. They each went separate ways at adulthood and that left resentment. That resentment gets lip service for a while but the two quickly act far friendlier toward each other than the backstory would imply. But the big story in the plot is that their mom, also estranged from them, is heir of a duke.
Lindsay meets Mac, the estate manager, and they begin developing a romance, but that plot thread is secondary to the family reconciliation and their dealing with issues related to their inheritance.
The acting is mostly OK, but somehow I didn't feel it much from Scott Wolf. I think I was put off by his over enthusiasm which could have been overacting. The dialogue was also OK with some funny moments. We saw a bit of Scottish scenery and traditions.
There were no great highs or lows or surprises. The tension was all relational and didn't involve any threats to body or livelihood.
One mystery to me was Mac's brother-in-law. The actor looked familiar but I couldn't place him.
Lindsay meets Mac, the estate manager, and they begin developing a romance, but that plot thread is secondary to the family reconciliation and their dealing with issues related to their inheritance.
The acting is mostly OK, but somehow I didn't feel it much from Scott Wolf. I think I was put off by his over enthusiasm which could have been overacting. The dialogue was also OK with some funny moments. We saw a bit of Scottish scenery and traditions.
There were no great highs or lows or surprises. The tension was all relational and didn't involve any threats to body or livelihood.
One mystery to me was Mac's brother-in-law. The actor looked familiar but I couldn't place him.
I have nothing but nice things to say about this Hallmark holiday film. I am loving these excursions into foreign locales and the sharing of other culture's holiday traditions...and this is no exception. In this film we travel to Scotland for a Christmas with siblings Brad and Lindsay.
They arrive at the fictional Glenncraig, or the lovely and very real Duns Castle which was used in the filming, at their mother's invitation. What they don't know is their mother was meant to be the Duchess there as first born and Lady Josephine. A role that she ran away from to go to America where she became Brad and Lindsay's mother. Her brother, Danny, became the Duke in her absence. Unfortunately, Duke Daniel has recently passed away, leaving the castle and estate to his absent sister and potentially Brad and Lindsay.
It was fun seeing some Scottish Christmas traditions with the bonfire to celebrate the Christmas solstice, the Shetland ponies, the banquet and ball...The dancing, the kilts, the Scotch.
"An enchanting time and place, the romance, the history, the moors, Glenncraig is straight out of a fairytale at Christmas time."-Mac
This was a story about family and home. I thought it was a beautiful touch to use Michael Buble's song "Home" at a key point towards the end. It was fun to see the reunion of two Party of Five members, reunited as siblings again. The real revelation however is the Scottish actor James Robinson, who played the castle estate manager Mac Bell. Perfect for the role of a romantic lead, he is handsome and his Scottish burr really added a note of authenticity to the film (along with the proper Scottish pronunciations!). Kellie Blaise was also a nice addition to the cast as Sarah Morgan, Brad's wife. What lovely hair she has. Gerry O'Brien, was perfect as the voice of reason Graeme Stewart. The surprise appearance by Will Kemp for a dance with Lacy Chabert, was fun especially in light of their co-starring in Hallmark's Dancing Detective series.
This is a film I would recommend to anyone who likes to armchair travel and who is a fan of Christmas and family. (Also I might recommend this to Party of Five fans who might get a kick out of the Scott Wolf-Lacey Chabert reunion.)
They arrive at the fictional Glenncraig, or the lovely and very real Duns Castle which was used in the filming, at their mother's invitation. What they don't know is their mother was meant to be the Duchess there as first born and Lady Josephine. A role that she ran away from to go to America where she became Brad and Lindsay's mother. Her brother, Danny, became the Duke in her absence. Unfortunately, Duke Daniel has recently passed away, leaving the castle and estate to his absent sister and potentially Brad and Lindsay.
It was fun seeing some Scottish Christmas traditions with the bonfire to celebrate the Christmas solstice, the Shetland ponies, the banquet and ball...The dancing, the kilts, the Scotch.
"An enchanting time and place, the romance, the history, the moors, Glenncraig is straight out of a fairytale at Christmas time."-Mac
This was a story about family and home. I thought it was a beautiful touch to use Michael Buble's song "Home" at a key point towards the end. It was fun to see the reunion of two Party of Five members, reunited as siblings again. The real revelation however is the Scottish actor James Robinson, who played the castle estate manager Mac Bell. Perfect for the role of a romantic lead, he is handsome and his Scottish burr really added a note of authenticity to the film (along with the proper Scottish pronunciations!). Kellie Blaise was also a nice addition to the cast as Sarah Morgan, Brad's wife. What lovely hair she has. Gerry O'Brien, was perfect as the voice of reason Graeme Stewart. The surprise appearance by Will Kemp for a dance with Lacy Chabert, was fun especially in light of their co-starring in Hallmark's Dancing Detective series.
This is a film I would recommend to anyone who likes to armchair travel and who is a fan of Christmas and family. (Also I might recommend this to Party of Five fans who might get a kick out of the Scott Wolf-Lacey Chabert reunion.)
Just as well, for the 90's Party of Five addict in me, that Scott Wolf and Lacey Chabert played siblings - even if they are estranged at the start of the film. Couldn't have handled them playing a couple.
Speaking of PO5, the bar named Salinger's, owned by a guy called Charlie? Love that nod to the show that made Wolf and Chabert famous.
A Merry Scottish Christmas is much better than the last Hallmark movie where Chabert went to a castle (2021's forgettable 'Christmas at Castle Hart').
It is a Hallmark movie that doesn't feel like one. Aside from the unique setting, there is real family drama here, serious stuff that Hallmark movies usually don't touch with a ten-foot pole. (Well, the old version of Hallmark, anyway. The Crown network seems to be going to places it never did before with storylines, casts and romantic pairings. If that's them going woke, then I'm fine with it...)
Beautiful establishing shots, good acting all around, some very un Hallmark-like storylines (refreshingly so), plenty of Scottish flavour (music, language and Christmas traditions) and, for a change, a romance that wasn't the main focus of the film.
Oh, and a cool cameo from Chabert's romantic interest in the brilliant 2020 Hallmark classic 'The Christmas Waltz' on the same weekend as a sequel to that film airs on a rival network.
Speaking of PO5, the bar named Salinger's, owned by a guy called Charlie? Love that nod to the show that made Wolf and Chabert famous.
A Merry Scottish Christmas is much better than the last Hallmark movie where Chabert went to a castle (2021's forgettable 'Christmas at Castle Hart').
It is a Hallmark movie that doesn't feel like one. Aside from the unique setting, there is real family drama here, serious stuff that Hallmark movies usually don't touch with a ten-foot pole. (Well, the old version of Hallmark, anyway. The Crown network seems to be going to places it never did before with storylines, casts and romantic pairings. If that's them going woke, then I'm fine with it...)
Beautiful establishing shots, good acting all around, some very un Hallmark-like storylines (refreshingly so), plenty of Scottish flavour (music, language and Christmas traditions) and, for a change, a romance that wasn't the main focus of the film.
Oh, and a cool cameo from Chabert's romantic interest in the brilliant 2020 Hallmark classic 'The Christmas Waltz' on the same weekend as a sequel to that film airs on a rival network.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThe Scottish castle at the center of the movie is actually in Ireland.
- PatzerDuring the tour, Hamish says the castle dates back to the 14th century, but then two minutes later he says the castle was built in 1491 (which is the 15th century).
- VerbindungenReferences Downton Abbey (2010)
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By what name was A Merry Scottish Christmas (2023) officially released in India in English?
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