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Andy's family has built Rose Parade floats for generations. When her Dad gets sick, Andy's forced to supervise the construction and decoration of their client's float and deal with a demandi... Read allAndy's family has built Rose Parade floats for generations. When her Dad gets sick, Andy's forced to supervise the construction and decoration of their client's float and deal with a demanding businessman whose company commissioned it.Andy's family has built Rose Parade floats for generations. When her Dad gets sick, Andy's forced to supervise the construction and decoration of their client's float and deal with a demanding businessman whose company commissioned it.
Willa Milner
- Christine
- (as Ali Milner)
Austin Anozie
- Eric
- (as Austin Obiajunwa)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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BEWARE OF BOGUS REVIEWS. SOME REVIEWERS HAVE ONLY ONE REVIEW. WHEN ITS A POSITIVE REVIEW THAT TELLS ME THEY WERE INVOLVED WITH THE PRODUCTION. IF ITS A NEGATIVE REVIEW THEN THEY MIGHT HAVE A GRUDGE AGAINST THAT PRODUCTION. NOW I HAVE REVIEWED OVER 200 Christmas MOVIES. I HAVE NO AGENDA. I AM FARE ABOUT THESE FILMS.
Andy is a passionate artist whose family has been building Rose Parade floats for generations. When her Dad gets sick, Andy is forced to take the helm and supervise the construction and decoration of their client's float. And to make matters worse, she's saddled with the extra challenge of dealing with a demanding businessman whose company commissioned the float. She learns they are not happy with her at all!
This was the last "Hallmark Christmas Movie for 2016". Even though it premiered in New Years Day 2017.
Now I about cringed when I saw Rachel Boston because I still have nightmares of seeing the film she did called "Holiday High School Reunion". Rachel however is a fine actress and brings her A Game Here. Now the plot is very predictable. It offers nothing exciting. What does work the best in this entire story is that you are rooting for the two leads to hookup
Andy is a passionate artist whose family has been building Rose Parade floats for generations. When her Dad gets sick, Andy is forced to take the helm and supervise the construction and decoration of their client's float. And to make matters worse, she's saddled with the extra challenge of dealing with a demanding businessman whose company commissioned the float. She learns they are not happy with her at all!
This was the last "Hallmark Christmas Movie for 2016". Even though it premiered in New Years Day 2017.
Now I about cringed when I saw Rachel Boston because I still have nightmares of seeing the film she did called "Holiday High School Reunion". Rachel however is a fine actress and brings her A Game Here. Now the plot is very predictable. It offers nothing exciting. What does work the best in this entire story is that you are rooting for the two leads to hookup
Actually liked the idea of the story, which had a setting that set itself apart from a lot of Hallmark's festive efforts. Even if it still sounded formulaic, which is pretty much what one expects from Hallmark anyway. The title was quite cute, refraining too much from being too cheesy like film titles from Hallmark can be in game attempts to be cute and catchy. Still saw the film for completest sake and as someone who has never immediately written a Hallmark Christmas film off, enough of their stuff is watchable.
There is plenty of films of theirs that are average and below. While not one of their worst, 'A Rose for Christmas' is one of them. In no way is it a masterpiece, with too many major flaws. It also isn't an abomination either, as there are a few good things. Not one of Hallmark's best by any stretch from that year or overall, but also not one of their worst on both counts. 'A Rose for Christmas' was hardly doomed from the start, but the potential it had is not lived up to unfortunately.
It does have good things. It looks pleasant and professional enough visually. The scenery is particularly lovely. Did like everything to do with the float preparation, which was interesting and charming and never forced and that it isn't focused on too much was appreciated.
Marc Bendavid is an amiable male lead, while Michael Kopsa is touching and his story has a good deal of heart.
However, there are many major flaws with 'A Rose for Christmas' which stops it from blossoming. A big weak link is Rachel Boston, have liked her in other things but she didn't work for me here. To me she over-compensates and her delivery all round lacked any kind of shade or subtlety. Really didn't like her character either, too abrasive and selfish and she doesn't treat others well, she also never really grows as a character. There is no chemistry at all between Boston and Bendavid, with a completely underdeveloped, rushed and abruptly introduced (late in) romance.
Furthermore, the script is cheesily awkward, treacly and even repetitive. There is an awful lot of bickering and it got too much and very old fast. It made me struggle to care for the lead characters with that amount of negative energy. Of the characters, the only one to be interesting or connect with her was the father. The story is dully paced, very thin with an over-stretched-feeling middle act and no surprises at all. Emotionally, it is very bland as well, the charm is not there, it takes itself too seriously and the only heart comes from the father.
All in all, lacklustre. 4/10.
There is plenty of films of theirs that are average and below. While not one of their worst, 'A Rose for Christmas' is one of them. In no way is it a masterpiece, with too many major flaws. It also isn't an abomination either, as there are a few good things. Not one of Hallmark's best by any stretch from that year or overall, but also not one of their worst on both counts. 'A Rose for Christmas' was hardly doomed from the start, but the potential it had is not lived up to unfortunately.
It does have good things. It looks pleasant and professional enough visually. The scenery is particularly lovely. Did like everything to do with the float preparation, which was interesting and charming and never forced and that it isn't focused on too much was appreciated.
Marc Bendavid is an amiable male lead, while Michael Kopsa is touching and his story has a good deal of heart.
However, there are many major flaws with 'A Rose for Christmas' which stops it from blossoming. A big weak link is Rachel Boston, have liked her in other things but she didn't work for me here. To me she over-compensates and her delivery all round lacked any kind of shade or subtlety. Really didn't like her character either, too abrasive and selfish and she doesn't treat others well, she also never really grows as a character. There is no chemistry at all between Boston and Bendavid, with a completely underdeveloped, rushed and abruptly introduced (late in) romance.
Furthermore, the script is cheesily awkward, treacly and even repetitive. There is an awful lot of bickering and it got too much and very old fast. It made me struggle to care for the lead characters with that amount of negative energy. Of the characters, the only one to be interesting or connect with her was the father. The story is dully paced, very thin with an over-stretched-feeling middle act and no surprises at all. Emotionally, it is very bland as well, the charm is not there, it takes itself too seriously and the only heart comes from the father.
All in all, lacklustre. 4/10.
He needs a float for his company she is the maker. They bicker and bicker then suddenly there is romance.
The float prep is interesting. Marc Bendavid and Rachel Boston are the couple.
Not quite enough for a romance movie.
The float prep is interesting. Marc Bendavid and Rachel Boston are the couple.
Not quite enough for a romance movie.
The movie was well done. The writers put in the little things that make a movie interesting and memorable (e.g., a quote from Van Gogh was used, we develop some nick-names, an auction scene). The two main characters Andy "chaos" (Rachel Boston) and Cliff "bulldozer" (Marc Bendavid) were well developed with the supporting cast adding humor and advancing the story well. The focus on the main characters is always a plus for me, so many Christmas movies fail because they needlessly develop the supporting cast too much. Rachel Boston was always there to move the story along with her smile and enthusiasm. I was impressed that the movie was still fresh and exciting right until the end. Michael Kopsa was used well in the key role as the father. I disagree with the 2 previous reviews. This one is worth the watch.
At best, this movie showed the viewer some of the work that goes into preparing a float of the Rose Parade. That may be the most interesting part of this film. The lead actor is quite attractive and did his best in a role that was predictable but still romantic enough to satisfy the Hallmark movie viewer. The most distracting and almost irritating aspect of the film was Rachel Boston's performance. She is attractive, tall, slim, perky. But her acting range is so limited, it made the role too one dimensional..Her lines seem all to be at the same voice pitch and volume..twangy, flat and very loud. Whatever lines she was delivering all sounded too loud..too forced, not at all nuanced. Her delivery is one dimensional as well..through a smile and gritted teeth..She should have modulated her voice..her volume, her range of emotions in her lines. It is lovely to see an actress smile in film, but this actress smiled throughout every scene..so there was no range of emotions visible..
her costars did a great job..Her leading man is quite talented, handsome, romantic..just what a Hallmark movie watcher wants to see. But the lead actress needs some lessons in how to slow down, tone down, let the word s of the script determine her volume and her smile level
sorry..this film had great potential..but it became almost grating to have to watch it with the sound on.
Sorry.
her costars did a great job..Her leading man is quite talented, handsome, romantic..just what a Hallmark movie watcher wants to see. But the lead actress needs some lessons in how to slow down, tone down, let the word s of the script determine her volume and her smile level
sorry..this film had great potential..but it became almost grating to have to watch it with the sound on.
Sorry.
Did you know
- TriviaThe Bear float they are building throughout the movie, was based on a real float that appeared in the real rose parade the year before production. The actual float appears in the footage of the parade at the end of the movie.
- GoofsThe entire movie was built around creating a float for The Rose Parade, especially a bear they struggled to make move. But the one the cast created wasn't even close to the one that was shown at the end with footage from an actual parade.
- ConnectionsReferences Le Magicien d'Oz (1939)
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