Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuAt Christmastime, up-and-coming journalist Jackie's life is at crossroads until she finds an unexpected opportunity to run a newspaper in small-town Alaska. She decides to try it and relocat... Alles lesenAt Christmastime, up-and-coming journalist Jackie's life is at crossroads until she finds an unexpected opportunity to run a newspaper in small-town Alaska. She decides to try it and relocates to the picture-perfect town. Using a series of Christmas articles, she's able to quickl... Alles lesenAt Christmastime, up-and-coming journalist Jackie's life is at crossroads until she finds an unexpected opportunity to run a newspaper in small-town Alaska. She decides to try it and relocates to the picture-perfect town. Using a series of Christmas articles, she's able to quickly return the newspaper to profitability and she soon falls in love--with her new home and ... Alles lesen
- Business Woman
- (Nicht genannt)
- Christmas Village Patron
- (Nicht genannt)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
The premise is actually a combination of some other Christmas themes. Jackie goes to Alaska as almost a last job resort. There's never really a deadline, but the idea is still to save Finn's family business (newspaper). The newcomer makes an immediate, somewhat unrealistic impact. A small town changes a city girl.
The story is thin. I thought there was going to be some tension from a certain quarter, but it didn't turn out that way and as a result, the only tension was the future for the newspaper and Jackie. There's no great highs or lows and no real surprises. What might have been a twist was telegraphed clearly before it happened. The ending was pretty typical.
The appeal is a combination of chemistry between Carly Hughes and Rob Mayes plus the small town charm. Most of the cast, if not all, performed well. Movies where residents go out of their way to help their neighbors always appeal to me. Throw in a couple of nice BFF's and I'm hooked. One note about chemistry: the movie diluted Jackie and Finn's screen time with too much of the rest of the story. The time they had was good and there's some interesting activities - not just the formula ones in all Christmas movies.
Hughes sings a beautiful Christmas song, but it's short and embedded in the middle of the movie.
Pet peeve that doesn't affect my review or rating: please make phone texts large enough for anyone who doesn't have great vision or a huge screen. This one may be one of the hardest to read I've ever seen.
Lifetime's 2020 Christmas film batch, like all their previous years, was pretty hit and miss which was not unexpected when one takes the circumstances into account, though a better standard than 2019's. 'The Christmas Edition' managed to be one of the better ones once it settled fully, despite there being a medium sized gap where there was some uncertainty of whether to continue or not. It also had a more mature theme than most which was appreciated and done quite well.
'The Christmas Edition' isn't perfect. It does start on the slow side and the dialogue is a bit cheesy to begin with. Will agree that the relationship did feel rushed at times, as did some character motivations towards the expectedly too tidy end.
Marie Osmond for my tastes overdoes it in her role, though she does have a character that is difficult to play subtly and dialogue that is not always easy to take seriously.
However, 'The Christmas Edition' is worth seeing for primarily the effervescent performance of Carly Hughes, who really brightens up the screen and makes her character likeable. Rob Mayes also has the likeability and charm factor, he looks comfortable and doesn't take any flaws with his character to extremes. Their chemistry didn't quite ignite straightaway but when it settled it was genuine and charming. Aloma Wright and Emily Alabi are lively support and don't come over as forced.
Furthermore, a great job is done with the Christmas atmosphere, where it does feel like Christmas and in an affectionate way. Some lovely Christmas touches and there are some very sweet, but not sickly, scenes. Was not crazy about the script early on, but it did have a nice mix of funny and poignant lines. The story may be thin but has a warm heart and charm and doesn't take itself too seriously, despite exploring a topical issue (which it handles quite intelligently). It benefits from some nice photography and scenery and the music isn't constant or too drone-like.
Overall, worth watching. 7/10.
Here is Rob Mayes (Finn), again in Alaska, as an artisan who inherits his father's biz, mixing it up, again, with a driven San Francisco career gal of color on the verge of a promotion, Carly Hughes' Jackie, who lands sideways in a Christmas-happy small town.
Happily, Hughes is a breath of fresh air, and, with the exception of Finn's clutch of fugly sweaters (hello, wardrobe!), this movie is definitely an upgrade.
For one, Jackie, Finn & Co. unite around a real and heartfelt issue-the death of newspapers, specifically community news, a rare commodity in these films.
Jackie and Finn have an easy chemistry. Finn is off-the-beaten-path for a male lead, played with a laid-back touch by Mayes. It works. Most of the supporting characters bring some originality. It makes things flow, like rain in a desert of a stale among these movies.
All in all, it had a more natural vibe: less cardboard, more variety of folk, a few more interesting happenings, rather than the typical 'event' feel. Some thoughtfulness all-around. Even Marie Osmond, as the presumed villainess, packed a little surprise in the end.
One rub, FWIW: if you're set on calling it Alaska, and your cast is diverse, how about including Native Alaskan actors?
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThe signpost showing the direction to Garland, AK when Jackie first arrives is from the Ein Weihnachtsgeheimnis (2014) movie.
- PatzerWhen Jackie waits for Finn to meet her at the airport she's wearing a purple jacket; when she's inside his truck she's wearing a black jacket. After meeting the locals and going to the house she's renting, she's back to the purple jacket.
Top-Auswahl
Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Offizieller Standort
- Sprache
- Auch bekannt als
- Magické Vianoce na Aljaške
- Drehorte
- Huntsville Astronomic and Lunar Observatory, 198 South, 7400 East Huntsville, Utah 84317, USA(scenes in the observatory)
- Produktionsfirmen
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen