The staff and students of St Bernadette's Primary School in Coventry audition for a place in a rock-musical competition.The staff and students of St Bernadette's Primary School in Coventry audition for a place in a rock-musical competition.The staff and students of St Bernadette's Primary School in Coventry audition for a place in a rock-musical competition.
Brian Alan Bartle
- Doru
- (as Brian Bartle)
- Director
- Writer
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Featured reviews
Currently watching this on boxing day with an 8 year old that likes rock music 🎶
We have had a few giggles and enjoyed the message especially love when Mr poppy said that the school badge means the refugee now has a family, such a beautiful thing to say. Enjoy it for what it is!
"And after that, our Nativity's got better and better" - Mr Madden's (Nativity)
While the first sequel with David Tennant in the lead was a fair sequel, the second (with a woefully miscast Martin Clunes) acted as a lovely showreel for Marc Wooton as Mr. Poppy and not much else.
I thought that would and should be the end of the franchise.
However, in 2018 we got 'Nativity Rocks!', which acts as a soft reboot of the franchise, I'm sure with the intention of there being more.
Gordon Shakespeare (who looked out of place in the 3rd film anyway) is retired, but sadly so is the original Mr. Poppy. In typical franchise style, we get a new one... a brother (played by Simon Lipkin)...with exactly the same name and personality...
It's Lipkin's show from start to finish, with Helen George (of 'Call the Midwife' fame) being very much out of her depth with this sort of comedy, and a very forgetable new actor playing the 'St Bernadette's' teacher), not that he's given much to do at all.
It is a soft reboot, so we get a repeat of the performance in the cathedral/nativity focusing on Herod elements from the first film, but oddly with a rock opera spin, that I don't think anyone really wanted/asked for.
It's not a complete disaster like the 3rd (save Wotton's performance), with some nice elements about refugees and finding your own family, but ultimately this is a franchise by this point that has run its course.
While the first sequel with David Tennant in the lead was a fair sequel, the second (with a woefully miscast Martin Clunes) acted as a lovely showreel for Marc Wooton as Mr. Poppy and not much else.
I thought that would and should be the end of the franchise.
However, in 2018 we got 'Nativity Rocks!', which acts as a soft reboot of the franchise, I'm sure with the intention of there being more.
Gordon Shakespeare (who looked out of place in the 3rd film anyway) is retired, but sadly so is the original Mr. Poppy. In typical franchise style, we get a new one... a brother (played by Simon Lipkin)...with exactly the same name and personality...
It's Lipkin's show from start to finish, with Helen George (of 'Call the Midwife' fame) being very much out of her depth with this sort of comedy, and a very forgetable new actor playing the 'St Bernadette's' teacher), not that he's given much to do at all.
It is a soft reboot, so we get a repeat of the performance in the cathedral/nativity focusing on Herod elements from the first film, but oddly with a rock opera spin, that I don't think anyone really wanted/asked for.
It's not a complete disaster like the 3rd (save Wotton's performance), with some nice elements about refugees and finding your own family, but ultimately this is a franchise by this point that has run its course.
Two things:
1) My five-year-old loved it
2) This film gives all amateur film-makers hope. If this can be made then anything can, so for that reason it should get decent marks.
Pretty painful to watch but I can imagine it appealing to some children as pure pantomime. The acting is generally terrible and the story is quite preposterous.
If you have nothing else to watch and don't need to dedicate more than a few brain cells to this then it's OK but otherwise you'll never feel like you've missed out on not seeing this.
If you have nothing else to watch and don't need to dedicate more than a few brain cells to this then it's OK but otherwise you'll never feel like you've missed out on not seeing this.
Which figures, as the film is a dogs dinner.
Glad I only paid for it a r kids club
Did you know
- TriviaThe first film in the series to not feature Marc Wooton as Mr. Poppy.
- ConnectionsFollows Sacré Noël ! (2009)
- How long is Nativity Rocks!?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $4,129,456
- Runtime
- 1h 40m(100 min)
- Color
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