Val’s Movie Roundup #15: Hallmark Edition


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Citizen Jane (2009) – I was quite surprised that this was actually a Hallmark movie. The acting was strong. The story stayed focused. They actually bothered shooting in San Francisco. This almost could have been a small time B-Movie or something I would expect from Lifetime.

It begins with Jane Alexander’s (Ally Sheedy) aunt being murdered. Jane lives with a man named Tom O’Donnell (Sean Patrick Flanery) and it’s never really a mystery that he did it. The film is about how they prove it. Jane has assistance from Detective Jack Morris (Meat Loaf). I think Meat Loaf did a great job and so does Sheedy. We care, we follow, we get a decent movie. The only problem I found is the same one that was in the Lifetime movie Cleveland Abduction (2015). That movie was also based on real events. Even not knowing the true story behind it, you could tell that the film was a superficial treatment that needed much more time to properly tell the story. The same is true here. At times things will feel like they just jumped from one gear to another. Otherwise, it’s one of the most well made of the Hallmark mystery type movies. Even if there isn’t much of a mystery to it. More like mystery in the Columbo sense of the word where we know exactly what happened, but find out how the person is going to be caught.

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Garage Sale Mystery: The Wedding Dress (2015) – Again, it’s time for Jennifer (Lori Loughlin) to get involved in a mystery. This time she is at an estate sale and when she returns to her shop she discovers that among the things she has purchased is a vintage 1970’s wedding dress. Great! Except there are blood stains in a pocket. And thank god there are. I say that because this establishes a good reason for her to be investigating while the cops don’t. That’s really nice when it comes to the recent deluge of these murder mystery movies that Hallmark is producing. Usually the woman just comes across as a busybody who should just mind her own business. Here she has something that should spark her interest and the further she looks into it, the more she has a reason to bring her police officer friend into the case. It’s still heavily sanitized in the way you expect from these movies. However, for this series, I think it’s the best one I have seen so far.

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Love Under the Stars (2015) – When you boil it down to the basic plot, this is like the Hallmark movie Class (2010). Except it’s much better. It’s about a college girl played by Ashley Newbrough who needs to come up with her thesis in child psychology. Her college advisor played by Barry Bostwick has a niece that teaches a fourth grade class and has Newbrough go there for inspiration. She meets a guy played by Wes Brown who is raising a daughter as a single parent because the mother/wife has passed away. It plays out the way you expect it to and the way Class did, but it’s just better the whole way through. Especially Wes Brown. We can easily understand why she is attracted to him, but he also comes across well as a loving father who appears happy, but also has an underground river of fear and concern for his daughter constantly flowing through him. He is the real reason the film works as well as it does. Newbrough is pretty good too, but she basically walks around the film like she’s hot and horny, to put it bluntly, all the time she’s with him. It makes it difficult to take her character seriously as a real person the way we do with him. In particular, when it comes to her backstory of also losing her mother and the development of the relationship with the daughter. They should have had her dial it back a bit and act less like an infatuated teenager.

Also, the daughter (Jaeda Lily Miller) is a little annoying. I don’t think it’s the actresses fault so much as it is the way her character is written. I don’t think they give her enough credit and let her be more like a real kid with problems, then a cardboard cut out of a troubled child. A little tweaking of her character would have helped.

I really did like the use of the counting thing. When the father leaves her off at school or somewhere else, he counts down a few seconds because he knows she will turn around, usually opening a door, in order to wave to him one more time. She’s afraid he might be gone like her mother is forever. It’s a really nice touch that of course pays off in the end.

All around, this is one of the top tier Hallmark movies I have seen so far.

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Operation Cupcake (2012) – I mentioned not giving the character of the daughter enough credit in Love Under The Stars and the problem is in this film too. This is about Army Colonel Griff Carson (Dean Cain) who comes home on leave to his wife Janet (Kristy Swanson) who runs a cupcake shop. The whole thing is about Griff adjusting to civilian life while also awaiting a possible promotion to General. The problem is they don’t give this guy enough credit. Instead, they drag out his adjustment way too long. It shouldn’t have taken him so long and the change should have been more gradual rather than played for laughs as long as it could. He works at the shop with his wife, and there was at least one scene where you wonder if he actually comes from the Army. He is mobbed by a ton of people at the cupcake store that he suddenly has to service. He doesn’t really attempt to put some of his training to use in order take a bunch of unruly people and get them to act in a civilized manner. The scene doesn’t work and the movie just doesn’t really work either. I think they should have had Cain’s character transition more gradually rather than having him be essentially a brick wall that only comes down in the end. Hallmark avoided that with Recipe For Love and that’s why it is one of my favorites. I also think that Dean Cain was miscast. I have difficultly buying any kind of machismo from his character. He just doesn’t fit the part. This is one that’s fine if you wind up catching it by chance, but don’t put your lure out into the Hallmark waters explicitly to see it.

Final note: I didn’t even notice till I was looking at the credits, but Donna Pescow is in this. She was a baker at the store who has some back and forth with Cain. Of course for most people she is from Saturday Night Fever (1977), but I will always remember her as the mom on the TV Show Out Of This World. Makes me want to break out my bootleg copies of that show. To the best of my knowledge, they still haven’t released that show on DVD.

11 responses to “Val’s Movie Roundup #15: Hallmark Edition

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  6. I respectfully disagree about the comments regarding Ashley Newbrough in “Love Under the Stars.” I found her character to be charming. She plays the part with a real concern for the daughter, and shares the concern Wes Brown’s character has about their developing relationship negatively affecting his daughter.

    It’s hard to imagine any character on Lifetime “hot and horney.” Certainly Newbrough plays her character’s attraction to Brown’s character in an understated way. They both portray the struggles two good people would go thru in their situation.

    The writers had the plot take a bit of an unrealistic turn to create tension between the two characters; they actors did about as well as they could getting thru it. Like most Lifetime movies, “oh darn it all” is about the worst thing that characters say when they’re mad or hurt (they don’t say those exact words).

    That said, it was a thoroughly enjoyable film, well acted.

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    • I really appreciate you being kind about your comment. Sadly, that’s not something you see everyday when someone disagrees with something in a review you’ve written.

      I have to admit that I’ve watched 111 Hallmark movies, along with all the other ones, since Love Under The Stars so my memory may be a little fuzzy.

      What I remember is that in contrast to Wes Brown’s character, she came across as infatuated and on the bubbly side. Not something that would be a problem except that it was going on next to Wes Brown’s performance. I put it bluntly with those words in my review because when I watched it, that’s how she came across to me. I was simply being honest about how the character came across to me.

      I only faintly recall the “unrealistic turn”, but I do remember there being something like that near the end. I recall it being the standard Hallmark last minute romantic speed bump they often include in their films. I wanna say it had to do with him thinking he and his daughter were simply a research project for her, which obviously they weren’t as noted by the fact that she very clearly had strong feelings for him.

      This is one of my older Hallmark reviews. I try to do more expanded ones nowadays with screenshots and everything. I most likely would have used them to get across what I was referring to rather than those words. Also, I’ve had more experience with Hallmark’s movies at this point.

      That’s about all I can remember except that I totally agree with you about the quality. I may have had a few complaints, but they really are minor. I’m up to 164 Hallmark movies now, and I would still tell people this is one of the best I’ve seen. I’m glad you enjoyed the film.

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      • I loved everything about it until his unnecessarily hostile reaction to her paper and in the end I would have been satisfied if she had blown him off; he deserved it. It approached rage and damaged the movie.

        Liked by 1 person

  7. Jaeda is the best. I love all her movies. She is so lovely…. sweet, child. Just love her! Can’t wait to see more of her movies.

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