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The Christmas House
Format: DVD
$22.51$22.51
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Product description
Working through some difficult decisions, a mother and father summon their two grown sons home for the holidays. It is their hope that bringing the family together to recreate the Christmas house, will help them find resolution and make a memorable holiday for the entire family and community.
Product details
- Aspect Ratio : 1.78:1
- Language : English
- Package Dimensions : 18.9 x 13.6 x 0.8 cm; 77.11 Grams
- Media Format : NTSC, Subtitled
- Run time : 1 hour and 24 minutes
- Subtitles: : English
- Language : English (Dolby Digital 5.1)
- Studio : Hallmark
- ASIN : B099L7RYY2
- Number of discs : 1
- Best Sellers Rank: 12,261 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
- 9,429 in Movies (Movies & TV)
- Customer Reviews:
Customer reviews
4.6 out of 5 stars
4.6 out of 5
100 global ratings
How are ratings calculated?
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Top reviews from other countries

Kenneth Durham
5.0 out of 5 stars
This film is a must see for the entire family to watch
Reviewed in Canada on 4 December 2021Verified Purchase
It is refreshing to see a family where the parent's son has no qualms over him being gaysexual and that he is going through the process of adopting a child with his husband. This is just one of the aspects of the film which I'm not going to give away the rest since this would spoil the film itself. It is a must see film, that's for sure.
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Ann
5.0 out of 5 stars
Good movie
Reviewed in Canada on 8 January 2022Verified Purchase
Entertaining, good quality and great price

Anthony Bidulka
5.0 out of 5 stars
Arrived safe and sound and on time. Thanks.
Reviewed in Canada on 4 December 2021Verified Purchase
Arrived safe and sound and on time. Thanks.

w
4.0 out of 5 stars
A Disconnect Between the Idea and the Execution
Reviewed in the United States on 10 October 2021Verified Purchase
A family gathers one last time to bring their once traditional annual Christmas House to life. A rekindled romance, dreams come true, a relationship revived, a little magic. This is very Hallmark so no unpleasant surprises and no sad endings. These movies are part of what signal the season for me, H-mark has the formula down so they always work – just to varying degrees. For sure these weren’t my parents, unfailingly supportive, sensitive, unselfish. Treat Williams still looks like a million bucks and Sharon Lawrence as the mom comes across as the most natural though she always looks like she’s on the verge of tears. All of the actors are nice to look at as required, and a good amount of time is spent on superficial character development [if that’s not too contradictory] necessary if there’s going to be any emotional wallop at the end, and there’s really only one, and it was a bit of a ‘surprise’. So, we’re SHOWN Mike and Andi, Phylis and Bill, et. al. and we’re TOLD about their relationships, but no one really inhabits their characters, there just isn’t time, everything glides on the surface, sincerity/emotional connection is in short supply [contrast this with Doris Roberts in Mrs. Miracle]. It’s still a nice bit of run-up to holiday feels nice escape. My thing is with the look of the movie – everything looks brand spanking new, even the soft-focus flashbacks. The Christmas house, the symbol of their memories and the magic of Christmas is all contemporary, nothing’s ratty or dented or dinged, the house is 40 years old and stuff is taken out of storage bins but it looks like it all came from the Home Depot [or more significantly Hallmark] last week – so the problem is that visually, nothing evokes nostalgia or sentiment or memory, everything is bright, glitzy, slick, and LED – this is a problem when the idea of the story revolves around recapturing the magic of bringing back a family tradition ‘one last time’.
NOTE: I should've mentioned this before, but the male couple reads as a heteronormative relationship depicting something that's probably been around since we lived in caves - in 2021 it's about as shocking as using the F word; the only surprising thing is how accepting his entire family is of him, his husband, and their plans. more risqué by far is the conscious display of Robert Buckley's [Mike] straight character studly body.
NOTE: I should've mentioned this before, but the male couple reads as a heteronormative relationship depicting something that's probably been around since we lived in caves - in 2021 it's about as shocking as using the F word; the only surprising thing is how accepting his entire family is of him, his husband, and their plans. more risqué by far is the conscious display of Robert Buckley's [Mike] straight character studly body.
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Jerry Flack
4.0 out of 5 stars
Not Quite As Promised
Reviewed in the United States on 21 October 2021Verified Purchase
One of the reasons that I ordered this Christmas film was because it presents what I am sure it the first-ever gay couple in a Hallmark made-for-TV movie. While that relationship is enjoyable to watch unfold, the film itself simply has too many plot lines being played out. Interestingly, the story of the gay couple may be the most family-oriented plot element in the entire film. The anchor to the story, the decorating of a once-famous family Christmas house, seems to be really impossible to have been put together by so few characters in such a short time. The "surprise" plot line of the problems the parents of their two grown sons are supposed to be having is also a bit hard to take seriously. The quasi-military nature of the family mother is also more annoying than humorous. This story or the film itself could have used some sharp editing. All the actors perform well and are a pleasure to watch. The story is just too overloaded with multiple unfolding stories. The brief scenes of Christmas fast-forwarded to a future holiday season is a nice final touch.
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