AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,9/10
1,1 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Três gerações de mulheres Delaney, enquanto elas exploram os altos e baixos do namoro moderno, descobrindo que o amor e o romance podem ser encontrados em qualquer idade, e até mesmo onde vo... Ler tudoTrês gerações de mulheres Delaney, enquanto elas exploram os altos e baixos do namoro moderno, descobrindo que o amor e o romance podem ser encontrados em qualquer idade, e até mesmo onde você menos espera.Três gerações de mulheres Delaney, enquanto elas exploram os altos e baixos do namoro moderno, descobrindo que o amor e o romance podem ser encontrados em qualquer idade, e até mesmo onde você menos espera.
- Prêmios
- 2 indicações no total
Barry W. Levy
- Rick
- (as Barry Levy)
Aaron J. Anderson
- Alex
- (as Aaron Joseph)
Avaliações em destaque
I watched this movie for the third time the other night and I was impressed. Maybe I'm slow on the uptake. The main two characters took their time and warmed up to one another, gradually. These two are wounded ducks, so to speak, each having lost a spouse and that makes them cautious about love and commitment. Both have children which makes things even more complicated and their slowness in realizing that they are attracted to one another is natural. The puns the two main characters tossed back and forth was at first mildly awkward for me but when you are dating and comfortable you let down your guard and let the real person out. I do recommend this movie but you need to be patient and let it unfold.
Rachel Boston and Paul Campbell were great and seemed to really enjoy being together. There was real chemistry there. Although the un-funny puns got old after a while. Enough is enough already.
Zoe Christie as Emma, looked WAY to old to be a teenager with a crush. She just couldn't pull off playing a 16 year old. Frankly she looked closer to a 30 something. It spoiled the whole teenage Delaney dating part of the storyline. And sitting and staring ALL the time at the guy you have a crush on was just creeoy. I didn't blame the guy for ignoring her.
My advice: great family flilm, not Shakespeare, but entertaining.
Zoe Christie as Emma, looked WAY to old to be a teenager with a crush. She just couldn't pull off playing a 16 year old. Frankly she looked closer to a 30 something. It spoiled the whole teenage Delaney dating part of the storyline. And sitting and staring ALL the time at the guy you have a crush on was just creeoy. I didn't blame the guy for ignoring her.
My advice: great family flilm, not Shakespeare, but entertaining.
Loved the actors. The movie was cute and funny. Some reviewers complained about the puns and corny jokes, but they were part of movie's story line and helped make the movie funny. Highly recommend.
Maggie Delaney (Rachel Boston) is a divorcee and a "single mother" of two. She has not been on a date in twenty years, but she decides to try dating when she sees her widowed mother and her teenage daughter dating. Everyone, it seems, is sticking a toe into the dating pool with little real-life experience. Maggie's nervousness is abated somewhat when a friend, Michael Taylor (Paul Campbell), suggests that they go on pretend dates and critique each other's game.
Hallmark romance fans can see where this is going already, which is fine. There is plenty of humor in this story about the three generations. The relationship between Maggie and Michael is fairly comedic, as they tease each other and share jokes. The writing is good, yielding dialogue that is fun and upbeat.
Rachel Boston is the keystone of the film, providing a cheerfulness that does not flag, even when her character deals with things that annoy her. There may not be a lot of depth in this story, but it is enjoyable.
Hallmark romance fans can see where this is going already, which is fine. There is plenty of humor in this story about the three generations. The relationship between Maggie and Michael is fairly comedic, as they tease each other and share jokes. The writing is good, yielding dialogue that is fun and upbeat.
Rachel Boston is the keystone of the film, providing a cheerfulness that does not flag, even when her character deals with things that annoy her. There may not be a lot of depth in this story, but it is enjoyable.
As another reviewer (Jackbv123) pointed out, Rachel Boston and Paul Campbell essentially recreated the roles they played in The Last Bridesmaid. They have a nice breezy chemistry that, frankly, works so well it undercuts the credibility of their "pretend" dating. In real life, I don't see how they wouldn't talk about "real" dating after that first night out. To be fair, the implausibility of continuing that charade does get discussed at the bakery the next day, but Maggie inexplicably decides to keep up the pretense. That seemed more than a bit forced, especially with the ridiculous caricatures that she dated.
Random observations:
Parmiss Sehat was great as Devon, the friend and co-worker.
The teens were realistically dorky and awkward. The scenes with Emma (well played by Zoe Christie) were especially well written by Jennifer Barrow. She wrote Sun, Sand and Romance which also starred Paul Campbell (and she also wrote another Hallmark movie about how to date called the Dater's Handbook, which starred future princess Meghan Markle).
The cake portion sizes were ridiculously large.
Make it, bake it, cake it? It sounds catchy, but it also sounds stupid. And there wasn't much to the show once it aired.
I loved the waiter's solution to Bad Date #1
The jokes WERE often cringeworthy, but they did establish and reinforce the connections between Maggie & Michael and Emma & John, and those moments were often quite cute (even if they also induced groans).
My biggest complaint was Maggie's plan to attend her ex's wedding. In what alternate universe would the ex-wife even think about going to her ex-husband's wedding???? First, he's a jerk who can't be bothered to spend time with his own kids even though he apparently has plenty of time for his next wife. Heck, it'll be hard enough to get his kids to show up. But his ex-wife?? That would be wildly unrealistic and beyond awkward. I'd rather have a root canal without anesthesia than see my ex get married. Ugh.
I liked the response to "how did you know you liked him?":
"It's not gonna be the same for everyone. It's gonna be a combination of things. Common interests, the ability to talk to one another, a similar sense of humor...I think you want a gentleman. Someone who treats you well but also knows you are strong, you are smart, you are capable. He lets you be you. You shouldn't have to shrink in order to make him feel big."
Overall, a sweet but flawed movie with 2 likeable leads.
Random observations:
Parmiss Sehat was great as Devon, the friend and co-worker.
The teens were realistically dorky and awkward. The scenes with Emma (well played by Zoe Christie) were especially well written by Jennifer Barrow. She wrote Sun, Sand and Romance which also starred Paul Campbell (and she also wrote another Hallmark movie about how to date called the Dater's Handbook, which starred future princess Meghan Markle).
The cake portion sizes were ridiculously large.
Make it, bake it, cake it? It sounds catchy, but it also sounds stupid. And there wasn't much to the show once it aired.
I loved the waiter's solution to Bad Date #1
The jokes WERE often cringeworthy, but they did establish and reinforce the connections between Maggie & Michael and Emma & John, and those moments were often quite cute (even if they also induced groans).
My biggest complaint was Maggie's plan to attend her ex's wedding. In what alternate universe would the ex-wife even think about going to her ex-husband's wedding???? First, he's a jerk who can't be bothered to spend time with his own kids even though he apparently has plenty of time for his next wife. Heck, it'll be hard enough to get his kids to show up. But his ex-wife?? That would be wildly unrealistic and beyond awkward. I'd rather have a root canal without anesthesia than see my ex get married. Ugh.
I liked the response to "how did you know you liked him?":
"It's not gonna be the same for everyone. It's gonna be a combination of things. Common interests, the ability to talk to one another, a similar sense of humor...I think you want a gentleman. Someone who treats you well but also knows you are strong, you are smart, you are capable. He lets you be you. You shouldn't have to shrink in order to make him feel big."
Overall, a sweet but flawed movie with 2 likeable leads.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThe third of eight original films in The Hallmark Channel's 2022 "Fall Harvest" lineup.
- Erros de gravaçãoThe name of Emma's best friend, as shown on the bowling score card, is Lilly. It is listed as Lily in the end credits.
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