Christmas at Plumhill Manor 2024 - Movies (Nov 17th)
Red One 2024 - Movies (Nov 17th)
End Times 2023 - Movies (Nov 17th)
Ozi Voice of the Forest 2023 - Movies (Nov 17th)
Black Bags 2023 - Movies (Nov 17th)
Jingle Bell Run 2024 - Movies (Nov 17th)
Heightened 2023 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Sebastian 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Hounds of War 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Knox Goes Away 2023 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
A Quiet Place Day One 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Cabrini 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Titanic The Musical 2023 - Movies (Nov 16th)
Silent Bite 2024 - Movies (Nov 16th)
Jake Paul vs. Mike Tyson 2024 - Movies (Nov 16th)
Christmas with the Singhs 2024 - Movies (Nov 16th)
Woman of the Hour 2023 - Movies (Nov 16th)
A Missed Connection 2024 - Movies (Nov 16th)
Plastic People 2024 - Movies (Nov 16th)
A Reason for the Season 2024 - Movies (Nov 16th)
Unwrapping Christmas Mias Prince 2024 - Movies (Nov 16th)
The Great Canadian Baking Show - (Nov 18th)
Bargain-Loving Brits in the Sun - (Nov 17th)
The Gone - (Nov 17th)
Highland Cops - (Nov 17th)
Wolf Hall - (Nov 17th)
Countryfile - (Nov 17th)
Sunday Brunch - (Nov 17th)
Love Your Weekend with Alan Titchmarsh - (Nov 17th)
Strictly Come Dancing- It Takes Two - (Nov 17th)
EXOs Travel the World on a Ladder - (Nov 17th)
Inside with Jen Psaki - (Nov 17th)
MotoGP Unlimited - (Nov 17th)
Girl Meets Farm - (Nov 17th)
The Great Indian Kapil Show - (Nov 17th)
Roadkill - (Nov 17th)
Inside the NFL - (Nov 17th)
A Virtuous Business - (Nov 17th)
Finding Mr. Christmas - (Nov 17th)
Invincible Fight Girl - (Nov 17th)
Have I Got News for You - (Nov 17th)
I decided to just watch three new Hallmark holiday movies this season, and The Royal Nanny was the best of the three. It ended up where a Hallmark Christmas movie is supposed to, and it used much less icky sweetness and sugar getting there, so as not to endanger the blood sugar readings of diabetic viewers like my wife. It contained the usual bits of romance and humor, but resisted embedding “this is what Christmas is about” messaging as clumsily as the other two movies were loaded with. There were also elements of the spy thriller here, most notably the old “Who can you trust?” Motif. Obviously it borrows from the iconic Mary Poppins also, between the nickname “Scary Poppins” and the difficult children, but it doesn’t lean heavily upon it, just a few brief references in that direction. Greta Scacchi steals the show a bit as the nanny trainer, but everyone does a credible job, with the possible exception of an overacting villain or two. It was a fair movie and I am glad I watched it last out of the three Hallmark film.
Set in a cabin on Christmas Eve, US Marshall Jo protects a pregnant fugitive from a bounty hunter and a hitman Santa, accompanied by his henchmen of elves.
A young reindeer named Niko dreams about flying like his father, whom he has never met. Despite constant teasing from others, he sneaks out of his home valley to take flying lessons from Julius, a flying squirrel.
When the evil Krad steals Santa's toy bag, he crushes the holiday spirit- and over time, the world's children forget all about Christmas. Now, a wide-eyed orphan and her band of friends will embark on the polar adventure of a lifetime, as they try to stop Krad from destroying Christmas once and for all!
Miser Ebenezer Scrooge is awakened on Christmas Eve by spirits who reveal to him his own miserable existence, what opportunities he wasted in his youth, his current cruelties, and the dire fate that awaits him if he does not change his ways. Scrooge is faced with his own story of growing bitterness and meanness, and must decide what his own future will hold: death or redemption.
It’s Christmastime and the far-flung members of the Rodriguez family are converging at their parents’ home in Chicago to celebrate the season and rejoice in their youngest brother’s safe return from combat overseas.
When a huge snowstorm leaves everyone stranded, Mickey and all of his guests at the House of Mouse, including Pooh, Belle, Snow White, Cinderella, Ariel and many more of his old and new friends, break out the cookies and hot chocolate to help Donald mend his tattered Christmas spirit.
Good-natured Reverend Henry Biggs finds that his marriage to choir mistress Julia is flagging, due to his constant absence caring for the deprived neighborhood they live in. On top of all this, his church is coming under threat from property developer Joe Hamilton. In desperation, Biggs prays to God for help – which arrives in the form of an angel named Dudley.
Over the Christmas holidays in a small New England college town, a man and a woman share a brief interlude. He is there to visit his wife, who is a mental patient at the university, and she is there visiting her son, who is a student, after discovering her husband's infidelity.
It’s Christmas and the charming city of York, home to Jules, 16 and her Dad, David is decked out ready for the festive season. In many ways, David and Jules’ relationship is no different from that of most fathers and their sixteen-year-old daughters. He struggles to understand her, she refuses to communicate with him. He wants to be involved in her life, she wants her own space. In one important respect, however, David and Jules share a profound bond: the death of Jules’ mum, and David’s wife, in a car crash two years before. With both struggling to cope with everyday life in the shadow of their loss, Jules, inspired by happy memories of her mum, decides to take matters into her own hands.
Toronto, Canada. A few days before Christmas, Miles Cullen, a bored teller working at a bank branch located in a shopping mall, accidentally learns that the place is about to be robbed when he finds a disconcerting note on one of the counters.
LeAnn Rimes plays herself from her childhood in Nashville to her performing around the country as a country-western singer, until she has to make a choice: Does she perform at the Grand Ole Opry, following her dreams? Or does she not go to the concert, and stay at her dying grandmother's bedside? The made-for-tv film is based in part on LeAnn's autobiographical novel.