IMDb RATING
6.5/10
3.2K
YOUR RATING
A famous MGTOW author is forced to look after his niece and nephew over the holidays and, with the help of his Christmas-loving neighbor, he learns to find love and the Christmas spirit.A famous MGTOW author is forced to look after his niece and nephew over the holidays and, with the help of his Christmas-loving neighbor, he learns to find love and the Christmas spirit.A famous MGTOW author is forced to look after his niece and nephew over the holidays and, with the help of his Christmas-loving neighbor, he learns to find love and the Christmas spirit.
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Featured reviews
Fun and a bit different
Here we get an antithetical romance between Jesse Metcalfe--who we first saw and came to like in the Dallas sequel-- and Fiona Gubelmann.
Jesse plays a successful author of lifestyle books for single men, and he lives his lifestyles, adding authenticity to his work. He's also not a big "holiday guy".
He gets saddled with his niece and nephew leading up to Christmas, and is a real fish out of water in handling kids. His neighbor (Fiona) helps out even though she and Jesse don't get along that well.
A funny bit throughout the movie is someone continually placing Christmas decorations in his yard, and his frustration when he gets rid of them and they reappear.
It's well worth a watch, and we've seen it more than once.
Jesse plays a successful author of lifestyle books for single men, and he lives his lifestyles, adding authenticity to his work. He's also not a big "holiday guy".
He gets saddled with his niece and nephew leading up to Christmas, and is a real fish out of water in handling kids. His neighbor (Fiona) helps out even though she and Jesse don't get along that well.
A funny bit throughout the movie is someone continually placing Christmas decorations in his yard, and his frustration when he gets rid of them and they reappear.
It's well worth a watch, and we've seen it more than once.
Enjoyable Festive Fun!
You can pick away at any Hallmark movie's details. There's always something that doesn't fit or how about that half of them are shot in the summer and have melting foam everywhere!
The whole point of watching these movies is to suspend reality for a couple of hours. If you can't do that, you shouldn't be watching them.
I actually thought this moving was refreshing. It was modern and I enjoyed the dialogue. The kids were well cast. They weren't annoying and whiny which is often the case.
I know Jessie Metcalf's hair was ridiculous and so was April's (can't remember her real name), so many ugly extensions! But her acting was great and was beyond TV movie quality and all and all I think the cast was believeable.
I also liked that they shot this movie in the fall (guessing) at least. I could see that the tree branch's were bare and in certain scenes you could see their breath because it was chilly out. I hate when they shoot these wintertime movies in the summer!
This is the first time I've ever written a review and it was because I thought this movie was a cute, original, thoughtful Christmas movie.
I actually thought this moving was refreshing. It was modern and I enjoyed the dialogue. The kids were well cast. They weren't annoying and whiny which is often the case.
I know Jessie Metcalf's hair was ridiculous and so was April's (can't remember her real name), so many ugly extensions! But her acting was great and was beyond TV movie quality and all and all I think the cast was believeable.
I also liked that they shot this movie in the fall (guessing) at least. I could see that the tree branch's were bare and in certain scenes you could see their breath because it was chilly out. I hate when they shoot these wintertime movies in the summer!
This is the first time I've ever written a review and it was because I thought this movie was a cute, original, thoughtful Christmas movie.
The minor details make a difference....
The minor details in the film make a huge difference in how one perceives it, between being a low budget waste of time and a decent film where they put at least some effort into the production.
Anyone else notice how they were skating on plastic tiles rather than ice? This, as well as the obvious violin playing.
Overall, it was a decent film for what it was, and I ended up watching it through completely. That's how I judge a film, if I can actually get through it. I just wish that they would focus on the minor details a bit more than they did. It would have made a huge difference in how it's seen.
Anyone else notice how they were skating on plastic tiles rather than ice? This, as well as the obvious violin playing.
Overall, it was a decent film for what it was, and I ended up watching it through completely. That's how I judge a film, if I can actually get through it. I just wish that they would focus on the minor details a bit more than they did. It would have made a huge difference in how it's seen.
Never Underestimate the Power of the Side Part!
My wife and I settled in for some festive TV watching a couple of weeks ago, and we landed on Christmas Next Door from the Hallmark Channel. However, we also had things to do, so we only watched parts of this movie over the course of two hours. By the time the movie was over, I estimate that I had watched about 18 minutes of this actual movie, and my wife probably watched about 12 minutes. There was some overlap in our watching, but there were also some parts one of us watched while the other person was doing something in another room. Together, we pretty much got the gist of the story.
It seems that the guy in the story, who early on had his black hair completely slicked back, did not have the Christmas spirit, and did not like decorating for Christmas. There was some annoying man who lived on Slicked-Back's block who wanted to decorate the front of his house for him, but Slicked-Back was having none of it. After not watching for a little while, my wife and I tuned in to find a blonde woman, who also lived on that block, talking to her sister about how Slicked-Back doesn't like to decorate. This part was troubling to me, and I honestly feared for Slicked-Back's life at that point. It seemed that the whole neighborhood was obsessed with him. I was afraid that the neighbors were going to drug him, kidnap him, and perform medical experiments on him where they tried to make him part reindeer. I imagine that they probably would have attached the antlers to his head, kept his face in tact, given him a reindeer torso, kept his human arms and legs, and then attached hooves. Sleep with one eye open, Slicked-Back!
I guess my fear wasn't so great that I had to keep watching because we stopped paying attention to the movie for a while. When we started watching again, Slicked-Back was still alive, BUT he was hanging out with the blonde woman enjoying Christmas carols AND his hair went from being slicked back to an even side part. This encapsulated the main character's transition from being a bad boy who was too cool for xmas to the side-parted teddy bear who wanted nothing more than to buy the prized goose for Bob Cratchit's family. My wife noticed this too, and we both instantly knew that Side-Part had found the true meaning of Christmas. I was so moved that immediately hugged my daughter, but she was busy tearing napkins to shreds and therefore did not seem to care about my hug.
It seems that the guy in the story, who early on had his black hair completely slicked back, did not have the Christmas spirit, and did not like decorating for Christmas. There was some annoying man who lived on Slicked-Back's block who wanted to decorate the front of his house for him, but Slicked-Back was having none of it. After not watching for a little while, my wife and I tuned in to find a blonde woman, who also lived on that block, talking to her sister about how Slicked-Back doesn't like to decorate. This part was troubling to me, and I honestly feared for Slicked-Back's life at that point. It seemed that the whole neighborhood was obsessed with him. I was afraid that the neighbors were going to drug him, kidnap him, and perform medical experiments on him where they tried to make him part reindeer. I imagine that they probably would have attached the antlers to his head, kept his face in tact, given him a reindeer torso, kept his human arms and legs, and then attached hooves. Sleep with one eye open, Slicked-Back!
I guess my fear wasn't so great that I had to keep watching because we stopped paying attention to the movie for a while. When we started watching again, Slicked-Back was still alive, BUT he was hanging out with the blonde woman enjoying Christmas carols AND his hair went from being slicked back to an even side part. This encapsulated the main character's transition from being a bad boy who was too cool for xmas to the side-parted teddy bear who wanted nothing more than to buy the prized goose for Bob Cratchit's family. My wife noticed this too, and we both instantly knew that Side-Part had found the true meaning of Christmas. I was so moved that immediately hugged my daughter, but she was busy tearing napkins to shreds and therefore did not seem to care about my hug.
Here, hold this
When Eric goes to see April at the restaurant at the end, does anyone else find it weird that she just hands the violin off to someone dining, and just leaves without it?
Did you know
- TriviaSkating scene is filmed in front of Toronto's city hall at Nathan Philips Square. Skating is done outside usual rink area used.
- GoofsApril Stewart and Eric Redford live two houses away from each other in a well-to-do suburb in brick houses. For some reason, particular plot developments happen when one can hear what is going on inside the other residence.
- SoundtracksDeck the Halls
(uncredited)
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- El amor llama a tu puerta
- Filming locations
- Toronto, Ontario, Canada(location)
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