Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaValerie Warrick and a dashing veteran need to track down the enigmatic owner of her family's land in order to preserve her family's legacy.Valerie Warrick and a dashing veteran need to track down the enigmatic owner of her family's land in order to preserve her family's legacy.Valerie Warrick and a dashing veteran need to track down the enigmatic owner of her family's land in order to preserve her family's legacy.
Daniella Dela Peña
- Kristi
- (as Daniella Peña)
Avaliações em destaque
Christmas in Maple Hills starts out as another save the farm movie, but quickly turns into a search for family roots, and then a love story within a love story.
When a farm girl goes to the bank to fund an expansion to her business, it is discovered that her farm is not in her family's name, but a mysterious organization no one has ever heard of. The search is on, assisted by the doctor who has designs on our lovely farm girl.
Flashbacks reveal a WWII romance involving her grandmother, and the mystery continually deepens.
Emily Alatalo and Marcus Rosner do a nice job as farm girl and doctor, but gorgeous Amanda Jordan, with her amazing blue eyes, and Adrian Spencer as a soldier she encounters are perhaps the real hilight of the movie.
I'm a sucker for 40's and WWII era nostalgia, so I really like this kind of movie and I'm happy to say it was quite well-done.
The nurse was particularly appealing as the best friend who always has a sparkle in her eye.
Nicely done.
When a farm girl goes to the bank to fund an expansion to her business, it is discovered that her farm is not in her family's name, but a mysterious organization no one has ever heard of. The search is on, assisted by the doctor who has designs on our lovely farm girl.
Flashbacks reveal a WWII romance involving her grandmother, and the mystery continually deepens.
Emily Alatalo and Marcus Rosner do a nice job as farm girl and doctor, but gorgeous Amanda Jordan, with her amazing blue eyes, and Adrian Spencer as a soldier she encounters are perhaps the real hilight of the movie.
I'm a sucker for 40's and WWII era nostalgia, so I really like this kind of movie and I'm happy to say it was quite well-done.
The nurse was particularly appealing as the best friend who always has a sparkle in her eye.
Nicely done.
7.6 stars.
A wonderfully nostalgic and memorable story of two interwoven romances spanning 80 years in the town of Maple Hills. It's an account of a family on the verge of losing their maple farm because the bank discovers the deed is not in their name. The true owner is a mysterious person who signed it sometime soon after WWII.
In the present day, a doctor and a young woman whose family runs the farm are falling in love. The mystery of the farm is occupying their time more than anticipated and soon becomes an impediment to the romance. In the past, we see her grandmother longing for a man to return from the war. He is not much more than a stranger to her, but she is in love with him and he with her. There are other men involved both in the past and present, and we are left trying to solve the mysteries of unrequited loves and how they all began. Who owns the farm, who will discover the identity of the stranger and the mystery deed owner?
First of all, there are way too many commercials, so this film must have a runtime of 80 minutes. That's fine, but with a story so rich with so much potential, more is better. Nevertheless, it's very easy to get lost in both the back story and the present one, both so fascinating, it's difficult to pick which is better.
It's a very intriguing mystery that keeps us guessing who, when, and where. Enjoy it for the excitement, the romance, or both, but either way this is two stories unconventionally rolled into one short film.
A wonderfully nostalgic and memorable story of two interwoven romances spanning 80 years in the town of Maple Hills. It's an account of a family on the verge of losing their maple farm because the bank discovers the deed is not in their name. The true owner is a mysterious person who signed it sometime soon after WWII.
In the present day, a doctor and a young woman whose family runs the farm are falling in love. The mystery of the farm is occupying their time more than anticipated and soon becomes an impediment to the romance. In the past, we see her grandmother longing for a man to return from the war. He is not much more than a stranger to her, but she is in love with him and he with her. There are other men involved both in the past and present, and we are left trying to solve the mysteries of unrequited loves and how they all began. Who owns the farm, who will discover the identity of the stranger and the mystery deed owner?
First of all, there are way too many commercials, so this film must have a runtime of 80 minutes. That's fine, but with a story so rich with so much potential, more is better. Nevertheless, it's very easy to get lost in both the back story and the present one, both so fascinating, it's difficult to pick which is better.
It's a very intriguing mystery that keeps us guessing who, when, and where. Enjoy it for the excitement, the romance, or both, but either way this is two stories unconventionally rolled into one short film.
This could have been a nice sentimental story that was more than the usual Hallmark Saturday night. Like some of their Christmas stories that involve a quest to uncover something from the past, it is a romance with a mystery attached. The mystery would be especially compelling as it involves Grandma and a mysterious relationship during World War II.
My first problem that I'll call a hole is that an unusually committed love affair is launched on basically one dance at a USO-like function where grandma is a hostess who admits she isn't supposed to get personal with the soldiers. From that beginning, the soldier writes her countless letters and she pines to receive them but some mix-up leaves him without her address and so apparently she never got them while he was gone. He is deployed several years. I don't want to give a spoiler, but let me just say that how this is resolved is equally spontaneous and hard to understand.
Meanwhile, the granddaughter Val and her newfound "friend" are searching for answers to a title issue for the ranch. How they proceed on the search is confusing. How and where they find clues is confusing. And where they find the biggest clues leave an obvious question - why did they wait to look there? The way it played in the movie, it seemed that there was no reason they couldn't have looked there first. In fact, it would have made more sense than at least one of the places they did look. It really was a disappointment.
There is a character Douglas who isn't really explained. All I can figure is that he is a red herring for the viewer.
The movie explores home, immediate family, ancestral family, love, and wanderlust.
The movie kept my attention because of the mystery, but my frustration level was high throughout because there were so many scenes that were hard to figure out. I wasn't particularly surprised by anything including the ending.
The acting was decent despite the story holes. There was chemistry between Marcus Rosner and the beautiful and winsome Emily Alatalo. There were many flashbacks as I alluded to above.
My first problem that I'll call a hole is that an unusually committed love affair is launched on basically one dance at a USO-like function where grandma is a hostess who admits she isn't supposed to get personal with the soldiers. From that beginning, the soldier writes her countless letters and she pines to receive them but some mix-up leaves him without her address and so apparently she never got them while he was gone. He is deployed several years. I don't want to give a spoiler, but let me just say that how this is resolved is equally spontaneous and hard to understand.
Meanwhile, the granddaughter Val and her newfound "friend" are searching for answers to a title issue for the ranch. How they proceed on the search is confusing. How and where they find clues is confusing. And where they find the biggest clues leave an obvious question - why did they wait to look there? The way it played in the movie, it seemed that there was no reason they couldn't have looked there first. In fact, it would have made more sense than at least one of the places they did look. It really was a disappointment.
There is a character Douglas who isn't really explained. All I can figure is that he is a red herring for the viewer.
The movie explores home, immediate family, ancestral family, love, and wanderlust.
The movie kept my attention because of the mystery, but my frustration level was high throughout because there were so many scenes that were hard to figure out. I wasn't particularly surprised by anything including the ending.
The acting was decent despite the story holes. There was chemistry between Marcus Rosner and the beautiful and winsome Emily Alatalo. There were many flashbacks as I alluded to above.
Ok, despite what I perceived as "professional" reviews preceding this one, I was very impressed with the real life message that probably went over the heads of the other reviewers.
My wife when she was in HS was given an assignment to interview her grandparents about the WW 2 era, she chose her grandfather.
As it turned out, her grandfather had been awarded the SILVER STAR for an action vs Natzi Germany over a bridge battle. He had never talked about anything form that war with any of his kids or relations. No one knew this had happened, he wanted nothing to do with that war
Whoever scripted this movie, was completely aware of this behavior in actual warfront vets, the entire movie revolves around this theme.
I was not overly impressed with the acting, there was very little if any actual farm activity with our hard working farmers. I'd give this thing maybe a 5 or 6, except that the central theme is so powerful, and so overlooked.
My wife when she was in HS was given an assignment to interview her grandparents about the WW 2 era, she chose her grandfather.
As it turned out, her grandfather had been awarded the SILVER STAR for an action vs Natzi Germany over a bridge battle. He had never talked about anything form that war with any of his kids or relations. No one knew this had happened, he wanted nothing to do with that war
Whoever scripted this movie, was completely aware of this behavior in actual warfront vets, the entire movie revolves around this theme.
I was not overly impressed with the acting, there was very little if any actual farm activity with our hard working farmers. I'd give this thing maybe a 5 or 6, except that the central theme is so powerful, and so overlooked.
This was my favorite Christmas movie of the 2023 season on the Great American Family network (and in my top 5 overall of the 2023 Christmas movies on both Great American Family and Hallmark). It was not your typical predictable GAF/Hallmark Chritsmas movie. It had much more to the plot and I really enjoyed the storyline solving the mystery of the lead character's grandmother's love story via flashbacks to the WWII era. There was good chemistry between the actors in both the modern day timeline as well as the historical timeline of the grandparents. Each year there are only a few movies I would rewatch the following Christmas season and this movie will be one of them.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesChristmas in Maple Hills (2023) is a Canadian-United States holiday romance written by Jennifer Snow, and directed by Marco Deufemia. It stars Emily Alatalo, Marcus Rosner, and Amanda Jordan.
- ConexõesReferences Duro de Matar (1988)
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- How long is Christmas in Maple Hills?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Tempo de duração1 hora 26 minutos
- Cor
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By what name was Christmas in Maple Hills (2023) officially released in India in English?
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