When after school programs see their funding cut, Teachers Josh and Ella turn to fundraising before banding together in search of a larger donation, falling hard along the way.When after school programs see their funding cut, Teachers Josh and Ella turn to fundraising before banding together in search of a larger donation, falling hard along the way.When after school programs see their funding cut, Teachers Josh and Ella turn to fundraising before banding together in search of a larger donation, falling hard along the way.
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7.7 stars.
This third installment of the series has added a new young girl to this big house full of prior and current foster children, cared for by a benevolent matriarch. This particular story is about the man, the only adult man that grew up in this foster house that we are aware of. Of course, he's been in the first two films of the series and will continue in the rest of the series most likely. Interestingly, one of the women, the one from the second film, does not appear in this movie for more than a few short moments.
I enjoyed this story, much more than the previous two. First of all the lead female, the love interest of the lead male, is quite beautiful. I like her style, and I've liked her in most movies. That's a bonus already. But don't get me wrong, if the dialogue and interactions were wooden and shallow, I'd not hesitate to put this movie in the dog house with the 2nd of the series.
Notwithstanding a few awkward moments, where the lead male was somewhat creepy (the "I need a hug" scene) this was a great addition to the series. The entertainment was high and the tension was sufficient. The man exhibits an all-or-nothing mentality as he bravely risks much for the sake of the woman's happiness and trust. She, in turn, is attracted to his chivalrous behavior and a very endearing romance springs forth. It's a long time coming, a bit delayed, but somehow it works. It's probably because the actors create a satisfying tension.
Some of these multi-film franchises are a bust, but this film has breathed life into the series, so my fingers are crossed for the next one.
This third installment of the series has added a new young girl to this big house full of prior and current foster children, cared for by a benevolent matriarch. This particular story is about the man, the only adult man that grew up in this foster house that we are aware of. Of course, he's been in the first two films of the series and will continue in the rest of the series most likely. Interestingly, one of the women, the one from the second film, does not appear in this movie for more than a few short moments.
I enjoyed this story, much more than the previous two. First of all the lead female, the love interest of the lead male, is quite beautiful. I like her style, and I've liked her in most movies. That's a bonus already. But don't get me wrong, if the dialogue and interactions were wooden and shallow, I'd not hesitate to put this movie in the dog house with the 2nd of the series.
Notwithstanding a few awkward moments, where the lead male was somewhat creepy (the "I need a hug" scene) this was a great addition to the series. The entertainment was high and the tension was sufficient. The man exhibits an all-or-nothing mentality as he bravely risks much for the sake of the woman's happiness and trust. She, in turn, is attracted to his chivalrous behavior and a very endearing romance springs forth. It's a long time coming, a bit delayed, but somehow it works. It's probably because the actors create a satisfying tension.
Some of these multi-film franchises are a bust, but this film has breathed life into the series, so my fingers are crossed for the next one.
This is the 3rd in a series of HEARTS AROUND THE TABLE, chronicling the lives of adults who are part of a foster family with Angie (Mindy Cohn) as the head of the clan. This story is about Joshua, a Math teacher and Track coach, (Jake Epstein). He meets a newly hired English and Music teacher, Ella (Stephanie Bennett), and they are both thrown together when the school announces budget cuts to the Athletic and Music Departments. So the teachers are now tasked to find ways to get needed funds for their respective programs. There is also a subplot when a new foster child, joins the group, a teenager, Gina, (Millie Davis) who is having difficulty with her studies.
This movie is way too predictable even for a Hallmark movie, viewers can guess the outcome after watching just a short time into the story. There is too little actual romance, between Ella and Jake, it's more like friendship, which contradicts the script when you get surprised by the words towards the end of the movie and you wonder, when did that happen? (which shows how poorly the script is written.) The supporting actors who play the part of possible donors need acting lessons, it sounds like they are just reading a script page from a teleprompter. There is the usual conflict and resolution ---HO HUM! And an anticlimactic "surprise" announcement from another foster character. This is a series where MY HEART DOESN'T WANT TO BE AROUND THE TABLE! Please Hallmark can we get some better scripts! PLEASE!!!!
This movie is way too predictable even for a Hallmark movie, viewers can guess the outcome after watching just a short time into the story. There is too little actual romance, between Ella and Jake, it's more like friendship, which contradicts the script when you get surprised by the words towards the end of the movie and you wonder, when did that happen? (which shows how poorly the script is written.) The supporting actors who play the part of possible donors need acting lessons, it sounds like they are just reading a script page from a teleprompter. There is the usual conflict and resolution ---HO HUM! And an anticlimactic "surprise" announcement from another foster character. This is a series where MY HEART DOESN'T WANT TO BE AROUND THE TABLE! Please Hallmark can we get some better scripts! PLEASE!!!!
The actors in this movie are all very appealing. The concept, raising funds to support both sports and music programs at a high school, is fine for one of these Hallmark movies. But, wow, every other element of the movie is just terrible. The plot has more holes than a gopher-ridden golf course. It's as if the writers never attended high school, participated in sports, or been in band. Almost everything in the story is wrong. There's a good story here somewhere, but it would need competent writers to bring it out. The dialogue is just awful, and the editing and direction just makes the dialogue worse. Modern Hallmark movies are so much worse than those of years past and the primary reason is poor writing. It's as if they've fired all their successful writing teams and replaced them with people with no screenwriting experience.
Miss Hawthorne looks and dresses like a suburban trophy wife going to Lunch at the club for a couple of martinis. Otherwise she acts like a teacher well.
I can't believe other reviewers blame a hallmark movie for being a hallmark movie. The hallmark brand is loved by millions. Could Christmas be Christmas without hallmark movies.
This is a fun series. The characters are well developed and likable. The green screen shots are obvious. It's not a big budget but flows nicely.
Did the Band room get funded? Does the track team get new uniforms. Will Josh and Ella spark? Tune in and find out? Five more letters.
I can't believe other reviewers blame a hallmark movie for being a hallmark movie. The hallmark brand is loved by millions. Could Christmas be Christmas without hallmark movies.
This is a fun series. The characters are well developed and likable. The green screen shots are obvious. It's not a big budget but flows nicely.
Did the Band room get funded? Does the track team get new uniforms. Will Josh and Ella spark? Tune in and find out? Five more letters.
I like the premise of these movies...the whole foster family story line. But this third installment...OMG the writing! As a high school special education teacher and a track and field coach, and a former marching band member.... I literally laughed out loud while watching. Why would funding be cut in the middle of the year? And why is a teacher starting in the middle of the year? And what PTA provides funding for extra curricular activities? Every school I've ever taught and coached at and also when I was in school participating in sports and band...we had to do fundraisers ourselves. Where's the Athletic Director and sports booster clubs? And why is an ELA teacher also the music teacher? Most public high schools that look as large as that one actually have a marching band and band classes taught by an actual music teacher/band director. And don't even get me started on how huge her classroom is!! And as for the track team Josh is coaching...there are way more expensive items than the uniforms. Pole vault pits by themselves cost over 20K. Then there's the whole ADHD storyline. The writers obviously know nothing about identifying and testing for ADHD...this is actually a medical diagnosis. Yes it's often identified in a school setting, because of learning difficulty and behavioral issues...and once a medical diagnosis is made schools can do further testing to see how learning is impacted and recommend either a 504 plan or an IEP. At least they did take her to a testing center...but the principal doesn't usually have anything to do with that. Is this different in Canada where maybe the writers are from?
Overall I just think the writers did very little research and just made a whole bunch of this crap up. And the actors just had to keep smiling and get through it.
Oh and sorry, but in the second movie...when Josh lined up some runners at a starting line and started them by saying "3, 2, 1 GO...", Ummm...no actual track coach starts a race (even in practice) like that. That's just ONE example of the dumb things he says as a "coach". Just no.
Like I said. A bunch of crap. And I'm usually a big Hallmark fan.
Overall I just think the writers did very little research and just made a whole bunch of this crap up. And the actors just had to keep smiling and get through it.
Oh and sorry, but in the second movie...when Josh lined up some runners at a starting line and started them by saying "3, 2, 1 GO...", Ummm...no actual track coach starts a race (even in practice) like that. That's just ONE example of the dumb things he says as a "coach". Just no.
Like I said. A bunch of crap. And I'm usually a big Hallmark fan.
Did you know
- TriviaJake Epstein who plays Josh Adler and this movie in 2016 through 2018 he played in Designated Survivor as Chuck Russink. James Welch Henderson Arkansas May 21, 2025
- ConnectionsFeatured in Hearts Around the Table: Kiki's Fourth Ingredient (2025)
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