An eight-year-old girl living in New York City in 1897 learns about belief and Christmas when her classmates question if Santa is even real.An eight-year-old girl living in New York City in 1897 learns about belief and Christmas when her classmates question if Santa is even real.An eight-year-old girl living in New York City in 1897 learns about belief and Christmas when her classmates question if Santa is even real.
Bea Miller
- Virginia O'Hanlon
- (voice)
- (as Beatrice Miller)
Alfred Molina
- Francis Church
- (voice)
Kieran Patrick Campbell
- Ollie
- (voice)
Nicholas Sireci
- Barry
- (voice)
Andrew Cherry
- George
- (voice)
Taylor Hay
- Taylor
- (voice)
Julian Franco
- Charlotte
- (voice)
Andrea Kessler
- Miriam
- (voice)
Chuck Nice
- Louis
- (voice)
Robb Pruitt
- Santa
- (voice)
Featured review
I assume most who praised this thing never seen the Emmy winning classic Bill Melendez special "Yes Virginia, There Is A Santa Claus" The Bill Melendez take on the story is more enjoyable than this as it felt believable with the response portrayed with more respect then the Macy's adaptation
the 2009 Macy's adaptation (of which saddens me that this rubbish made the Bill Melendez special fell into obscurity) is bad
Key points 1. It's dated Commercial for Macy's: When the (now obsolete/no longer used) Believeometer is a plot device of the special more so than Virginia's faith in Santa's existence and her letter to Mr. Church, You know we got problems
2. It's a Lifetime Film for Kids: Virginia through the special suffers misery as she's been tormented for her belief in Santa Her friend believe some stuck up little bitch and turn their back on her, same bitch mock her when she sees her letter trashed by Mr. Church - all that to the point of Virginia brought to the point of depression and all it took was a hobo in a Santa suit to restore her faith in Santa by confronting Church and motivate him to make that response
Again, Why this rubbish stuck around and the more enjoyable one ("Yes Virginia, There Is A Santa Claus") fell into obscurity as well as Dollar Store DVD fodder is beyond me
If you like this, To each his own but honestly, If you want your kids to know the legacy of "Yes, Virginia" and the moral it brings - You're better off hunting down Bill Melendez's "Yes Virginia, There is a Santa Claus"
the 2009 Macy's adaptation (of which saddens me that this rubbish made the Bill Melendez special fell into obscurity) is bad
Key points 1. It's dated Commercial for Macy's: When the (now obsolete/no longer used) Believeometer is a plot device of the special more so than Virginia's faith in Santa's existence and her letter to Mr. Church, You know we got problems
2. It's a Lifetime Film for Kids: Virginia through the special suffers misery as she's been tormented for her belief in Santa Her friend believe some stuck up little bitch and turn their back on her, same bitch mock her when she sees her letter trashed by Mr. Church - all that to the point of Virginia brought to the point of depression and all it took was a hobo in a Santa suit to restore her faith in Santa by confronting Church and motivate him to make that response
Again, Why this rubbish stuck around and the more enjoyable one ("Yes Virginia, There Is A Santa Claus") fell into obscurity as well as Dollar Store DVD fodder is beyond me
If you like this, To each his own but honestly, If you want your kids to know the legacy of "Yes, Virginia" and the moral it brings - You're better off hunting down Bill Melendez's "Yes Virginia, There is a Santa Claus"
- cyberfox-479-356710
- Oct 1, 2016
- Permalink
Storyline
Did you know
- SoundtracksYes, Virginia (There's a Santa Claus)
Written by William Schermerhorn
Performed by Ann Hampton Callaway, Cenovia Cummins, Jordan Jancz, and Lance Horne
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- Also known as
- Так, Вірджинія
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