Adding a dash of realism to Hallmark Christmas movies
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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 05/12/2021 (1115 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.
Wow. It’s December 2021 and we’re still in a pandemic. I know. I know!
WFP Movie Night
Want to watch a real Hallmark Christmas movie with us? Please join us for a holiday WFP Movie Night!
On Thursday, Dec. 9 at 7 p.m., we’re hosting a virtual screening of the locally shot Hallmark Christmas movie Crashing Through the Snow, starring Amy Acker, Warren Christie, Brooke Nevin and Kristian Bruun, about two exes, Maggie and Jeff, navigating the holidays co-parenting a blended family that includes Jeff’s new girlfriend, Kate, and Kate’s brother Sam.
Want to watch a real Hallmark Christmas movie with us? Please join us for a holiday WFP Movie Night!
On Thursday, Dec. 9 at 7 p.m., we’re hosting a virtual screening of the locally shot Hallmark Christmas movie Crashing Through the Snow, starring Amy Acker, Warren Christie, Brooke Nevin and Kristian Bruun, about two exes, Maggie and Jeff, navigating the holidays co-parenting a blended family that includes Jeff’s new girlfriend, Kate, and Kate’s brother Sam.
To gain access to the screening, you must register for a free ticket through Eventbrite. Only one ticket per household is required. Head here to get yours: http://wfp.to/1VZ
Tickets will be available until 4 p.m on December 9, or until all available tickets have been reserved.
A couple of other housekeeping notes:
This event is one night only — you will not be able to watch it at a later date.
The screening will take place at www.winnipegfreepress.com/movie-night. You do not need access to cable TV to watch; all you need is an internet connection and device to watch on, such as a computer, laptop, tablet, etc.
We will have a live chat going during the screening, in which you’ll be able to interact with local cast and crew as well as each other.
All movie details and FAQ are available on the website. Questions can be sent to fpevents@freepress.mb.ca
You know who is not — and has never been — in a pandemic? The Hallmark cinematic universe. No siree. In the Hallmark cinematic universe, social distancing isn’t a thing. There are no lockdowns, no masks, no “mysterious illnesses” — except for in one 2021 offering called You, Me & the Christmas Trees, in which some sort of tree plague is killing a Christmas tree farmer’s firs and noted evergreen expert Danica McKellar has to get to the — you know where this is going — “root of the problem.”
But as we wondered last year, what would it look like if Hallmark did address COVID-19? Here are some new Hallmark Christmas movies for the not-quite-post pandemic normal, or whatever we’re calling this point in time. (Disclaimer: This is satire and these movies do not exist — yet. I would be willing to write them for a price, H-Mark.)
Christmas Before COVID
Angela (probably Lacey Chabert) is devastated when a new COVID-19 variant threatens to derail her holiday plans — again. She bites into a magical gingerbread man and is transported back in time to Christmas 2019 (it’s a cookie, not a time machine), which was marred by a longstanding feud between her brothers (those guys from that thing). She tries to warn everyone about the importance “making this Christmas really count, you guys” — and not, you know, the impending arrival of a deadly plague, but OK, sure, Ange — but will anyone listen?
Ho ho no!: The Santa Shortage
Nick (definitely Travis Van Winkle) has actively hated the holidays ever since his dad walked out on his family one Christmas morning and never looked back. But when Annie, Nick’s high school sweetheart/one who got away, asks him to fill in as the Gazebo Santa in their hometown after the pandemic caused a professional Santa shortage (this is a real thing that’s happening, look it up), he finds himself getting into the spirit of the season.
A Very Vaccinated Christmas
Now that the world has reopened, Connie is finally meeting, in person, Chad, the dreamboat she’s been long-distance Zoom dating over the pandemic, and has been excitedly planning a Christmas trip to his hometown (might stay a week, might stay forever). But his perfect white teeth have distracted from a major red flag: he’s “just asking questions” on an awful lot of internet threads about vaccines. Is he… an anti-vaxxer? And can Connie convince him to get his jab before she quits her stressful C-Suite job and moves across the country to be with him? Or did he have his vaccine all along? (Buckle up: this one’s a rollercoaster.)
Christmas Unmasked
Despite dealing with some intense re-entry anxiety after basically self-isolating for two years, Alison (Candace Cameron Bure) is looking forward to a new-normal holiday season — especially after a meet-cute with Dave, the guy who accidentally picked up her eggnog latte from the counter instead of his but then she couldn’t touch her own cup after he touched it because COVID and it was a whole thing. Alison knows Dave will be at the socially distanced Snow Ball, and she has an important decision to make: is he worth unmasking under the mistletoe for?
Marshmallow World
Before the pandemic, Jack Frost (absolutely not his real name) was a hot-shot restaurateur with an impossible-to-get-into concept in the big city called Ice, which the Times (not that Times) called “hot and cool.” When lockdowns and ongoing supply-chain issues shutter his restaurant right before Christmas, Jack finds himself back in his small town — a place he’s been socially distancing from for quite some time — where he takes it upon himself to make Marshmallow World, the beloved holiday dessert tour in the town square, “cool again.” Will he ruin a tradition or remember why he fell in love with food in the first place?
Christmas Under The Christmas Tree Because It’s Christmas
Socialite Brittneigh is vaxxed, relaxed and, unfortunately for her, credit-card maxed. She’s forced to look for her very first job — she’s 30 — and the only place that will take a chance on her is the local Christmas tree lot, which is run by Josh, an aw-shucks guy who, according to Brittneigh, is “hot in like a Sears catalogue kind of way.” When the lot is quickly cleared out by panic-buyers worried about the 2021 Christmas tree shortage, Brittneigh decides to take matters into her own hands — and she must be stopped.
jen.zoratti@winnipegfreepress.com
Twitter: @JenZoratti
Jen Zoratti
Columnist
Jen Zoratti is a Winnipeg Free Press columnist and author of the newsletter, NEXT, a weekly look towards a post-pandemic future.
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