IMDb RATING
5.9/10
2.5K
YOUR RATING
The entire Brady family manages to overcome personal obstacles to spend a happy holiday together.The entire Brady family manages to overcome personal obstacles to spend a happy holiday together.The entire Brady family manages to overcome personal obstacles to spend a happy holiday together.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Awards
- 1 win & 1 nomination total
Mike Lookinland
- Bobby Brady
- (as Michael Lookinland)
G.W. Lee
- Mickey Logan
- (as G. W. Lee)
F.J. O'Neil
- Mr. Prescott
- (as F. J. O'Neil)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
5.92.4K
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Featured reviews
For Die Hard Fans Only
This film was rushed into production in 1988. Hollywood was in the middle of a writers strike. This script however was already completed and ready to shoot. In fact the script was around for 5 years before CBS picked it up. Upon viewing the film you can fully understand why it wasn't made. 5 years earlier. "Its not Very Good".
For fans of the show you will enjoy this reunion. However Cindy Brady Susan Olsen declined participation in this and was replaced by Jennifer Runyon and she is fine but true fans will miss Susan I know I did.
In this film The entire Brady family manages to overcome personal obstacles to spend a happy holiday together. Its the first time in years that the entire family is reunited.
Each Brady Child is going through something and has reservation about the reunion.
I think this reunion film was okay but the final few minutes are worse then a visit from cousin Oliver. There is a scene where Mike Brady is in danger on the family starts "Singing".
Listen I loved "The Brady Bunch". I just did not like this film.
For fans of the show you will enjoy this reunion. However Cindy Brady Susan Olsen declined participation in this and was replaced by Jennifer Runyon and she is fine but true fans will miss Susan I know I did.
In this film The entire Brady family manages to overcome personal obstacles to spend a happy holiday together. Its the first time in years that the entire family is reunited.
Each Brady Child is going through something and has reservation about the reunion.
I think this reunion film was okay but the final few minutes are worse then a visit from cousin Oliver. There is a scene where Mike Brady is in danger on the family starts "Singing".
Listen I loved "The Brady Bunch". I just did not like this film.
Brady Fans will love this
To those who have watched the Brady Bunch...God! I can't believe it's been that long! If you have watched the series and are a full fledged Brady Bunch fan, then you will enjoy A Very Brady Christmas for your holiday movie viewing.
Shot on the original set, ...and with a few decorative updated changes, Mike and Carol are contemplating how to spend the holidays. And how would family oriented parents spend it---by inviting the whole family!! Of course, not all is perfect with Americas lovable family. Work Stress, tough life career decisions, and divorce loom in the air. But in true Brady and television fashion, all crisis are solved by the end of the episode. ....except one last very life threatening situation.
True, it IS a TV movie based on a TV series. The dialog is tin pan and the acting is grade B acting. But remember, A Very Brady Christmas is a Christmas story fantasy like Frosty The Snowman and Rudolph the Red Nose Reindeer. The "miracle" ending is laughable but very heartwarming and memorable.
In other words, take it what it is. A Very Brady Christmas should be loved by fans. The Christmas message is that family is most important and possibly with their help we may fulfill our hopes and dreams.--or as Alice says "It's nice to have family" If you never seen the series, you may be dismayed by the sugary sweetness of the characters.
So take a Very Brady Christmas as it is....a family celebration of togetherness that may be sometime to sweet to take, but it goes down like an enjoyable Christmas pie!
Shot on the original set, ...and with a few decorative updated changes, Mike and Carol are contemplating how to spend the holidays. And how would family oriented parents spend it---by inviting the whole family!! Of course, not all is perfect with Americas lovable family. Work Stress, tough life career decisions, and divorce loom in the air. But in true Brady and television fashion, all crisis are solved by the end of the episode. ....except one last very life threatening situation.
True, it IS a TV movie based on a TV series. The dialog is tin pan and the acting is grade B acting. But remember, A Very Brady Christmas is a Christmas story fantasy like Frosty The Snowman and Rudolph the Red Nose Reindeer. The "miracle" ending is laughable but very heartwarming and memorable.
In other words, take it what it is. A Very Brady Christmas should be loved by fans. The Christmas message is that family is most important and possibly with their help we may fulfill our hopes and dreams.--or as Alice says "It's nice to have family" If you never seen the series, you may be dismayed by the sugary sweetness of the characters.
So take a Very Brady Christmas as it is....a family celebration of togetherness that may be sometime to sweet to take, but it goes down like an enjoyable Christmas pie!
Brady cheesiness at its finest. So bad it's good.
I absolutely love the Brady Bunch and so does my daughter now ( she's 14). We love this movie.
It was great seeing the whole Brady clan together- except for the orig Cindy. I've always loved Florence Henderson she still looks beautiful in this movie.
Of course there are some corny scenes and just annoying characters. Marcia's husband Wally is a nerd who doesn't want anyone to know he lost his job. Their son is a bratty red head who's mean to Greg's kid. You seriously want to punch the brat in the face.
When bringing in the tree, the Bradys break out into a cheesy Christmas song which no normal family actually sings.
When Peter and Bobby talk in the middle of the night, Peter is wearing a nightgown. What guy actually wears that?
Look for a big goof decorating the Christmas tree. Some bad audio. Hard to believe that wasn't caught during editing.
Cheesy Christmas fun I watch every holiday.
It was great seeing the whole Brady clan together- except for the orig Cindy. I've always loved Florence Henderson she still looks beautiful in this movie.
Of course there are some corny scenes and just annoying characters. Marcia's husband Wally is a nerd who doesn't want anyone to know he lost his job. Their son is a bratty red head who's mean to Greg's kid. You seriously want to punch the brat in the face.
When bringing in the tree, the Bradys break out into a cheesy Christmas song which no normal family actually sings.
When Peter and Bobby talk in the middle of the night, Peter is wearing a nightgown. What guy actually wears that?
Look for a big goof decorating the Christmas tree. Some bad audio. Hard to believe that wasn't caught during editing.
Cheesy Christmas fun I watch every holiday.
Without Question The Best Reunion Movie Ever
Christmastime just isn't complete for me without watching this movie. The Brady family reuniting for the holidays always produces warm fuzzies for me. The original show was cheesy and so is this reunion movie, but it is also surprisingly well acted by every member of the ensemble cast and hits upon some real truths about family togetherness. Jennifer Runyon seamlessly fills the shoes of Susan Olsen in this yuletide gathering, Maureen McCormick is as beautiful as ever, and Florence Henderson is still the sunniest and most perky television mom around. A TV movie can get away with being sappy if it's focused around Christmas, and this movie succeeds on every level as a feel-good holiday reunion film.
'Tis the season to be schmaltzy.
My family used to look forward to "The Brady Bunch" kicking off every Friday night (along with the rest of the ABC lineup; Must See TV, early 70s-style). Hundreds of thousands wished they could be part of this family. Who wouldn't want to be able to neatly solve their problems in 30 minutes with such understanding parents? Not to mention the memorable Hawaiian vacation episodes (a few Hawaii episodes were de rigueur for sitcoms of the era). While series star Robert Reed always chafed at the simplistic comic situations, it did manage to endear itself to the Me generation. After the original show left primetime, there were several abortive attempts to bring them back.
Of the numerous variations on the Brady theme, this reunion was the most true to form. The "Brady Kids" cartoon was too, well, cartoonish, with a magical, talking crow and no parents to be seen. "The Brady Bunch Variety Hour" was a short-lived flop. "The Brady Brides" had its moments, but couldn't capture the spirit of the original, since it didn't include the entire cast. 1990's "The Bradys" became too serious, moving the house, paralyzing Bobby, turning Marcia into an alcoholic and Mike into a politician, not to mention losing Maureen McCormick. Those changes resulted in a 6 episode run, besting the 10 episodes of the Brides and the 8 of the Variety Hour to become the shortest-lived Brady show. The Brady Bunch theatrical films were a travesty, choosing to mock the original clan as inexplicably Munster-ish outcasts blissfully ignorant of their retrofreakishness.
In my household, watching this is a holiday season tradition, the way "Miracle on 34th Street," "It's a Wonderful Life," "A Christmas Story" or "Rudolph the Rednosed Reindeer" is for others. After all, Christmas is the warm and fuzzy season and the Brady Bunch was nothing if not warm and fuzzy. When this was first broadcast, it was like seeing old friends again after a very long time, not unlike Schwartz' first successful TV show reunion, "Rescue from Gilligan's Island." Everybody had grown older, but nothing had really changed. Greg had married offscreen and both he and Marcia had kids, but that's about it. The house with its cavernous interior was thoroughly familiar and painstakingly recreated and updated. Only the driveway and backyard was missing. And the situations were classic. With roughly 100 minutes to fill, everybody got to have their own secrets and problems. True, the reunion sometimes verged on mawkishness, especially with the caroling, but that's part of the Brady charm. Only in the last 15 minutes did it drag, with Mike trapped in a construction site collapse.
All of the original cast members were at just the right age. Robert Reed never seemed more paternal. The kids were still young, but no longer the cloying youngsters of endless reruns. The production also teemed with pretty ladies. Aside from Marcia, Marcia, Marcia, there was Greg's wife Nora, Peter's girlfriend Valerie, and Jennifer Runyon as a prettier, if blander, Cindy. Susan Olsen, the original Cindy, was on her honeymoon (she should have done the reunion, since that marriage ended in divorce). Also missing was Allan Melvin, the original Sam the butcher. Only Florence Henderson was a distraction, with almost Tammy Fay Bakkerish makeup and overplucked eyebrows.
Now Schwartz is working on yet another Brady project where Mike is elected President. If it ain't broke, don't fix it. Thanks, but I'll stick with this, the last vestige of old school Brady.
Of the numerous variations on the Brady theme, this reunion was the most true to form. The "Brady Kids" cartoon was too, well, cartoonish, with a magical, talking crow and no parents to be seen. "The Brady Bunch Variety Hour" was a short-lived flop. "The Brady Brides" had its moments, but couldn't capture the spirit of the original, since it didn't include the entire cast. 1990's "The Bradys" became too serious, moving the house, paralyzing Bobby, turning Marcia into an alcoholic and Mike into a politician, not to mention losing Maureen McCormick. Those changes resulted in a 6 episode run, besting the 10 episodes of the Brides and the 8 of the Variety Hour to become the shortest-lived Brady show. The Brady Bunch theatrical films were a travesty, choosing to mock the original clan as inexplicably Munster-ish outcasts blissfully ignorant of their retrofreakishness.
In my household, watching this is a holiday season tradition, the way "Miracle on 34th Street," "It's a Wonderful Life," "A Christmas Story" or "Rudolph the Rednosed Reindeer" is for others. After all, Christmas is the warm and fuzzy season and the Brady Bunch was nothing if not warm and fuzzy. When this was first broadcast, it was like seeing old friends again after a very long time, not unlike Schwartz' first successful TV show reunion, "Rescue from Gilligan's Island." Everybody had grown older, but nothing had really changed. Greg had married offscreen and both he and Marcia had kids, but that's about it. The house with its cavernous interior was thoroughly familiar and painstakingly recreated and updated. Only the driveway and backyard was missing. And the situations were classic. With roughly 100 minutes to fill, everybody got to have their own secrets and problems. True, the reunion sometimes verged on mawkishness, especially with the caroling, but that's part of the Brady charm. Only in the last 15 minutes did it drag, with Mike trapped in a construction site collapse.
All of the original cast members were at just the right age. Robert Reed never seemed more paternal. The kids were still young, but no longer the cloying youngsters of endless reruns. The production also teemed with pretty ladies. Aside from Marcia, Marcia, Marcia, there was Greg's wife Nora, Peter's girlfriend Valerie, and Jennifer Runyon as a prettier, if blander, Cindy. Susan Olsen, the original Cindy, was on her honeymoon (she should have done the reunion, since that marriage ended in divorce). Also missing was Allan Melvin, the original Sam the butcher. Only Florence Henderson was a distraction, with almost Tammy Fay Bakkerish makeup and overplucked eyebrows.
Now Schwartz is working on yet another Brady project where Mike is elected President. If it ain't broke, don't fix it. Thanks, but I'll stick with this, the last vestige of old school Brady.
Did you know
- TriviaSusan Olsen was the only original cast member not to appear in the movie, because she had decided to go on her honeymoon in Jamaica. She also found out that Paramount only had to deliver on five of the six "kids," and wanted to pay Olsen the least.
- GoofsWhen the travel agent call Carol's bank, the agent is provided the exact account balance (as well as recent transaction history). Banks can only verify if a certain amount is in the account to cover the funds (whether it's a "good" check or not at that time). This would be a severe breach of customer privacy.
- Quotes
[Mickey slides down the handrail for the stairs]
Mike Brady: Mickey, do you want to see your next Christmas?
Mickey Logan: Yes.
Mike Brady: DON'T EVER DO THAT AGAIN.
Mickey Logan: Deal!
Mike Brady: Okay!
- ConnectionsEdited from The Brady Bunch: The Voice of Christmas (1969)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Рождество в семействе Брэйди
- Filming locations
- 15434 Sutton Street, Sherman Oaks, California, USA(Mr. Prescott's house)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
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