Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueMe and Luke is a family story about a young father and his newborn son. Matt, who is nineteen, goes to the hospital to see his baby. At the hospital, he discovers, his young girlfriend has a... Tout lireMe and Luke is a family story about a young father and his newborn son. Matt, who is nineteen, goes to the hospital to see his baby. At the hospital, he discovers, his young girlfriend has already made arrangements for a couple to the adopt their baby boy. Matt has no family and ... Tout lireMe and Luke is a family story about a young father and his newborn son. Matt, who is nineteen, goes to the hospital to see his baby. At the hospital, he discovers, his young girlfriend has already made arrangements for a couple to the adopt their baby boy. Matt has no family and when he sees Luke for the first time, like fathers everywhere, he falls in love with him. ... Tout lire
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 1 victoire et 1 nomination au total
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I posted on comment on YouTube that I found the movie to be an absolutley beautiful movie. I grew up in a house that I did not feel love. I lived in fear of my father; he passed away in 2014 and to this day I do not feel guilty at all that he is gone and I didn't spend much time with him.
For me this movie was so emotionally uplifting, makes me happy to think that there are fathers out there that truly love their children and do whatever it takes to make sure that their children has a good solid upbringing.
"A Dad for Christmas" is based on the young adult novel "Me and Luke" (1987), by Audrey O'Hearn. The adaptation, by Alan Hines, is very well done. He and director Eleanor Lindo take a distinct character and make him suitable for a TV Movie screen – and for the lead actor, who is believable despite being older and more instantly employable than the scruffy 17-year-old in the book. Lucky to have a good production team, Turner is consistently sincere. Led by a lovely late-career role for Louise Fletcher (as Glennie), the supporting cast does well. This may not be how events often happen in reality, but it's how they could. Babies should start lives with fathers who want them as much as we see here.
****** A Dad for Christmas (12/3/06) Eleanor Lindo ~ Kristopher Turner, Louise Fletcher, Jack Shepherd, Lindsay Ames
Matt, a 19-year-old student, goes to the hospital to see his newborn son. He learns his girlfriend plans to put the baby up for adoption without his consent, so he takes his son to his grandmother's house to fight for custody. Keep in mind this wasn't really a "Christmas Movie".
This film shows us "IT'S OKAY TO KIDNAP" a child. He did not have legal custody. The film is cast with capable actors but the actors are not given a screenplay worthy of their talents. If you looking to watch a Christmas theme film then this isn't the movie for you. In fact this film should be shown in film classes on why TV-movies are bad.
Like must TV-movies this one is terrible.
Well-crafted family dynamics focus on the lives of a newborn baby Luke and his young parents. Each main character shines sufficiently to make their motivations clear. Matt Bessing (Kristopher Turner) is the young 19 year-old student father. However, Megan Eubanks (Emma Taylor-Isherwood), the mother, decides college and career is her destiny, not the newborn whom she alone now chooses to give away for adoption. People's lives forever change, and Pam (Lindsay Ames, of Metropia; Gossip; and The Vow) steps into Matt's life. She too has mapped out her own future, away from the small American town where the events unfurl. Louise Fletcher and Jack Shepherd feature as doting grandparents Glennie and Bert (a retired attorney who warmly gives Matt encouragement to do the right thing) amidst a major legal problem concerning Luke's custody.
There are no fireworks, just healthy family interplay – of the kind often missing in busy modern life – though the film's only rogue, Benson, has other devious ideas. Under Eleanor Lindo's directorship warmth wins the day without allowing the film to nosedive into unnecessary cheesy schmaltz. Lindo's entire directorial career is in TV movie-making. Consequently, the situation and characters are always believable and draw you right in. Both titles are somewhat misleading, as the film would be better called 'Pass the Baby' and Christmas is incidental.
Begins well, develops at a steady pace, ends suitably, and makes a worthwhile watch.
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- A Dad for Christmas
- Lieux de tournage
- Bracebridge, Ontario, Canada(small town setting)
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée1 heure 30 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.33 : 1