IMDb RATING
6.4/10
3.3K
YOUR RATING
A young woman from a privileged life falls for a soup-kitchen owner after discovering a Dear Santa letter written by his 7-year-old daughter.A young woman from a privileged life falls for a soup-kitchen owner after discovering a Dear Santa letter written by his 7-year-old daughter.A young woman from a privileged life falls for a soup-kitchen owner after discovering a Dear Santa letter written by his 7-year-old daughter.
Paulina 'Miel' Chmielecka
- Saleswoman
- (as Paulina Chmielecka)
Dave El Wray
- Soup Kitchen Grizz
- (uncredited)
Kristina Elliott
- Jennifer
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
I recommended this movie to about a dozen people, and every single one of them loved it and watched it at least a second time. Most movies that I watched that were billed to be a Christmas movie either had a plot that had too little mention of Christmas or showed very sporadic scenery that just didn't remind you that you were actually watching a Christmas movie. Not Dear Santa, it was sprinkled throughout the movie perfectly. It is exactly what it was meant to be. A beautiful love story centered around Christmastime with great character acting and a wonderful, quick moving storyline. Romantic, cute, funny, sad, happy, covers all the emotional bases and even has a beautiful song in it, too. And don't be surprised if your eyes well up once or twice .....
Love this movie. Plot is totally predictable like 90% of every other movie in the IMDb. Widower dad adorable daughter wants Santa bring daddy new mommy spoiled rich girl finds letter to Santa yadda yadda ...
But who cares? Great execution by everyone involved. Amy Acker lights up every scene. Jason Priestly smartly keeps the camera on her most of the time. The father/daughter pair are cast perfectly and play off of each other well. The antagonist girlfriend hits just the right note. The LGBTQ character plays beyond stereotype effectively. Production values are passable. Hard to imagine a better Hallmark/Lifetime-like movie.
But who cares? Great execution by everyone involved. Amy Acker lights up every scene. Jason Priestly smartly keeps the camera on her most of the time. The father/daughter pair are cast perfectly and play off of each other well. The antagonist girlfriend hits just the right note. The LGBTQ character plays beyond stereotype effectively. Production values are passable. Hard to imagine a better Hallmark/Lifetime-like movie.
Formulaic, cheesy, cliché'd and wonderful. Maybe it is all of the afore mentioned, but it is Christmas! Surprisingly well cast with Amy Acker stealing your heart as the rich girl gone good, and a nice turn by Haydn-Jones as the love interest. Gina Holden is excellent in the evil queen personage and Olivia Gowan is not allowed by director Jason Priestly to over act (which is sometimes the problem with made for TV productions) and she does wonderfully. Appreciative nods also must be given to Peter Creery in the role of matchmaker...
A sweet movie not to be taken seriously, and something you can watch with your child or your girlfriend.
A sweet movie not to be taken seriously, and something you can watch with your child or your girlfriend.
Shopaholic Crystal's (Amy Acker, Alias) wealthy parents give her an ultimatum: change her irresponsible ways by Christmas or they will cut her off without a cent. With no job or romantic prospects, what's a party girl to do? Fate intervenes when she finds seven year-old Olivia's (Emma Duke) letter to Santa asking for a new wife for her widowed dad Derek (David Haydn-Jones). Crystal tracks them down and vows to win over father and daughter before the fast-approaching holiday deadline.
This is a nice little film. It has lots of spirit and charming actors. It has more depth than your average Christmas Movie!
When you see it pop up on television WATCH IT. You will enjoy this.
This is a nice little film. It has lots of spirit and charming actors. It has more depth than your average Christmas Movie!
When you see it pop up on television WATCH IT. You will enjoy this.
Amy Acker plays the poor little rich girl who finds a letter to Santa from a young girl with no mommy. This is your typical Christmas movie, but done in a good way. Brings a smile to your face and has that feelgood Christmas message. Great for all the family.
Did you know
- TriviaWhen Crystal is checking her mail near the end of the film, the zip code on the top letter reads 701209. The last five digits transposed backwards read 90210, the show that the director, Jason Priestley, starred in during the 1990s.
- GoofsDuring the opening title sequence Crystal is Christmas-shopping and takes out her iPhone to loot at her shopping list via the iPhone-notes app. Although nearly every shop sports Christmas window-displays, the phone shows "Today 31 Mar" in the note.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Cinema Snob: Dear Santa (2016)
Details
Box office
- Budget
- CA$3,950,000 (estimated)
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