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6.3/10
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Emily James (Julie Berman), now 27 years old and considered a relic in the world of figure skating, gets an improbable shot to reclaim skating glory when a young coach sees greatness in her.... Read allEmily James (Julie Berman), now 27 years old and considered a relic in the world of figure skating, gets an improbable shot to reclaim skating glory when a young coach sees greatness in her. Together, they find their love of skating goes beyond the ice.Emily James (Julie Berman), now 27 years old and considered a relic in the world of figure skating, gets an improbable shot to reclaim skating glory when a young coach sees greatness in her. Together, they find their love of skating goes beyond the ice.
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- TriviaPrior to airing, the film was accused by fans of Yuri!!! On Ice (2016) of ripping off the anime series and simultaneously "straight-washing" the series. Yuri!! On Ice writer Mitsurô Kubo stated on her Twitter that the similarities between the series and the movie were coincidental.
- GoofsDuring Spencer and Nikki's first on-ice practice, Spencer asks Nikki to attempt a Sal (i.e. Salchow jump). What Nikki actually attempts on the first try is an Axel, the only figure skating twisting jump taking off in a forward position (a Salchow which has a backward entry, like most twisting jumps).
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Spencer Patterson, a young figure skating coach, is hired to coach
Nikki Lee, a teenager from Lakeville, Michigan, who shows great promise as a skater. (There is in fact no town called Lakeville in Michigan, although there is a town of that name in Minnesota). At the rink Spencer meets another Lakeville resident, a young woman named Emily James, who herself was once one of America's leading figure skaters but who mysteriously walked away from the sport eight years ago. (We later learn the reason why she did so). Emily now works as a waitress in a cafe, but spends her spare time at the rink, teaching young children to skate.
Spencer invites Emily to assist him with coaching Nikki, and realising that Emily still has great talent for the sport asks her if she would be willing to return to competition with him as her coach. After some hesitation, Emily agrees, but this situation is not to the liking of Nikki's pushy mother, Mia, who sacks Spencer as Nikki's coach and instead appoints Emily's old coach, Leslie Adams.
Which leaves only two questions to be answered. "Will Nikki or Emily win when the two of them skate off against one another in an important regional competition?" and "Will the handsome Spencer and the pretty Emily find love together?" And as the film is called "Love on Ice" we all know what the answer to that second question will be.
I normally avoid the Hallmark Channel and its works like the plague, but I watched this one because of my keen interest in figure skating, a sport largely overlooked by the movie industry. Unfortunately, it only served to remind me just why I don't like Hallmark. Their stated intention is to make "family" movies, but there is more to making family films than a scrupulous avoidance of sex, violence and bad language. You also have to make something that will hold the family's interest, and I suspect that if a film like this had been offered to me when I was a child, I would have been bored to tears. And so would my parents and siblings.
Apart from Leslie, who has a spiteful side to her nature, all the characters are just so nice. We never get any sense of rivalry between Nikki and Emily, because both are as sweet and wholesome as apple pie. It doesn't really matter which of them wins the skating contest, because both will take the god medal for cuteness. Spencer is a thoroughly decent young chap. Mia may be pushy and overbearing, but we sense that her heart is really in the right place and that she only wants the best for her talented daughter. The result is a film without any real conflict or drama, except briefly in some of the Leslie scenes, which means a film without any real interest.
Also, the skating scenes struck me as unrealistic; I could never accept either Emily or Nikki (or whoever was acting as their stunt doubles) as elite skaters, performing single jumps where real elite skaters would perform doubles or (preferably) triples. To describe the film in skating terms, it lacks technical merit and fails to make an artistic impression. 4/10.
Spencer invites Emily to assist him with coaching Nikki, and realising that Emily still has great talent for the sport asks her if she would be willing to return to competition with him as her coach. After some hesitation, Emily agrees, but this situation is not to the liking of Nikki's pushy mother, Mia, who sacks Spencer as Nikki's coach and instead appoints Emily's old coach, Leslie Adams.
Which leaves only two questions to be answered. "Will Nikki or Emily win when the two of them skate off against one another in an important regional competition?" and "Will the handsome Spencer and the pretty Emily find love together?" And as the film is called "Love on Ice" we all know what the answer to that second question will be.
I normally avoid the Hallmark Channel and its works like the plague, but I watched this one because of my keen interest in figure skating, a sport largely overlooked by the movie industry. Unfortunately, it only served to remind me just why I don't like Hallmark. Their stated intention is to make "family" movies, but there is more to making family films than a scrupulous avoidance of sex, violence and bad language. You also have to make something that will hold the family's interest, and I suspect that if a film like this had been offered to me when I was a child, I would have been bored to tears. And so would my parents and siblings.
Apart from Leslie, who has a spiteful side to her nature, all the characters are just so nice. We never get any sense of rivalry between Nikki and Emily, because both are as sweet and wholesome as apple pie. It doesn't really matter which of them wins the skating contest, because both will take the god medal for cuteness. Spencer is a thoroughly decent young chap. Mia may be pushy and overbearing, but we sense that her heart is really in the right place and that she only wants the best for her talented daughter. The result is a film without any real conflict or drama, except briefly in some of the Leslie scenes, which means a film without any real interest.
Also, the skating scenes struck me as unrealistic; I could never accept either Emily or Nikki (or whoever was acting as their stunt doubles) as elite skaters, performing single jumps where real elite skaters would perform doubles or (preferably) triples. To describe the film in skating terms, it lacks technical merit and fails to make an artistic impression. 4/10.
- JamesHitchcock
- Sep 5, 2024
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