When Rebecca Miller returns home to Tennessee two weeks before Christmas, the last thing she expects is to reconnect with her childhood best friend.When Rebecca Miller returns home to Tennessee two weeks before Christmas, the last thing she expects is to reconnect with her childhood best friend.When Rebecca Miller returns home to Tennessee two weeks before Christmas, the last thing she expects is to reconnect with her childhood best friend.
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I typically love LMN Christmas movies and I try to catch all the new LMN ones, but this just fell dry for me. Of course Keshia Knight Pulliam is always wonderful but I think it's the script. I had to rewind this movie 4x to get through it. It just did not keep my attention.
The story is filled with all the usual stuff. I didn't think anything set this one apart from the rest.
The lead's response to her job situation is slightly more emphatic that in most of these stories.
The lead's response to her job situation is slightly more emphatic that in most of these stories.
I was excited to see Keshia Knight Pulliam acting as an adult, and boy she did not disappoint. Her excitement is contagious!
I was also happy to see Jarod Joseph after the awesome job he did in "The 100" series.
Not every Christmas story is the same, because everyone has a different heritage, with different traditions, and people in the U. S. come from different countries. While this movie has a familiar story line, the story itself is authentic, heartfelt, and beautiful!
For those complaining about the plot, Hallmark has made a living off of repeating story lines, usually putting actors in rolls with similar themes way too often at this point, and you've been supporting them for years!
Why can't Lifetime do a familiar story line with a twist? They're called universal themes for a reason, many can relate as it happens to almost everyone in "different ways".
We can all relate to the love of family, to holding on to true love, to cherishing traditions, and to practicing values such as service to others, the importance of the arts in human development and life, nurturing children's hearts and imagination, honoring our elders right to be happy, uniting toward the common good, etc.
Why not applaud them for being authentic when they do produce a beautiful story like this one, instead of looking for silly things to criticize?
What matters is that they represent real people, real stories, and reality regardless of how much some would like to deny it or criticize it.
I invite open minded people, who see everyone as "human beings" first and foremost, to give themselves the opportunity to watch this and other lifetime movies (especially those with minority leads and cast), and rate them in a fair, objective, and unbiased way, as it should be.
I'm very pleased with this beautiful movie, and others done this 2021 -22 holiday season, which have shown classy, and culturally diverse stories that celebrate family and love in all its forms.
Bravo to Lifetime for making a commitment to be a network that employs diverse casts and champions inclusion! Please continue to do so always, and continue making beautiful movies! Lord knows our nation needs to see our stories, our children need to see themselves represented in people who look like them, and our actors need the platform and the opportunities.
I celebrate and support them all! Bravo!
🙌💝🙌
I was also happy to see Jarod Joseph after the awesome job he did in "The 100" series.
Not every Christmas story is the same, because everyone has a different heritage, with different traditions, and people in the U. S. come from different countries. While this movie has a familiar story line, the story itself is authentic, heartfelt, and beautiful!
For those complaining about the plot, Hallmark has made a living off of repeating story lines, usually putting actors in rolls with similar themes way too often at this point, and you've been supporting them for years!
Why can't Lifetime do a familiar story line with a twist? They're called universal themes for a reason, many can relate as it happens to almost everyone in "different ways".
We can all relate to the love of family, to holding on to true love, to cherishing traditions, and to practicing values such as service to others, the importance of the arts in human development and life, nurturing children's hearts and imagination, honoring our elders right to be happy, uniting toward the common good, etc.
Why not applaud them for being authentic when they do produce a beautiful story like this one, instead of looking for silly things to criticize?
What matters is that they represent real people, real stories, and reality regardless of how much some would like to deny it or criticize it.
I invite open minded people, who see everyone as "human beings" first and foremost, to give themselves the opportunity to watch this and other lifetime movies (especially those with minority leads and cast), and rate them in a fair, objective, and unbiased way, as it should be.
I'm very pleased with this beautiful movie, and others done this 2021 -22 holiday season, which have shown classy, and culturally diverse stories that celebrate family and love in all its forms.
Bravo to Lifetime for making a commitment to be a network that employs diverse casts and champions inclusion! Please continue to do so always, and continue making beautiful movies! Lord knows our nation needs to see our stories, our children need to see themselves represented in people who look like them, and our actors need the platform and the opportunities.
I celebrate and support them all! Bravo!
🙌💝🙌
Christmas films can go either way, which has been my experience watching overtime the festive output of Lifetime and Hallmark. They can either be well-meaning, charming, warm-hearted and don't feel too heavy. Or they can be too over-sentimental, cheesy, contrived and bland. There have been many films of theirs that have fallen in both camps and in the camp where there is a bit of both. And 'The Christmas Aunt' did have the sort of premise where the execution could have gone either way.
'The Christmas Aunt' didn't strike me as a great film and is pretty uneven. It is also not a waste of time and definitely worth an at least one time watch for primarily Lifetime Christmas film completest sake and the performances. 'The Christmas Aunt' struck me as scraping above average if with a mix of quite a lot of good and some pretty bad things, and somewhere in the middle as far as Lifetime's variable 2020 Christmas output goes. There are better films of theirs from this year, but also worse.
A lot is good here in 'The Christmas Aunt'. It looks good, with lovely scenery complemented nicely by the nicely framed and never cheap photography. There are some amusing parts in the writing, some of it is over the top but endearingly so rather than forced. The direction has a good feel for the Christmas spirit and seems to understand the genre and be at ease with it.
Story isn't perfect, but it is mostly very heart-warming and charming while not taking itself too seriously. Really liked Keshia Knight Pullium's composed and warmly charming performance and similarly the sympathetic one of Jarod Joseph. Their chemistry is warm, sweet and very natural. Nyla Alleyne and Gabriel Jacob-Cross are also very likeable and breaths of fresh air agreed. All the performances are fine in one of the better acted 2020 Lifetime Christmas films, and the chemistry never looks stilted.
However, there are things that don't come off well. The story tends to be thin, with some very contrived in writing conflict later on and once again another hastily resolved and too neat ending.
Cutesiness goes into overload and also would have liked more subtlety and personality in the music.
Overall, above average and really quite decent. 6/10.
'The Christmas Aunt' didn't strike me as a great film and is pretty uneven. It is also not a waste of time and definitely worth an at least one time watch for primarily Lifetime Christmas film completest sake and the performances. 'The Christmas Aunt' struck me as scraping above average if with a mix of quite a lot of good and some pretty bad things, and somewhere in the middle as far as Lifetime's variable 2020 Christmas output goes. There are better films of theirs from this year, but also worse.
A lot is good here in 'The Christmas Aunt'. It looks good, with lovely scenery complemented nicely by the nicely framed and never cheap photography. There are some amusing parts in the writing, some of it is over the top but endearingly so rather than forced. The direction has a good feel for the Christmas spirit and seems to understand the genre and be at ease with it.
Story isn't perfect, but it is mostly very heart-warming and charming while not taking itself too seriously. Really liked Keshia Knight Pullium's composed and warmly charming performance and similarly the sympathetic one of Jarod Joseph. Their chemistry is warm, sweet and very natural. Nyla Alleyne and Gabriel Jacob-Cross are also very likeable and breaths of fresh air agreed. All the performances are fine in one of the better acted 2020 Lifetime Christmas films, and the chemistry never looks stilted.
However, there are things that don't come off well. The story tends to be thin, with some very contrived in writing conflict later on and once again another hastily resolved and too neat ending.
Cutesiness goes into overload and also would have liked more subtlety and personality in the music.
Overall, above average and really quite decent. 6/10.
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- Country of origin
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- Also known as
- A Titia Noel
- Filming locations
- Maple Ridge, British Columbia, Canada(on location)
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro
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- Budget
- $1,000,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 26 minutes
- Color
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