IMDb RATING
6.9/10
4.7K
YOUR RATING
US soldier visits the town from where an inspirational Christmas card was sent to him by a church group that mails cards out to servicemen as a goodwill effort.US soldier visits the town from where an inspirational Christmas card was sent to him by a church group that mails cards out to servicemen as a goodwill effort.US soldier visits the town from where an inspirational Christmas card was sent to him by a church group that mails cards out to servicemen as a goodwill effort.
- Nominated for 1 Primetime Emmy
- 1 win & 1 nomination total
Chad Michael Collins
- Lewis
- (as Chad Collins)
Gerald F. Gough
- Older Man
- (as Gerald Gough)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
A good Christmas TV movies for all the family. Well directed and acted. Nice to see a movie focusing on soldiers serving overseas. It's soppy, but just what you need at Christmas.
This one, although still having the cliche and standard Christmas themes, is the best and most creative of them all. It should be the standard for made for TV Christmas love stories.
We need more shows depicting life in the rural areas, depicting prayer, family, and love.
Ed Asner does a wonderful job as a Dad who wants his daughter to be happy with someone that respects her wishes. Great scenery, good story, and good family show.
The bond between soldiers may be overstated, but we should all respect our troops, whether we believe our leadership is doing the right thing overseas, or not.
The show also demonstrates how all the individuals respect each other, and how hard work can build a good life.
Love begins with respect, and dies without it. To me, that is what this story is all about.
Ed Asner does a wonderful job as a Dad who wants his daughter to be happy with someone that respects her wishes. Great scenery, good story, and good family show.
The bond between soldiers may be overstated, but we should all respect our troops, whether we believe our leadership is doing the right thing overseas, or not.
The show also demonstrates how all the individuals respect each other, and how hard work can build a good life.
Love begins with respect, and dies without it. To me, that is what this story is all about.
If you are familiar with other Hallmark holiday romances, this one is different than most. Neither of the main characters has a bubbly, festive personality. This might be considered a more serious film. And there is a reason for that.
The main character is Cody Cullen (John Newton), an American soldier stationed in Afghanistan. Through a community outreach program, he receives a letter from a small town named Nevada City. When he is sent stateside to deliver the dog tags of a fallen soldier to the widow, he decides to travel to Nevada City.
Through a series of coincidences, he connects with a family that runs a lumber mill. The daughter is Faith (Alice Evans). She might be interested in him if she didn't already have a steady boyfriend.
One of the best aspects of this film is Ed Asner, who plays Faith's father with positivity and mirth.
The film hits all the right emotional buttons for many who watch the Hallmark offerings, with scenes that reinforce the values of hard work, patriotism, prayer, small-towns, the family dinner table, and nature's beauty.
An emotional pay-off comes at the end of the film, but the ending is too abrupt, as many other reviewers have written.
The main character is Cody Cullen (John Newton), an American soldier stationed in Afghanistan. Through a community outreach program, he receives a letter from a small town named Nevada City. When he is sent stateside to deliver the dog tags of a fallen soldier to the widow, he decides to travel to Nevada City.
Through a series of coincidences, he connects with a family that runs a lumber mill. The daughter is Faith (Alice Evans). She might be interested in him if she didn't already have a steady boyfriend.
One of the best aspects of this film is Ed Asner, who plays Faith's father with positivity and mirth.
The film hits all the right emotional buttons for many who watch the Hallmark offerings, with scenes that reinforce the values of hard work, patriotism, prayer, small-towns, the family dinner table, and nature's beauty.
An emotional pay-off comes at the end of the film, but the ending is too abrupt, as many other reviewers have written.
Its basic virtue is the story. Wise crafted, seductive, moving, clear and correct in details. The second, obvious, Alice Evans, John Newton and the location. Not the last, it is a film about faith. And that is the main virtue for a real Christmas film. And, in same measure, it is a film about dilemmas. No doubts, dilemmas are good ingredient for Hallmark films but, in this case, the way to give solution represents the lovely good point. Short, just beautiful.
Did you know
- TriviaLois Nettleton's final role.
- GoofsIn the scene where the Commanding Officer is giving Jones's dog tags to Cullen both dog tags are there. Military members killed or injured have one dog tag left with them, the 2nd dog tag is removed and used for notification purposes. Jones was KIA, so the CO would have only had one dog tag to give to Cullen in real life.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The 59th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards (2007)
- SoundtracksJingle Bells
Written by James Pierpont (uncredited)
Sung by Nick Ballard, Brian Robinson & Chad Michael Collins
(Scene at Army base)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- The Christmas Card
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 24m(84 min)
- Color
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