The story of a man who returns home on Christmas to settle his estranged mother's estate. Once there, he discovers a diary that may hold secrets to his own past and of a beautiful young woma... Read allThe story of a man who returns home on Christmas to settle his estranged mother's estate. Once there, he discovers a diary that may hold secrets to his own past and of a beautiful young woman on a mysterious journey of her own.The story of a man who returns home on Christmas to settle his estranged mother's estate. Once there, he discovers a diary that may hold secrets to his own past and of a beautiful young woman on a mysterious journey of her own.
Featured reviews
The premise is rather unusual. How a diary could turn strangers into sweethearts, reconcile estranged relatives, and make a child fully understand her mother who abandons her is something to root for. And the movie brings out all the elements that make it a gem.
Justin Hartley and Barrett Doss have undeniably good chemistry on screen which makes their scenes together quite entertaining.
The soundtrack helps to energize it, and the cinematography captures the Christmassy feeling and tone.
There are many remarkable, quiet Christmas stories out there. This is one of them.
The cast were uniformly strong, and the leads had a believable chemistry. Both were likeable but imperfect (again, unusual in this genre but a welcome change!) Particularly enjoyed Bonnie Bedellia's turn as the romantically-inclined neighbour.
This movie managed to draw me in and make me care what happened to its characters - a sure sign of competent writing and acting.
Please Netflix - more like this! Real life has its challenges, as do real people, but they're so much more interesting than the standard Christmas movie versions we get served up.
Secondly, this movie had so much to work with, but just didn't have the guts to go there. Everything was kept at such a surface level that it was hard to care or relate to the characters. I cry over pretty much anything, but I didn't shed a tear watching a movie about a woman searching for her birth mother and a man dealing with trauma and abandonment. There was no heart, no passion, no drama. No love. Rachel's decision didn't satisfy, the "closure" of Jacob's relationship with his father was anticlimactic, and the romance gave nothing. No conversation or kiss or anything that made it feel complete or earned at the end. Basically, it's a pass as far as Christmas movies go.
I liked this movie a lot other than the pretty quick ending. Justin Hartley is really underrated as an actor. It was nice to see him out of Randall's shadow on This Is Us. The Vermont and Massachusetts winter scenery was beautiful and the cast dynamic was solid. The plot was simple but mostly believable.
As I said, my only complaint was the shotgun ending. Act 3 felt criminally short in comparison to the rest of the movie.
Did you know
- TriviaAva, the dog, is an Australian Shepherd named Skye (Outrun's Allagash Evening Skye).
- GoofsNoel's diary is dated 1987 and she claims that Jake loved her to read Magic Tree House books to him. The first Magic Tree House book wasn't published until 1992, however.
- Quotes
Rachel Campbell: Jake, if you leave now, you are doing exactly what he did. Right? Why don't you just try being the first adult in your family not to take the exit?
- ConnectionsFeatures It's a Wonderful Life (1946)
- How long is The Noel Diary?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 39m(99 min)
- Color
- Sound mix