अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंNicole Borden, the owner of a quaint arts and crafts store "The Crafty Companion", is faced with an ultimatum when the owner of "Mitchell's Art and Craft Supplies" tells her she must either ... सभी पढ़ेंNicole Borden, the owner of a quaint arts and crafts store "The Crafty Companion", is faced with an ultimatum when the owner of "Mitchell's Art and Craft Supplies" tells her she must either sell her store or be forced out of business.Nicole Borden, the owner of a quaint arts and crafts store "The Crafty Companion", is faced with an ultimatum when the owner of "Mitchell's Art and Craft Supplies" tells her she must either sell her store or be forced out of business.
फ़ोटो
DonnaKelli Barnett
- Craft buyer
- (as DonnaKelli)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
I will find it difficult to fulfill the character requirement on this one. From the very start the phone conversation between Father and son was so cliched and the lead actress' acting was dreadful. She was just reading her lines with no commitment or true expression. The customers entering her store were even worse and within 5 minutes it felt like I was watching a high school play. I rarely review a film or series without seeing it through to the end but this one was impossible to watch and I generally love Hallmark movies.
It was the typical opening set-up with the son of a huge conglomerate being sent to a small town to promote their new store and tear down the competition. Won't be hard to guess what happens but with dialogue, direction and acting as bad as this, I won't be watching to find out.
It was the typical opening set-up with the son of a huge conglomerate being sent to a small town to promote their new store and tear down the competition. Won't be hard to guess what happens but with dialogue, direction and acting as bad as this, I won't be watching to find out.
Normally I put on a Hallmark or Great American Family movie at bedtime to help me fall asleep. This one actually kept me interested enough that I stayed awake to finish it. Hallmark and GAF have done a number of variations of the main theme of the 1998 Tom Hanks-Meg Ryan Rom-Com YOU'VE GOT MAIL which is itself a remake of the 1940 Jimmy Stewart-Margaret Sullavan movie THE SHOP AROUND THE CORNER: two business associates who can't stand each other are unaware that they are also anonymous pen-pals/email correspondents and falling in love with each other through that channel.
In YOU'VE GOT MAIL, Hanks and Ryan are business rivals, with Hanks a member of the family of a large nationwide bookstore chain (think Barnes & Noble) and Ryan the owner of a small bookstore in Manhattan she inherited from her mother and is struggling to keep afloat. As the newest store of Hanks's family is about to open and inevitably put Ryan's literally named "The Shop Around the Corner" out of business, the intensity of their mutual hatred crescendoes until Hanks learns his email correspondents true identity.
In CRAFT ME A ROMANCE, Jodie Sweetin plays Nicole, the manager and co-owner with her brother and the manager of a small Arts & Crafts store inherited from their parents, about to be eclipsed by a large nationwide craft supplies chain opening a new store around the corner. Alfred, owner of the chain, has repeatedly offered a generous buyout offer to Nicole as decades earlier her parents' store had caused a previous failure of their first attempt to open a store in that town decades earlier. Nicole refuses to even respond to the offer, so Alfred sends Matthew, his son and vice president, to deliver the offer in person. Matthew arrives to deliver the message, but before identifying himself he finds himself enamored of Nicole and enthralled by her presentation to a craft fair of her customers in the store. Without the additional plot element of anonymous correspondence of YOU'VE GOT MAIL,, this movie cuts to the chase of Matthew's conflict.
As I said in the review of another variant of the YOU'VE GOT MAIL theme, nothing wrong with that. Even with the mandatory formula for ANY Hallmark or GAF movie where you know within the first twenty minutes which two characters are going to be coupled up at the end and that the movie ends with a kiss. This is where the old metaphor kicks in that Life isn't a destination, it's a journey. We already know the destination is the kiss at the end, and we know that the YOU'VE GOT MAIL plot is the parameter of the journey. (I recognized it for the other movie I reviewed immediately just reading the program guide, but not for this one!) The trick is to deviate enough in the journey so that it's not totally predictable and stale and a rehash of the previous versions.
I don't know why other reviewers have a problem with Jodie Sweetin's acting; I suspect that they still see her as little Stephanie Tanner from FULL HOUSE and are frozen in time with that memory. She and Brent Bailey as Matthew have good chemistry together and it works. In all the years that Max Caulfield (Alfred) has been acting, there's only one role of his I'm familiar with, but it's my all time favorite movie, GETTYSBURG (1993) in which he plays real-life Union Colonel Strong Vincent who dies heroically in the eponymous battle. I was curious how he would come across as the only real "bad guy" in this movie. I won't spoil anything, but I was not disappointed.
In YOU'VE GOT MAIL, Hanks and Ryan are business rivals, with Hanks a member of the family of a large nationwide bookstore chain (think Barnes & Noble) and Ryan the owner of a small bookstore in Manhattan she inherited from her mother and is struggling to keep afloat. As the newest store of Hanks's family is about to open and inevitably put Ryan's literally named "The Shop Around the Corner" out of business, the intensity of their mutual hatred crescendoes until Hanks learns his email correspondents true identity.
In CRAFT ME A ROMANCE, Jodie Sweetin plays Nicole, the manager and co-owner with her brother and the manager of a small Arts & Crafts store inherited from their parents, about to be eclipsed by a large nationwide craft supplies chain opening a new store around the corner. Alfred, owner of the chain, has repeatedly offered a generous buyout offer to Nicole as decades earlier her parents' store had caused a previous failure of their first attempt to open a store in that town decades earlier. Nicole refuses to even respond to the offer, so Alfred sends Matthew, his son and vice president, to deliver the offer in person. Matthew arrives to deliver the message, but before identifying himself he finds himself enamored of Nicole and enthralled by her presentation to a craft fair of her customers in the store. Without the additional plot element of anonymous correspondence of YOU'VE GOT MAIL,, this movie cuts to the chase of Matthew's conflict.
As I said in the review of another variant of the YOU'VE GOT MAIL theme, nothing wrong with that. Even with the mandatory formula for ANY Hallmark or GAF movie where you know within the first twenty minutes which two characters are going to be coupled up at the end and that the movie ends with a kiss. This is where the old metaphor kicks in that Life isn't a destination, it's a journey. We already know the destination is the kiss at the end, and we know that the YOU'VE GOT MAIL plot is the parameter of the journey. (I recognized it for the other movie I reviewed immediately just reading the program guide, but not for this one!) The trick is to deviate enough in the journey so that it's not totally predictable and stale and a rehash of the previous versions.
I don't know why other reviewers have a problem with Jodie Sweetin's acting; I suspect that they still see her as little Stephanie Tanner from FULL HOUSE and are frozen in time with that memory. She and Brent Bailey as Matthew have good chemistry together and it works. In all the years that Max Caulfield (Alfred) has been acting, there's only one role of his I'm familiar with, but it's my all time favorite movie, GETTYSBURG (1993) in which he plays real-life Union Colonel Strong Vincent who dies heroically in the eponymous battle. I was curious how he would come across as the only real "bad guy" in this movie. I won't spoil anything, but I was not disappointed.
When I watch Hallmark movies I'm looking for a sweet escape. The acting is generally not A+ but as long as the overall story is sweet & engaging, I don't mind. Some parts were just that - others weren't at all. Jodie's love story was forced, Andrea's was adorable - if the movie were based around her it would have been so much better. 💕 Jodie's strength, in my opinion, is comedy. She lacks emotion. Andrea outshines Jodie in most heartfelt scenes - which is basically throughout the movie. I'm excited to follow Andrea's career. I hope it's as fruitful and long lasting. She deserves leading roles in these Hallmark type movies. She was made for it.
The story line was ok but was boring for the most part. The acting was terrible and Jodi Sweetin should stick to full house. GAC paid to much money to show this. It was more like a .99 movie dvd you find at the goodwill. Jodi needs to stick to tv because her acting skills are F-. After I watched this I googled the title to read reviews from other people. I noticed that Jodi Sweetin was angry this movie was sold to GAC. She should be grateful that it was sold. I hope GAC doesn't buy anymore of her movies because this movie was a waste of my time watching it. I know now I will not watch anymore of her movies they are like watching glue dry.
The acting and the story line is pretty cheesy, even for this genre of movie. I have watched almost all hallmark movies and when this channel split off some of the actors and actresses I was excited for new opportunities, but this movie - didn't do it. It almost seems like they are trying to pack too much into the movie. Sometimes it's okay to leave out information or lines and the story can still come across. It almost feels like they don't believe their story line can survive without spelling it out for us the viewers. If you want some background noise it's okay, but if you are wanting to watch it for the acting and story - I would skip it.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाLead actress for this film, Jodie Sweetin, stated to the press that she was disappointed to learn that this film had been sold to the network Great American Family for which Candace Cameron Bure chief creative officer. Sweetin, who starred alongside Bure in Full House (1987), told People Magazine: "I am disappointed, but in keeping with my mission of supporting the LGBTQ+ family, any potential or future money made from this sale will be donated to LGBTQ+ organizations."
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
- How long is Craft Me a Romance?Alexa द्वारा संचालित
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- चलने की अवधि1 घंटा 26 मिनट
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