A romance editor tries to help a mystery writer incorporate romance into his next book. In return, he agrees to be her fake date for her sister's beach wedding.A romance editor tries to help a mystery writer incorporate romance into his next book. In return, he agrees to be her fake date for her sister's beach wedding.A romance editor tries to help a mystery writer incorporate romance into his next book. In return, he agrees to be her fake date for her sister's beach wedding.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Ivy Roberts
- (as Kristina Cole)
- Wedding Guest
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
The other great thing is the chemistry between Kristina Cole and Russell Quinn. There is so much energy and admittedly some of it comes from the fast paced dialogue.
One complaint I have had with many movies on GAC Family where this appeared is lack of tension. Zach as a character may not be exactly "tension" but he is annoying beyond belief and creates some major tension. At one point, Reed describes him pretty well and I'm with Reed in not being able to figure out what Ivy ever saw in him. By the end of the movie, Ivy would be justified to slap Zach silly.
Another complaint I've frequently had with GACF is background music. In this movie, I only noticed that background a couple of times briefly and not overwhelmingly, so I have to give this movie a pass on that complaint.
To sum up. The acting is good and the chemistry is fantastic. But the real gem is the writing. Perhaps the line delivery is a bit fast, but the script is superb in big and small ways. I look forward to watching this again in the future.
First, we liked the actors and thought the leads did a good job. The overall story idea was clever, and as an author, I particularly like movie ideas which include writers. And yes, sometimes an editor can help an author identify issues in their plotting and seriously improve a manuscript.
Here's the other side. Last year I wrote a murder mystery, and over the last two years I've been writing a series of RomComs, so I've kind of got my elbows down in that type of work. They say the guy handles his romance relationship all wrong, and the editor is going to help him improve that. Fine. What they missed were any DETAILS to make that trope more real to the viewer.
In the far superior Trading Christmas, a woman helps a male author with the relationship in his manuscript and what's wrong with his female character, and they at least talk about it enough to understand where the author was going wrong and how to fix it.
None of that here, I'm afraid.
I really like fake relationship trope and it was executed pretty well. Acting was solid except Reed Favero who played annoying adult brat but people like him exist so it's ok. There was a bit of some bad makeup, lighting, and cuts but nothing serious like in many other ROE TV movies. Movie plot location is in Florida, and it was actually filmed in the beautiful Miami.
There are two reasons why I gave it 4* instead 6*. This is message to Reel One Entertainment - pay somebody to do proper audio production because most of your TV movies suffer from the obnoxiously loud background music! Dialogue in this movie is literally barely audible in Acts I and III - I had to read subtitles which are mostly badly translated in this part of the world! Several scenes also suffer from horrendous audio recording. The second reason is the cast issues. You see, Ivy has parents and married sister Clarisa. Her parents, aunt Edith, sister Clarisa and her husband came to the wedding week, but for some reason her father and brother in law didn't speak a word whole movie. They were just there, and even more insulting is that Clarisa's husband was active in only men's activities but he was mute. And yet her mother and aunt had screen and talking time.
In the typical bad ROE tradition, trailer compress whole movie in 2:06 min so don't watch it if you plan to watch movie as is full of spoilers.
Did you know
- Quotes
Ivy Roberts: Out of curiosity, what was our first date?
Reed Shepherd: We went to O'Reilly's.
Ivy Roberts: Oh, I've always wanted to go there.
Reed Shepherd: Then, we went to Jean Carlos. You had the shrimp scampi.
Ivy Roberts: I'm sure I loved it.
Reed Shepherd: It's to die for.
Ivy Roberts: Well, it sounds like a really good first date.