IMDb RATING
6.0/10
2.1K
YOUR RATING
A put-upon teen finds himself reliving the same miserable Christmas day over and over again.A put-upon teen finds himself reliving the same miserable Christmas day over and over again.A put-upon teen finds himself reliving the same miserable Christmas day over and over again.
- Awards
- 1 win & 2 nominations total
Randy Brown
- Bronski Dad
- (uncredited)
Jai Ganatra
- Sammy
- (uncredited)
Alyssa Piazza
- Christmas Party Guest
- (uncredited)
Tammy-lynn Wilcox
- Spectator
- (uncredited)
W. Steven Wright
- Spectator
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
This is a made for TV movie about a teenager who has a terrible Christmas day but gets to re-live it again and again. He gets the opportunity to change the way Christmas pans out.
It's a good natured tale and is very entertaining and while not laugh out loud funny, there are plenty of good light hearted moments. In addition there are also a few poignant moments. The setting is great but what makes this a well above average TV movie is the talented and likable cast. Whilst many TV movies suffer on this score, this one has a cast that features no weak links at all. Zachary Gordon is great as the teenager coming to terms with groundhog day and Bruce Dern adds class as the grumpy grandad. Bailee Madison also shines as the girl next door, putting in a very natural performance.
The usual Christmas messages abound but are dealt with here without the usual schmaltz. This has the feel of a much higher budgeted movie and is one of the best Christmas TV movies I've seen.
This is one of those films that is much better than you think it will be. As an easy to watch Christmas film this really hits the mark.
It's a good natured tale and is very entertaining and while not laugh out loud funny, there are plenty of good light hearted moments. In addition there are also a few poignant moments. The setting is great but what makes this a well above average TV movie is the talented and likable cast. Whilst many TV movies suffer on this score, this one has a cast that features no weak links at all. Zachary Gordon is great as the teenager coming to terms with groundhog day and Bruce Dern adds class as the grumpy grandad. Bailee Madison also shines as the girl next door, putting in a very natural performance.
The usual Christmas messages abound but are dealt with here without the usual schmaltz. This has the feel of a much higher budgeted movie and is one of the best Christmas TV movies I've seen.
This is one of those films that is much better than you think it will be. As an easy to watch Christmas film this really hits the mark.
We've all been there, even in a loving family, regardless of gender :)
It's nice to watch how Pete sorts out his teen angst, finds his maturity and deals with the dichotomies of family love. Bruce Dern is fantastic :)
It's fun to watch these uptight, self-focused people - kids and grownups alike, become derailed and find themselves, each other, and their family again, not necessarily in that order.
It's one of my favourite Christmas movies. First saw it one year when I was watching *all* the Christmas movies, and this was one of the best. A lot of them were coming out of Canada at that time. Another one I liked was "Father Christmas, Who?", with Leslie Nielsen.
Anyway, it has a lot of fun moments, a lot of sweetness, with the disappointments of real life treated gently.
Everyone in the family (except for the grandparent) were so annoying, they were driving me mad! At the end is Ok.
Surprisingly good film, which keeps you interested throughout. Had there never been Groundhog Day, it would be 1 or 2/10 more than this vote. As there has been Groundhog Day, on a similar premise you cannot help but compare them. This is not as good as that was, the lead boy in parts can be a little peculiar as are the family and grandad for the earlier part of the film.
But the film doesn't always go exactly as you will expect and it is never dull and comes together well in the end.
6/10
But the film doesn't always go exactly as you will expect and it is never dull and comes together well in the end.
6/10
A very derivative but likeable Christmas TV movie, centring on Pete, the less-loved, put-upon middle child of three boys born to affable middle-aged American parents. After he has a nothing-else-could-surely-go-wrong Christmas Day with his family, a meteor shower occurs and hey presto, the young man wakens up the next day only to find he has rewound in time to relive his whole wretched Christmas Day experience all over again. So, amongst other things, he gets no present, gets the blame for ruining the family Christmas dinner, gets pelted with snowballs by the local heavies, also clobbered by same at the inter-neighbourhood festive American football game and joint worst of all, blows his chance of romance with the pretty new girl who arrives next door and sees his dad and grinchy old grandad argue to the point where gramps walks out on the family before the end of the day. Same day by same day, like a junior Bill Murray, he rights every wrong, closing on the real biggie, reconciling his dad and grandad to break the loop at last.
So it's pretty obviously a Christmas edition of "The Wonder Years" meets "Groundhog Day" the latter right down to young Pete using his repeat time to learn a musical instrument from scratch and find a way to his initially reluctant girl's heart, but it's all done so openly, inoffensively and amicably, plus it's only a Christmas T.V. show for pity's sake, your surname would have to be Scrooge for you not to be mildly entertained at the very least.
The two young male and female leads give nice performances in their Kevin and Winnie-type roles and Bruce Dern is the most recognisable cast member as the hard hearted old grandfather. The only really objectionable thing for me about this otherwise pleasant Christmas movie was the wishy-washy original music trilling away in the background but for fans of the two sources mentioned, this is a nice little film to while away the time if you're stuck indoors at Christmas with nothing much to do.
So it's pretty obviously a Christmas edition of "The Wonder Years" meets "Groundhog Day" the latter right down to young Pete using his repeat time to learn a musical instrument from scratch and find a way to his initially reluctant girl's heart, but it's all done so openly, inoffensively and amicably, plus it's only a Christmas T.V. show for pity's sake, your surname would have to be Scrooge for you not to be mildly entertained at the very least.
The two young male and female leads give nice performances in their Kevin and Winnie-type roles and Bruce Dern is the most recognisable cast member as the hard hearted old grandfather. The only really objectionable thing for me about this otherwise pleasant Christmas movie was the wishy-washy original music trilling away in the background but for fans of the two sources mentioned, this is a nice little film to while away the time if you're stuck indoors at Christmas with nothing much to do.
Did you know
- TriviaThe film takes place from December 24 to December 26, 2013.
- GoofsDuring the football scenes Pete can be seen wearing both number 14 and 88 during the same plays.
- ConnectionsReferenced in The Tonight Show with Jay Leno: Episode #22.29 (2013)
- SoundtracksSpringtime Sun
Written by Mel Parsons
Performed by Mel Parsons, Erika Dacunha and Jacoba Barber-Rozema
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- La Navidade de Pete
- Filming locations
- Wellington's Pub & Grill, Parry Sound, Ontario, Canada(Interior Diner)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- CA$3,300,000 (estimated)
- Gross worldwide
- $263,493
- Runtime
- 1h 26m(86 min)
- Color
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