IMDb RATING
6.4/10
2.8K
YOUR RATING
A corporate agent is sent to a small town to buy a cookie company and shut down its factory. When she starts falling in love with the factory's owner, the town's Christmas spirit over takes ... Read allA corporate agent is sent to a small town to buy a cookie company and shut down its factory. When she starts falling in love with the factory's owner, the town's Christmas spirit over takes her.A corporate agent is sent to a small town to buy a cookie company and shut down its factory. When she starts falling in love with the factory's owner, the town's Christmas spirit over takes her.
Amélie Eve
- Bonnie
- (as Amélie Eve Folkers)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
This is, of course, "only" a Hallmark Channel Christmas movie - one among many.
But it's also one of the most charming ones I've seen. Jill Wagner is a revelation, and completely engaging as Hannah Harper, a New York executive sent to the town of Cookie Jar to close the sale of Aunt Sally's Christmas Cookie company to her large conglomerate. She must negotiate with the handsome nephew of the original owner, and sparks fly - it's a Hallmark movie, duh.
It will take oodles of cookies, lots of love, and a little bit of last-minute Christmas magic, but everything will be all right in the end.
A very sweet, tasty treat for Christmas 2016.
But it's also one of the most charming ones I've seen. Jill Wagner is a revelation, and completely engaging as Hannah Harper, a New York executive sent to the town of Cookie Jar to close the sale of Aunt Sally's Christmas Cookie company to her large conglomerate. She must negotiate with the handsome nephew of the original owner, and sparks fly - it's a Hallmark movie, duh.
It will take oodles of cookies, lots of love, and a little bit of last-minute Christmas magic, but everything will be all right in the end.
A very sweet, tasty treat for Christmas 2016.
It's definitely not your normal Hallmark Christmas movie but it was so well done. They had great chemistry together and Jill was absolutely amazing as she is in every movie because she is believable. She genuinely ask the character out like it's herself and she does an amazing job. Her movies never disappoint me
The local cookie company is about to be sold to a large conglomerate who send Hannah (Jill Wagner) to seal the deal. The magic of the town, along with some sparky dealings with current owner Jake (Wes Brown), make it increasingly difficult for Hannah to follow through with the assignment. Some really great interplay and performances which hit the spot, make for a movie worth returning to each holiday season.
I love this film and Jill Wagner! It's a heartwarming story that I look forward to year after year.
I bet most of us have a separate rating scale for the Hallmark/Lifetime Christmas romance genre. They are low budget, quantity over quality films, so best to enter with a generous mindset.
For me, the number one strength or dealbreaker is the 2 leads. If they can both act, neither is annoying and there's some chemistry-boom, that makes it a rare bird. I DVR and delete at least half these movies after watching 10-15 minutes because I know I can't take 90 minutes of one of the leads.
Jill Wagner and Wes Brown are as good as it gets, and their 'introduction' scene conveyed some real sparks of friction. Their getting-to-know-you meet-ups were convincing, fun and served the plot. The supporting cast was also good, with extra points for a real sense of family in the scenes with Jake's relatives, especially his cute niece.
My number two criteria is sense of place, given these movies are short on plotting and long on setting. Some of them have little or no real in-town scenes and no feel of a distinct place, even as the dialogue constantly refers to how special ________town is.
In Cookie Jar, (yes, Cookie Jar) the cafe anchors the town, the tobogganing scenes practically smelled like pine and mountain air and the sets for Christmas events were lovely and realistic. Again, better than the vast majority of these films.
I would've rated this higher except for two major weak points. First, the resolution felt very slapdash and unbelievable. Like a cringe-y afterthought. Second, the business-related details rang so false they were distracting. Who travels to a small town on behalf of a 'conglomerate' without a rental car? With no public transport to rely on. Who would go out, solo, to close a deal with a biz owner after zero communications between the two? With no legal representation and no authority to revise the deal? We didn't need much detail about the business end-we just needed some logic there.
For me, the number one strength or dealbreaker is the 2 leads. If they can both act, neither is annoying and there's some chemistry-boom, that makes it a rare bird. I DVR and delete at least half these movies after watching 10-15 minutes because I know I can't take 90 minutes of one of the leads.
Jill Wagner and Wes Brown are as good as it gets, and their 'introduction' scene conveyed some real sparks of friction. Their getting-to-know-you meet-ups were convincing, fun and served the plot. The supporting cast was also good, with extra points for a real sense of family in the scenes with Jake's relatives, especially his cute niece.
My number two criteria is sense of place, given these movies are short on plotting and long on setting. Some of them have little or no real in-town scenes and no feel of a distinct place, even as the dialogue constantly refers to how special ________town is.
In Cookie Jar, (yes, Cookie Jar) the cafe anchors the town, the tobogganing scenes practically smelled like pine and mountain air and the sets for Christmas events were lovely and realistic. Again, better than the vast majority of these films.
I would've rated this higher except for two major weak points. First, the resolution felt very slapdash and unbelievable. Like a cringe-y afterthought. Second, the business-related details rang so false they were distracting. Who travels to a small town on behalf of a 'conglomerate' without a rental car? With no public transport to rely on. Who would go out, solo, to close a deal with a biz owner after zero communications between the two? With no legal representation and no authority to revise the deal? We didn't need much detail about the business end-we just needed some logic there.
Did you know
- TriviaAired as the fourth of nineteen original films in The Hallmark Channel's 2018 "Countdown to Christmas" lineup.
- GoofsWhen the 3 are sledding Bonnie's gloves are black but when the camera angle is sledding down it has pink gloves holding onto the sled.
- SoundtracksWhat Christmas Means to Me
Performed by Stevie Wonder
Composed by Anna Gordy Gaye, George Gordy and Allen Story
Published by Sony ATV Music Publishing
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- Christmas Cookies
- Filming locations
- Squamish, British Columbia, Canada(Exterior)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
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