Elderly nun Sister Anthony forms a friendship with Richard Reilly, the head gardener of New York City's Rockefeller Center, who wants to fell a tree that she has been growing for decades and... Read allElderly nun Sister Anthony forms a friendship with Richard Reilly, the head gardener of New York City's Rockefeller Center, who wants to fell a tree that she has been growing for decades and transport it to New York City to put it on display at Christmastime.Elderly nun Sister Anthony forms a friendship with Richard Reilly, the head gardener of New York City's Rockefeller Center, who wants to fell a tree that she has been growing for decades and transport it to New York City to put it on display at Christmastime.
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This was a charming TV movie. One I wish were available on VHS or DVD. It was a thoughtful and seasonally appropriate movie demonstrating the love one has for nature's gifts and learning to let go of those cherished gifts, to make way for something new. Think about giving up something as an adult, which you have cherished since childhood. I imagine it would be very difficult. That's one part of what this movie allows the viewer to be aware of. Of course there are other story lines about growth and love and giving. All very much a part of the meaning of Christmas. While an uncomplicated plot overall, the movie encourages the basics of the Christmas season and the basics one usually encounters in life. A simple story with several valuable lessons.
10wind-22
A feel good Christmas Tale. What a wonderful adaptation of a true story.
Anyone who's ever made the trek (or dreamed of) to see the tree in Rockefeller Centre will love this movie.
The charm of the need to feel close and loved by the lost child, and how the mystery of her life come together in this magical tale. The corporate search and it's attempt to walk all over anyone in it's pass is squashed by the lovely endearing nun.
I would love to see it every year but sadly it's been tucked away like so many of the wonderful Christmas values we had years ago.
If you're looking for a special movie, contact your local TV station and request the movie....maybe, just maybe... we can bring back the true meaning of Christmas.
Happy Holidays, Everyone...and every day of the year!
Anyone who's ever made the trek (or dreamed of) to see the tree in Rockefeller Centre will love this movie.
The charm of the need to feel close and loved by the lost child, and how the mystery of her life come together in this magical tale. The corporate search and it's attempt to walk all over anyone in it's pass is squashed by the lovely endearing nun.
I would love to see it every year but sadly it's been tucked away like so many of the wonderful Christmas values we had years ago.
If you're looking for a special movie, contact your local TV station and request the movie....maybe, just maybe... we can bring back the true meaning of Christmas.
Happy Holidays, Everyone...and every day of the year!
Some movies just stick with you. You continue thinking of them, being reminded of them, for years to come.
'The Christmas Tree,' directed by Sally Field, starring Julie Harris, is one of those movies.
Why it has not been re-shown on TV since its 1996 debut, I do not understand. Why is it not available for sale or rent anywhere, I do not know.
Tree is about a young girl who is an orphan, living in a convent. Her special friend is a tree, to whom she takes all her joys and sorrows. During the course of the movie, her early history is revealed, as well as a glorious future for Tree.
Some might call it sentimental, but isn't that a lot of what Christmas is about? I haven't looked at a tree quite the same way since.
'The Christmas Tree,' directed by Sally Field, starring Julie Harris, is one of those movies.
Why it has not been re-shown on TV since its 1996 debut, I do not understand. Why is it not available for sale or rent anywhere, I do not know.
Tree is about a young girl who is an orphan, living in a convent. Her special friend is a tree, to whom she takes all her joys and sorrows. During the course of the movie, her early history is revealed, as well as a glorious future for Tree.
Some might call it sentimental, but isn't that a lot of what Christmas is about? I haven't looked at a tree quite the same way since.
Sure, it's sentimental. Sure, it's schmaltzy. But isn't Christmas, when you get that warm glow from thinking about the holiday season--in a Norman Rockwell kind of setting--just as schmaltzy too? I read the beautifully illustrated book and thought it would make a wonderful present for my sister who lives in Maine. After this made-for-TV film came out, I contacted her to find out how she liked the film--which I thought was wonderful. She just found it empty, not saying much, a disappointment.
But I think it was a very slender story to begin with and Sally Field has directed it with an eye for warm details and, yes, sentiment. And JULIE HARRIS gives the kind of performance she's famous for--simple, earnest, truthful. The tree had become something so close to her that she was reluctant to see it torn down to serve as New York City's famous tree at Rockefeller Center.
Unfortunately, the story details escape me now, having seen it only once the night it made its debut in '96 and expecting that it would become a rerun the way IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE did. No way. All of the performances were fine and although many would find it a bit hokey to make such a fuss over a tree that ends up in Rockefeller Center, it was done in a way that had a magic sort of appeal. Beautifully photographed with lush vistas of New England landscapes, it had a certain charm that tried to capture the warmth of the book.
Summing up: By all means worth seeing, if you can. I have no idea why it has simply disappeared from sight.
But I think it was a very slender story to begin with and Sally Field has directed it with an eye for warm details and, yes, sentiment. And JULIE HARRIS gives the kind of performance she's famous for--simple, earnest, truthful. The tree had become something so close to her that she was reluctant to see it torn down to serve as New York City's famous tree at Rockefeller Center.
Unfortunately, the story details escape me now, having seen it only once the night it made its debut in '96 and expecting that it would become a rerun the way IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE did. No way. All of the performances were fine and although many would find it a bit hokey to make such a fuss over a tree that ends up in Rockefeller Center, it was done in a way that had a magic sort of appeal. Beautifully photographed with lush vistas of New England landscapes, it had a certain charm that tried to capture the warmth of the book.
Summing up: By all means worth seeing, if you can. I have no idea why it has simply disappeared from sight.
simply put I am a huge fan of Christmas stories, GOOD Christmas stories. the year the Christmas tree was aired I was sick to death with the flu...... as i watched this beautiful movie with one of our most revered actresses Julie Harris it was so refreshing to finally see something different about one of the most popular Christmas events-we have ,the Christmas tree in Rockefeller square. What gives with not releasing this movie. I am so tired of the same old same old ridiculous Christmas stories that are being produced, silly...too romantic.....overly sappy... AND I LOVE SAP..... please please please....try to get this movie released,it should become a Christmas tradition. Sorry for the length of this, but I have been searching for this movie for years..... Thank you so much...David
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- TriviaOscar-winning actress Sally Field is the director.
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