chriscma60
Joined Dec 2013
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chriscma60's rating
Let me start by saying I love Rachel Skarsten. Both she and Jazz Ramsey deserved better then this watered down murder mystery. This is not a very good film. I've been reading the book the story is taken from and it's obvious the amateurish screenplay took the basic story, tore the guts out, replacing it with romantic and familial entanglements. It looks like the budget was so limited they couldn't put extras as students in a school, parents in a meeting or even have a convincing office set where a witness works. Sad that characters with something to contribute stand about in silence as extras. So cheap. The sugary music score is inappropriate as well. With no spoilers, the most cringeworthy moment has detective Nick announcing the police will do all in their power to find the killer during a televised press conference. 24 hours later, he's ordered on to other more "pressing" cases. As for the K9 mystery, Zeus the crime dog finds a body and then becomes not much more then a pet. I had hoped this would be of the same quality as Rachel's previous film, The Royal Nanny, which was more than excellent. Alas, it's closer to the worst Hallmark has to offer. Give Jazz Ramsey another chance. With professional writing and higher production values, there could be something good here.
Rachel Skarsten was the perfect choice to head this clever Christmastime adventure. She has the rare ability to project a gentle and vulnerable persona while clearly being a badass. Skills she displayed as "Alice" in the recent Batwoman series. A performance that should have garnered Emmy Award attention.
There's a threat to the royal family and agent Claire (Skarsten) is sent undercover as a nanny for protection. What follows is the unfolding of a conspiracy plot that goes into unexpected directions. At the same time, Rachel charms the family, and the disinterest of Prince Colin, who over the course of the story finds himself drawn to Claire. Its mutual, but there's a mystery to solve first.
What makes The Royal Nanny so special is its written and filmed as an espionage story. There's very little of the usual Hallmark Channel tropes. It takes place in the real world and the supporting characters are all portrayed by well cast and believable performers.
So, why the "10? This is so different from the usual Hallmark fare. I was really caught up in the first few minutes. If the writer and director have any other ideas, Hallmark should really listen. Maybe even another adventure for Claire.
Bravo!
There's a threat to the royal family and agent Claire (Skarsten) is sent undercover as a nanny for protection. What follows is the unfolding of a conspiracy plot that goes into unexpected directions. At the same time, Rachel charms the family, and the disinterest of Prince Colin, who over the course of the story finds himself drawn to Claire. Its mutual, but there's a mystery to solve first.
What makes The Royal Nanny so special is its written and filmed as an espionage story. There's very little of the usual Hallmark Channel tropes. It takes place in the real world and the supporting characters are all portrayed by well cast and believable performers.
So, why the "10? This is so different from the usual Hallmark fare. I was really caught up in the first few minutes. If the writer and director have any other ideas, Hallmark should really listen. Maybe even another adventure for Claire.
Bravo!
While watching this I had a feeling of familiarity. It had the tone of Chuck Norris's first film, Good Guys Wear Black. Like that film it featured well known performers to bolster both the lead, Adam West in this case, as well as box office. Now this is not a good film. It's undernourished visually, with at least one too many songs from Buddy Greco. Still, Adam holds his own with the stilted dialog and more complicated than it needed to be plot. Nancy Kwan while beautiful is mostly wasted in what amounts to a series of cameo appearances that does very little to push forward a crime story as it morphs into a spy thriller. Nehimiah Persoff pretty much steals every scene he's in, as West's Johhny Cain spends much of his screentime listening rather than taking action. In the end, not a bad attempt to try to shake his "Batman" persona. Another attempt, with a more explosive and perhaps personal story with the same characters might have been worth it. Perhaps even as a new TV series.