Hallmark

Movie Review: A Carol for Two. Final song, can’t save it

5 stars. Nope. Background noise only.

A final singing number, which is quite catchy and fun, was not enough to save this Broadway dud from getting cancelled from my theater list. Our leads, Violette (Ginna Claire Mason) and Alex (Jordan Litz) work at as singing servers in New York. They have dreams of making it big on Broadway and we’re supposed to be rooting for them.

The trouble is the Cyrano de Bergerac storyline where Alex feeds his cousin Brad (Gino Anania) all the info on Violette and somehow almost wins her over with his yule log (don’t ask, it ain’t sexy). As expected, it all comes crashing down.

Not to put too fine a point on this whole thing, but Brad is the worst. We could have had a helpless in love guy in this part, but he’s made to be an absolute fool and a pure annoyance to everyone who knows him. Not loveable, but quite creepy. This character rips a star or two off this movie.

I enjoyed Mason in A Holiday Spectacular (2022, 6 stars) and the under appreciated A Heidelberg Holiday (2023, 7 stars). When she sings the final song, it’s magic, but when she’s made to sing public domain holiday songs, it’s a waste.
Litz too, is better than the material he’s given. Let the man sing! I see leading man for many years to come, if given the right material.

Cast Kudos: Hallmark veteran John B. Lowe in a cameo as the glitzy producer. Love that guy.

Alternate titles: Christmas comes to Broadway. Cast for Christmas. Singing for supper.

Originally aired on Hallmark Nov. 1, 2024. Watched Nov. 2, 2024

Movie Review: ‘Twas the Date Before Christmas

Movie Review: ‘Twas the Date Before Christmas

This was a great movie to kick off the 2024 Countdown to Christmas, even if it’s mid-October and my house is decorated for Halloween. It’s sweet and funny, but there is one clear reason why: Amy Groening. I’ve seen her in Santa Summit, sharing the female co-starring role with two others and as a secondary character in several other Hallmark movies. But this is the first lead role I’ve seen her in. Forgive me if it’s not the first. She’s excellent. Often we have Hallmark female leads who are a bit—how do I put this nicely—stiff. Groening is anything but stiff. She’s playful and funny, and easy to root for.