A grudge between two neighboring restaurateurs soon turns to love.A grudge between two neighboring restaurateurs soon turns to love.A grudge between two neighboring restaurateurs soon turns to love.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Simone Missick
- Elise
- (as Simone Cook)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
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Featured reviews
A charming Hallmarker
I enjoyed this movie, though it was expectedly predictable, it was still good, and I loved the restaurant atmosphere. Worth the watch!
Well-acted emotionally-satisfying Hallmark movie
A Taste of Romance is one of the better made and more enjoyable Hallmark films.
Sarah Westbrook (Teri Polo) and Gill Callahan (Jame Patrick Stuart) are complete opposites who own and run neighboring restaurants with polar-opposite strengths. Both characters initially seem unlikeable as they clash with each other, but we (the audience) start to genuinely like them as they first slowly learn to co-exist, and then become attracted to each other. The catalyst for their budding romance is Gill's young daughter, Hannah -who is beautifully acted by Bailee Madison.
Indeed, a great strength of this movie is that it is well-acted and has characters you can believe in. Teri Polo does a fine job of portraying a complicated woman whose passions and hangups are a significant barrier to new romance. James Patrick Stuart manages to bring warmth and likability to the male romantic lead role. And Bailee Madison delivers one of the best and most believable depictions of a young child that I have seen in a Hallmark TV movie.
I do wish there had been a bit more chemistry between the romantic leads - perhaps, a few more lingering looks, a few more tears when setbacks occur. But the feel-good ending is emotionally satisfying and delivers what the Hallmark audience wants. And the story that brings us to that ending never makes us roll our eyes in disbelief nor does it fail to hold our interest. A well-done movie!
Recommended.
Sarah Westbrook (Teri Polo) and Gill Callahan (Jame Patrick Stuart) are complete opposites who own and run neighboring restaurants with polar-opposite strengths. Both characters initially seem unlikeable as they clash with each other, but we (the audience) start to genuinely like them as they first slowly learn to co-exist, and then become attracted to each other. The catalyst for their budding romance is Gill's young daughter, Hannah -who is beautifully acted by Bailee Madison.
Indeed, a great strength of this movie is that it is well-acted and has characters you can believe in. Teri Polo does a fine job of portraying a complicated woman whose passions and hangups are a significant barrier to new romance. James Patrick Stuart manages to bring warmth and likability to the male romantic lead role. And Bailee Madison delivers one of the best and most believable depictions of a young child that I have seen in a Hallmark TV movie.
I do wish there had been a bit more chemistry between the romantic leads - perhaps, a few more lingering looks, a few more tears when setbacks occur. But the feel-good ending is emotionally satisfying and delivers what the Hallmark audience wants. And the story that brings us to that ending never makes us roll our eyes in disbelief nor does it fail to hold our interest. A well-done movie!
Recommended.
This movie is way underrated
I absolutely loved this movie. I had no idea what to expect and just started watching while doing something else. And after like 2 minutes I dropped everything and only had eyes for the movie. If you want to feel good, or maybe you want to see a romantic movie, or it's the holiday season - > watch this. It's great. It made me sad, it made me cry tears of joy, it made me laugh, it made me wanna hug my boyfriend. And then when I looked it up on IMDb I saw it didn't even have a picture, and the score was only 6,1. How is it possible that some people didn't like this movie? And that so little people have seen it? Only 360 people watched it and it's been out there for like a year now. I am going to recommend it to everyone from now on, and I really hope the director gets the credit he deserves.
10skpn123
Such an engaging film highlighting the therapeutic nature of food and cooking
Really this was a romance coinoisseurs delight with just the right amount of sugar and spice (excuse the pun) and dealing with some heavy issues like grief and loss but without getting dark or heavy.
But a special treat was seeing a young Bailee Madison. I can now see clearly why she was selected for an ongoing role in 'Good Witch' and has gone on to be a highly respected young actor.
But a special treat was seeing a young Bailee Madison. I can now see clearly why she was selected for an ongoing role in 'Good Witch' and has gone on to be a highly respected young actor.
horrible scenario, unlikable widower and his rude, self-centered
LOUD music. this TV movie's scenario premise is just too absurd. the guy, a widower with a teenage daughter, leased a space for his junk pizza business, from day 1 when he started the remodeling of his joint, he brought in radio and turned its volume to the extreme, bombarded the neighboring french restaurant. well, here's the first stupid arrangement to have a red-neck pizza joint next to a classy french restaurant. may i ask, what kind business neighborhood is this? how come a guy could be such an arse as a retired fireman when his neighbor complaining the loud and very disturbing music, his answer and response to such complaints would be, so what? this is a free country, i have the right to turn my music volume as loud as i like. no wonder this rude and arrogant bastard's wife would die so early. the causes of her death were obvious: his arrogance and his deafening loud music. the daughter role is very likable and, the french chef, a beautiful female, an American sweetheart, neither needed such arse to be either the father or the next-door neighbor business owner. file a complaint to the landlord and to the city for noise control code. romance? not in a million years!
Did you know
- GoofsOn opening night of the Five Alarm Grill, Danny addresses two fully-uniformed police officers as "Detectives." Detectives don't wear uniforms.
- ConnectionsReferenced in The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Episode #20.63 (2011)
- SoundtracksMiss The Days
Written by Luke Tierney, George Pendergast, Misha Feldmann, Michael Woglom
Performed by The Penfifteen Club
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