






Catherine Steadman and Jacqueline Bisset star in this drama directed by Don McBrearty. Aspiring writer Tilly (Steadman) has been travelling around Europe with her grandmother Isabella (Bisset) being shown what it is like to live in modern 1870's society. As they arrive in Dublin Isabella plans to teach Tilly the value of letters and the written word and she sets up a meeting with Ireland's poet laureate the Earl of Shannon (Robert O'Mahoney). What Isabella fails to tell Tilly, however, is that the Earl of Shannon is a past love and she hopes that he will pull some strings to get Tilly's work published. Review: ABSOLUTE SPELLBOUNDER OF A VERY FINE AND CLEVERLY-TOLD CHRISTMAS ROMANCE - Don't be fooled by the rather kitschy cover that might give you the idea that you are just buying a light-hearted but rather cheap Christmas caper. I had no idea that this gorgeous movie was based on a Louisa May Alcott (“Little Women”) novella but it wasn't long before I realized that I was watching an absolute master-piece of dialogue and story-telling. The movie is also much more than a simple mince-pie of triangle love, being instead a veritable Christmas pudding with added tasty ingredients – especially class and national cultural differences – mixed successfully in. Likewise, the characters are both superb and realistic and the “one-in-the-eye-for-you” conversation flows with wit and social observations. Most remarkable of all is the plot, with more and more characters being caught up in the whirlpool of a young American writer's problems just before Christmas. With everything seemingly spiraling out of control the story could have easily soon become a tedious mess but not so here. Instead drama is built upon drama before finally finishing up like a well-tied Christmas parcel. In short: very, very satisfying and very, very charming. Review: Good film - Watched with a friend and we both enjoyed it
| ASIN | B00LH192CI |
| Actors | Catherine Steadman, Jacqueline Bisset, Leon Ockenden, Marion O'Dwyer, Robert O'Mahoney |
| Best Sellers Rank | 13,207 in DVD & Blu-ray ( See Top 100 in DVD & Blu-ray ) 416 in Historical (DVD & Blu-ray) 4,346 in Drama (DVD & Blu-ray) |
| Country of origin | Australia |
| Customer reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (501) |
| Director | Don McBrearty |
| Language | English |
| Manufacturer reference | 5060352300741 |
| Media Format | PAL |
| Number of discs | 1 |
| Producers | Sue De Beauvoir |
| Product Dimensions | 25 x 15 x 3 cm; 50 g |
| Rated | Parental Guidance |
| Release date | 6 Oct. 2014 |
| Run time | 1 hour and 25 minutes |
| Studio | Spirit Entertainment Limited |
B**S
ABSOLUTE SPELLBOUNDER OF A VERY FINE AND CLEVERLY-TOLD CHRISTMAS ROMANCE
Don't be fooled by the rather kitschy cover that might give you the idea that you are just buying a light-hearted but rather cheap Christmas caper. I had no idea that this gorgeous movie was based on a Louisa May Alcott (“Little Women”) novella but it wasn't long before I realized that I was watching an absolute master-piece of dialogue and story-telling. The movie is also much more than a simple mince-pie of triangle love, being instead a veritable Christmas pudding with added tasty ingredients – especially class and national cultural differences – mixed successfully in. Likewise, the characters are both superb and realistic and the “one-in-the-eye-for-you” conversation flows with wit and social observations. Most remarkable of all is the plot, with more and more characters being caught up in the whirlpool of a young American writer's problems just before Christmas. With everything seemingly spiraling out of control the story could have easily soon become a tedious mess but not so here. Instead drama is built upon drama before finally finishing up like a well-tied Christmas parcel. In short: very, very satisfying and very, very charming.
C**Y
Good film
Watched with a friend and we both enjoyed it
J**H
Sequel to "An Old-Fashioned Thanksgiving", a Louisa May Alcott confection
Other reviews give brief summaries, for and against. I hope these details will help. “An Old Fashioned Christmas” is a SEQUEL to “An Old Fashioned Thanksgiving” which is set in the latter 1800s, a while after the American Civil War, and based (apparently only VERY LOOSELY based, using the title, the character-names and general setting, but with a strong period feeling of Alcott!) on a short story by Louisa May Alcott (the famous author of “Little Women”), in which a daughter and estranged mother argue over family ties. The Amazon (USA) plot summary says: “Isabella Caldwell is a high-society woman in late-1800s New York. When Isabella’s estranged daughter Mary becomes ill and is too proud to ask her mother for assistance, Mary’s daughter, Tilly, takes it upon herself to contact her grandmother and plead for help. Isabella’s arrival causes an upheaval in many lives, but may also lead to reconciliation within the family.” One reviewer adds: “[include] a little romance, a disapproving neighbour, sisterly jealousy, a scandalous past, poverty, scarlet fever, and a rambunctious little boy, all woven around the Thanksgiving season and you have a story that will hold your interest. In one scene the young widow accuses her mother of having married her father (who was quite a bit older) for his money and only had a child (herself) so that his older children from a previous marriage could not contest the will.” Both films star Jacqueline Bisset as the grandmother, Isabella, and Kristopher Turner as Gad, the love-interest for Tilly. Most reviewers prefer the “Thanksgiving” film. “An Old Fashioned Christmas” happens to be set around Christmas, and ends with a Christmas dinner and includes some carol singing (including “Jingle Bells” that had not been written at this time!), although NOT the Christmas dinner that had been planned. (However this is a green-leafed, sunshine-filled summery version of late-December in rainy Dublin: the film was NOT made in the actual season. Alas.) But the story is NOT about Christmas. Instead it is a Henry James-like tale of American wealth, democracy, and no-nonsense, versus traditional British, classism, complicated by an Irish setting. Wealthy American grandmother, Isabella, invites herself to visit and spend Christmas with the Earl of Shannon, the Irish Poet Laureate. She hopes he can help her granddaughter, Matilda, known as Tilly, progress in her attempts to become a writer. Unfortunately, the Poet Laureate has suffered a stroke, and although his intentions are good, he is unable to do or say much. He spends his time sitting and reading, and making quiet negative noises about his scheming wife and rascal son. However, when Isabella shows some of Tilly’s journals to the Earl, although at first he says he is unable to help her because he has lost contact with publishers, following his stroke, he recognises Tilly’s talent as a writer, and gives his encouragement for her to pursue this as a serious career or vocation. (Tilly quotes poetry, and is besotted by Lord Byron’s life and poetry. But it is not clear, apart from her travel journal, what she is writing, or might write.) The Earl’s wife, Lady Shannon, however, has spent the Earl’s money. She has accepted Isabelle’s request to visit the Earl, and have Christmas at the castle, because she hopes that her handsome devil-may-care, wastrel, playboy son and heir will marry heiress Tilly, and her money will restore the fortune of the earldom. The earl’s son tries to romance Tilly, and she finds him attractive. But she has been engaged for the last 2 years to an American, known as Gad, who has been patiently waiting for Tilly to end her European travels. Moreover, she is the daughter of Isabella’s daughter and a stable boy, the (relatively) poor son of an Irish farmer. Angry that her daughter would marry for love, and marry beneath her social status, Isabella had cut all ties with her daughter and husband. But after the Irish husband dies, Isabella intervenes, taking young adult Tilly away on her Grand Tour. Tilly writes letters to her mother, in America, and hopes, while she is in Dublin, to find and meet her Irish grandfather, and establish a reconciliation between Isabella and her grandfather. With the help of the Earl’s son, who has admitted his mother’s would-be marriage schemes, this is (surprisingly easily) accomplished, but Isabella and the Irish grandfather quarrel. She thinks he is a mere farmer, and he blames her for being snobbish and hurting, instead of helping, his son and his family. Meanwhile, Tilly’s American fiancé, Gad, is in Manchester, and, with some complications, is invited to spend Christmas in the Irish castle with the Earl. Rivalry quickly erupts between the Earl’s son and Tilly’s fiancé, and they come to blows. Tilly is unable to make up her mind, and the fiancé leaves. But with some encouragement from her Irish grandfather, Tilly speaks her mind to scheming Lady Shannon, resists the marriage proposal from the playboy son (who sees Tilly as a possible muse for his own writing, rather than wanting to encourage Tilly to be a writer), and … … the Christmas dinner is NOT at the castle but at the farm; not with the Earl’s family, but with newly established warm feelings between Isabella and the grandfather, and with renewed marriage intentions between Tilly and her fiancé. A multiplicity of happy endings. John Gough (Deakin University – retired) [email protected]
T**N
Period Christmas drama of family closer.
Okay watch for a gloomy afternoon.
N**L
Christmas film
Good DVD nice bargain quick service all round pleasant experience 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟👍😉
G**Y
All sorts of emotions
I was really quite surprised how much I enjoyed this film. I was in two minds after reading the mixed reviews but I am so glad that I decided to give it a try. The thing is, everyone gets what they deserve in the end. Good or bad. I personally, found nothing to dislike. Just writing this review makes me want to go and watch it again but I will resist until next Christmas. That way I will enjoy it all the more.
M**R
Happy Christmas film.
An enjoyable Christmas film which one needs at that time of year.
A**R
Good movie with a believable storyline that revealed depth of character and working out.
Good feelgood positive movie. Human nature revealed in the negative, hut turned to a positive outcome. How fit is good to be honest from within.
S**.
Ce téléfilm est la suite d'un autre, "An old fashioned Thanksgiving", malheureusement introuvable en DVD Région 2 (visionnable en Europe). Il est basé sur une nouvelle de Louisa May Alcott (l'auteur des "Quatre filles du Docteur March"). Le seul regret : il n'est qu'en anglais. Cela exclu de ce programme familial les membres de la famille qui ne parlent pas cette langue...Si jamais Amazon a un bon plan.... L'histoire d'une grand-mère de la grande bourgeoisie (jouée par Jacqueline Bisset) et de sa petite fille Tilly (une jeune femme moderne) qui quittent les Etats-Unis, leur famille et le fiancé de Tilly, au milieu de XIXe siècle, pour faire un grand voyage de quelques mois en Europe.
D**D
Luckily I had another machine to watch it on. Great movie!!
A**G
I watched the first movie (Thanksgiving) loving it so much that I ordered it right away and this second part as well. Unfortunately the second movie was taken on by Hallmark and is much more cheesy and I didn’t think it was worth the purchase!
P**T
Excellent movie
D**T
You cannot play this dvd on American dvd players. Don’t know why they can’t make it for us to use in our dvd players. Didn’t realize till I got it order and delivered and had to go through the process and trouble of sending it back.
Trustpilot
Hace 1 semana
Hace 2 semanas