The "Roses," a successful mother /daughter singing duo, are reunited after 10 years of bitter separation to create a new Christmas album. The granddaughter, manager, and sound technician mus... Read allThe "Roses," a successful mother /daughter singing duo, are reunited after 10 years of bitter separation to create a new Christmas album. The granddaughter, manager, and sound technician must work together to make this happen.The "Roses," a successful mother /daughter singing duo, are reunited after 10 years of bitter separation to create a new Christmas album. The granddaughter, manager, and sound technician must work together to make this happen.
- Bret King
- (as Michael James Dickson)
- Female Reporter
- (as Bukola Walfall)
- Stage Crew
- (uncredited)
- Ruby
- (uncredited)
- Drummer
- (uncredited)
- Camera man
- (uncredited)
- Pianist
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
'Rock and Roll Christmas' is not one of those films. It does have things wrong with it, then again when has a Hallmark, UPTV or Lifetime festive film (or similar) been perfect, and the flaws are a few of the usual ones. 'Rock and Roll Christmas' does achieve its aims though at being undemanding light-hearted entertainment that has charm and heart. It doesn't quite rock, but it doesn't roll with a thud at the same time. Anybody who loves anything to do with music and who relates to the premise should check it out.
It is not flawless. It is agreed that the bickering is too much, there is too much of it and a lot of it came over as too forced and over-heated. Also didn't buy the sudden out of nowhere 180 that happens with the two lead characters, going from self-absorbed and hurting people around them to being the complete opposite very late on with little build up and like what happened before did not happen felt far too rushed and far too neat.
The story is very slight and very predictable, everything that happens happening exactly what was expected and being obvious well in advance. Beverly Mitchell did have some stiff moments early on.
She does relax though and gives a deeply felt performance that saw her having fun at other points too. She has great and easy to relate to chemistry between Catherine Mary Stuart, who brings pretty much the same while being more comfortable. The best performance comes from charming and honest Kelaiah Giuel as the most likeable character in the film and her chemistry with the two is very natural and genuine.
It looks good too, especially the scenery, and the soundtrack is catchy and puts one in a good festive mood (wish though there were more renditions done in full). The writing is not great to begin with, but is very well meaning and with a heart of gold while also not being over-serious. The story is predictable and is not believable at the end, but is mostly charming, sincere and heart-warming with some nice light-hearted-ness when necessary. The characters on the whole feel real once the bickering dies down and Mitchell's character relaxes.
Overall, above average film if not a great one. 6/10.
I wish I could say I thought she did a marvelous job on this movie, but I thought her acting was fair, maybe not even that. But even so, to me, she was Lucy grown up. She sings several times with her on-screen mother and is passable as a country music star.
I enjoyed this movie because it is peppered with performances of several Christmas classics and one original song which was a little catchy. I have said in other Christmas reviews that I would like to see more movies with extended singing and this is exactly what I mean.
The story is different from the dozens of others airing on several 24/7 Christmas stations. It's not unique, but the mother/daughter aspect helps it stand out a little from the few other singing-star-come-back movies.
There is plenty of conflict and chaos since both of the older Rose women are stubborn and each clings to the hurts of the past. The granddaughter Riley is central as she attempts to make peace.
There's a romance aspect as both of the older Rose women have men interested in them.
This is UpTV and so there is a good deal of cheesiness. For me, that is a plus to a point and this movie stayed below the negative threshold for schmaltz. The main theme seems to be the value of family at Christmas. The ending tweaked my tear ducts a little even though I was sure of what I expected to happen.
I've never been a fan of either of the leading ladies - Beverley Marshall & Catherine Mary Stewart and these country music films are all very samey and for the most part, quite obnoxious. The singers are never nice people to start with and I always find it a struggle to want them to do well or find love.
It didn't help that I wasn't really very impressed with the love interest, Smith. He just didn't have any presence.
I couldn't watch the same bickering nonsense for the whole hour and a half, so I gave up after 20 minutes.
Unscored as Unfinished.
Did you know
- TriviaAlso known as A Christmas Comeback
- GoofsThe guitar that Beverly Mitchell's character gives her daughter at Christmas is a left handed model. Later in the movie that guitar changes to a right handed model with the same markings. Based on the part of Beverly's hair remaining constant throughout the movie (and in this scene) and the clock on the wall they did not reverse the image.
- Quotes
Bonnie Rose: Am I overbearing?
Bret King: I think you love hard. And yes, it can come across as overbearing. I know where your heart is, but sometimes I can imagine it can be hard for others to see.
Bonnie Rose: Well, I don't know any other way to be.
Bret King: Truth is, she's as independent as you are, so naturally she pulls when you push.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
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- Also known as
- A Christmas Comeback
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