When Ally's fired from an ad agency she gets her BFF to arrange an interview with an ad-exec mom. She gets the job--but as a nanny. Morgages and recession make her take it though she knows n... Read allWhen Ally's fired from an ad agency she gets her BFF to arrange an interview with an ad-exec mom. She gets the job--but as a nanny. Morgages and recession make her take it though she knows nothing about kids.When Ally's fired from an ad agency she gets her BFF to arrange an interview with an ad-exec mom. She gets the job--but as a nanny. Morgages and recession make her take it though she knows nothing about kids.
Shanie Evans
- Christmas Party Singer
- (as Shanie Annie Evans)
5.31.9K
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Featured reviews
Pass
I don't know if it's because this movie is 10yrs old but what is up with Ally's eyebrows? They are SO thin...it's distracting. Her hair is a mess....why? Please run a brush through her hair.
The plot was nothing special...kind of dragged on.
Overall - cheesy predictable Christmas movie with hair/make up distractions
Feel good Christmas movie for the family
This is your typical relax after dinner Christmas movie, which isn't necessarily a bad thing. Yes, the plot isn't all that, and very predictable.. But nonetheless this movie is a nice way to kill 90 minutes.
The acting is alright, and Emmanuelle is very lovable as always, and easy on the eyes as well. Besides that, Ruccolo put up a decent performance - I didn't really think of his character in Two Guys and a Girl for any moment - so that's a good thing.
If you want to see a pretty typical "christmassy" feel good movie, this one is worth your while, go check it out.
6.5/10
The acting is alright, and Emmanuelle is very lovable as always, and easy on the eyes as well. Besides that, Ruccolo put up a decent performance - I didn't really think of his character in Two Guys and a Girl for any moment - so that's a good thing.
If you want to see a pretty typical "christmassy" feel good movie, this one is worth your while, go check it out.
6.5/10
Too much plot
I love all the silly, "you can see the happy ending after the first 3 minutes" Christmas movies. I love them. I watch a ton every year. But this one just doesn't know what it wants to be and fails miserably trying. This movie has at least 4 (maybe 5) typical Christmas movie plots going at once, and doesn't have enough time to develop motivation of characters or resolutions for any them. Even for a Christmas movie people act in extremely contrived ways. You can't figure out why they would do that. And you don't really like them enough to care. Back stories are hinted at but not developed. It seemed the author had no idea how to set up the situation so just randomly got people to move to starting places for the story. Then there is too much plot to resolve, so abracadabra a small event or two suddenly makes everyone make decisions to tie up a happy ending for all the plots elements. Motivations for change are completely inadequate. If they had picked one or two of the several problems in the characters lives and focused on motivations and resolutions for that, it could have been a good movie. But it wasn't.
Avoids most of the cliches ... and that's good
Dean Cain plays VERY against type in this movie, as a bombastic company owner. When Ally Leeds, an advertising exec, pitches a campaign including an element certain to anger him, he storms out of the room and fires her ad agency, leading to her dismissal.
Later, thinking she's interviewing for a job at another agency as an ad exec, the owner of that agency thinks she's applying as a nanny and gives her that job. A bit desperate for ANY income, she accepts.
He unorthodox nanny techniques are fun, but complication arise when she falls for an ad exec at that company and pretends to also work there as an ad exec.
This is a fun movie, not at the top of our list, but one we're just fine with seeing again from time to time. It helps that we love Dean Cain, even though his role here is minor and, as I wrote, against type.
Later, thinking she's interviewing for a job at another agency as an ad exec, the owner of that agency thinks she's applying as a nanny and gives her that job. A bit desperate for ANY income, she accepts.
He unorthodox nanny techniques are fun, but complication arise when she falls for an ad exec at that company and pretends to also work there as an ad exec.
This is a fun movie, not at the top of our list, but one we're just fine with seeing again from time to time. It helps that we love Dean Cain, even though his role here is minor and, as I wrote, against type.
It didn't have that traditional sappy Christmas spirit to it...
Suffice it to say that I had, of course, never heard about the 2010 movie "A Nanny for Christmas" prior to sitting down to watch it here in 2024. I stumbled upon the movie as I was gathering Christmas movies for my December Christmas movie marathon.
Writers Michael Ciminera, Richard Gnolfo, Jeffrey Schenck and Peter Sullivan put together a rather generic script. I just didn't get that particular warm and sappy Christmassy feel as I sat through the 87 minutes that the movie ran for. Sure, it was a watchable movie, but it just didn't really stand out in the vast selection of sappy Christmas movies that are out there.
The movie does have a couple of familiar faces on the cast list, with the likes of Emmanuelle Vaugier, Dean Cain, Richard Ruccolo, Cynthia Gibb and Clyde Kusatsu. The acting performances in the movie were certainly fair.
While I did manage to sit through the entire movie, I was not particularly entertained. And since the movie failed to capture that sappy Christmas spirit, then the movie just didn't cut it for me.
This is definitely not a movie that I will be returning to watch a second time. Nor is it bound to become a Christmas classic. But I am sure that there is a fan base out there for a movie such as this.
My rating of director Michael Feifer's 2010 movie "A Nanny for Christmas" lands on a four out of ten stars.
Writers Michael Ciminera, Richard Gnolfo, Jeffrey Schenck and Peter Sullivan put together a rather generic script. I just didn't get that particular warm and sappy Christmassy feel as I sat through the 87 minutes that the movie ran for. Sure, it was a watchable movie, but it just didn't really stand out in the vast selection of sappy Christmas movies that are out there.
The movie does have a couple of familiar faces on the cast list, with the likes of Emmanuelle Vaugier, Dean Cain, Richard Ruccolo, Cynthia Gibb and Clyde Kusatsu. The acting performances in the movie were certainly fair.
While I did manage to sit through the entire movie, I was not particularly entertained. And since the movie failed to capture that sappy Christmas spirit, then the movie just didn't cut it for me.
This is definitely not a movie that I will be returning to watch a second time. Nor is it bound to become a Christmas classic. But I am sure that there is a fan base out there for a movie such as this.
My rating of director Michael Feifer's 2010 movie "A Nanny for Christmas" lands on a four out of ten stars.
Did you know
- TriviaThe outside shot of the mansion used in the Movie is also the same mansion used as the exterior of Kris Jenner's "home" in "Keeping Up With The Kardashians" reality television show but is in fact not the Jenner home but was used for security reasons.
- SoundtracksMy Real Christmas List
(uncredited)
Written by Joe Lervold & Lisa Aschmann
Performed by The Joel Evans Quartet featuring Frank Jackson, vocal
Courtesy of MasterSource
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $2,000,000 (estimated)
- Runtime
- 1h 30m(90 min)
- Color
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