IMDb RATING
6.2/10
1.3K
YOUR RATING
When New York restaurateur, Caroline Wilson inherits a café in Lemon Myrtle Cove, Australia, she begins to fall in love with the place and its people, in particular, the cafe's charming loca... Read allWhen New York restaurateur, Caroline Wilson inherits a café in Lemon Myrtle Cove, Australia, she begins to fall in love with the place and its people, in particular, the cafe's charming local chef, Simon Cook.When New York restaurateur, Caroline Wilson inherits a café in Lemon Myrtle Cove, Australia, she begins to fall in love with the place and its people, in particular, the cafe's charming local chef, Simon Cook.
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
Brian William Ranse
- Chef Nick
- (as Brian Ranse)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
I'm an Aussie girl and saw this movie on Netflix. I was very excited watching the preview with our Aussie accents on display and this movie didn't disappoint. Those people that are Aussies but give it a bad review are most likely those that only love a good action or drama. My hubby wouldn't be interested in this movie for that very reason, but he is away so I get the tv to myself tonight so this movie piqued my interest. It is light hearted, I really like the chemistry Of the couple and It's just an enjoyable watch. Thank you also for displaying some of our cultural differences and choosing actors that are actually Australian. I could see myself watching this movie again for something easy and light hearted.
This premiered in 2020,must of been a fail? I don't recall it.
Typical Hallmark movie,nothing overly special but something to watch.
Like Cindy in a few things,but her acting range is rather standard.
Ok cinematography & well.. That's about it!
Typical Hallmark movie,nothing overly special but something to watch.
Like Cindy in a few things,but her acting range is rather standard.
Ok cinematography & well.. That's about it!
Expectations were very mixed to not particularly excited. This sort of film can be charming if done right and Australia is absolutely wonderful in terms of scenery and culture, not to mention food. A large part of me knew that 'Hearts Down Under' (aka 'Romance on the Menu') would be very predictable and nothing special, and with a few exceptions Cindy Busby is not my cup of tea as an actress and has a fairly limited and samey range (even for somebody typecast/pigeon holed in these roles).
My mixed to not particularly excited expectations were not improved upon in the execution. This could have been much better than expected and there are many films that sound nothing special and very basic that turn out to be at least above average and even pretty decent. 'Hearts Down Under'/'Romance on the Menu' is not one of those films and actually turned out to be worse than expected. It has a few good things but also a lot of major bad things.
The good things shall be begun with. The scenery is absolutely magical and the photography does nothing to cheapen it and even enhances, clearly in love with it without being self-indulgent. The food looks amazing and makes the mouth water.
Also thought that Tim Ross did very well with what he was given, the character is underwritten but he has a natural charisma and is easy going.
Busby unfortunately is another story, she never looks comfortable and can be hammy. She also provides no variation on a type of role she contiually played in in a similar way each time for Hallmark. The supporting cast are stuck with cliched ciphers and are forgettable. So is the music, which is also intrusive. Busby and Ross have no chemistry together in a romance that doesn't develop very well and everything about it has a seen it all before vibe.
Something that is true with the story throughout, a well worn formula with all the typical Hallmark plot and character cliches executed in a mundane and more of the same formulaic way. The final third is especially predictable and is contrived and too convenient. Not to mention that it is paper thin and often moves at too slow a pace. The script is full of cheese and schmaltz and never flows naturally.
Overall, weak. 3/10.
My mixed to not particularly excited expectations were not improved upon in the execution. This could have been much better than expected and there are many films that sound nothing special and very basic that turn out to be at least above average and even pretty decent. 'Hearts Down Under'/'Romance on the Menu' is not one of those films and actually turned out to be worse than expected. It has a few good things but also a lot of major bad things.
The good things shall be begun with. The scenery is absolutely magical and the photography does nothing to cheapen it and even enhances, clearly in love with it without being self-indulgent. The food looks amazing and makes the mouth water.
Also thought that Tim Ross did very well with what he was given, the character is underwritten but he has a natural charisma and is easy going.
Busby unfortunately is another story, she never looks comfortable and can be hammy. She also provides no variation on a type of role she contiually played in in a similar way each time for Hallmark. The supporting cast are stuck with cliched ciphers and are forgettable. So is the music, which is also intrusive. Busby and Ross have no chemistry together in a romance that doesn't develop very well and everything about it has a seen it all before vibe.
Something that is true with the story throughout, a well worn formula with all the typical Hallmark plot and character cliches executed in a mundane and more of the same formulaic way. The final third is especially predictable and is contrived and too convenient. Not to mention that it is paper thin and often moves at too slow a pace. The script is full of cheese and schmaltz and never flows naturally.
Overall, weak. 3/10.
A typical Hallmark movie but even more cheesy than normal and with lots and lots of plot holes. As another reviewer said "Busby is awful, she plays the same character in all of her films". There is absolutely zero chemistry between the leads (and it feels like we missed something because all of the sudden there's love when just moments ago the characters hated each other). The plot is obviously predictable from the first minutes. The argument is lousy and the "final conflict" part is just too rushed and just strange. The cooking, ocean and the Australians are nice though. Really liked the girl playing Beth.
I normally like Hallmark romances but this one was too boring and weird (like, all was too unbelievable). Would not recommend nor watch again.
I normally like Hallmark romances but this one was too boring and weird (like, all was too unbelievable). Would not recommend nor watch again.
Hearts Down Under or Romance on the menu, either way this was a formulaic Hallmark Romantic film...light and breezy with a Happy Ending.
Stubborn control freak New York Laboratoire restaurant owner and chef Caroline inherits a quaint Australian restaurant named The Seagull from her deceased aunt Doreen. Caroline goes to Australia to sell the restaurant quickly and get back to New York for an important critic review. While in Australia she stays in a cottage owned by Simon Cook, who turns out to be the cook at The Seagull. As the staff rally together to convince Caroline not to sell, Simon and Caroline spar and one up each other over their differences in cooking. Desperate to make repairs quickly in order to sell the restaurant Caroline strikes up a deal to cook for Simon while he does the needed repairs on the restaurant for the building inspector which is required for her quick sale.
Caroline gets to know the staff and loosens up a bit in the process. There is a ridiculous looking dog named Spatch (short for spatula) and sunny beach scenes...but the best part is really the actor who plays Simon Cook. He looks a bit like an Australian version of Ben Affleck and he really wins you over with his smile.
Stubborn control freak New York Laboratoire restaurant owner and chef Caroline inherits a quaint Australian restaurant named The Seagull from her deceased aunt Doreen. Caroline goes to Australia to sell the restaurant quickly and get back to New York for an important critic review. While in Australia she stays in a cottage owned by Simon Cook, who turns out to be the cook at The Seagull. As the staff rally together to convince Caroline not to sell, Simon and Caroline spar and one up each other over their differences in cooking. Desperate to make repairs quickly in order to sell the restaurant Caroline strikes up a deal to cook for Simon while he does the needed repairs on the restaurant for the building inspector which is required for her quick sale.
Caroline gets to know the staff and loosens up a bit in the process. There is a ridiculous looking dog named Spatch (short for spatula) and sunny beach scenes...but the best part is really the actor who plays Simon Cook. He looks a bit like an Australian version of Ben Affleck and he really wins you over with his smile.
Did you know
- TriviaWas originally scripted to be set in the United States before first-time director Rosie Lourde pushed for it to switch to Australia.
- GoofsAfter Caroline and Simon sample the fish they caught from the pier Simon goes to the pantry, retrieves a tool box, and opens it. Then, after Marla shows up and they have a brief conversation, Simon unlatches and opens the tool box he had already opened at the beginning of the scene.
- ConnectionsReferences Ghost (1990)
- How long is Hearts Down Under?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- Romance on the Menu
- Filming locations
- Shorncliffe, Queensland, Australia(main location)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content