Rachel Boston and Andrew Walker are two of Lifetime's best, likable and solid.
It's too bad their story had to coexist with not one, but two cliched subplots.
It's a coin toss as to which trope is more overused in this genre: the 'real' Santa as hero, or the big developer versus the sincere but failing business owner (who is nearly always a single parent and/or carrying on a family tradition).
Here, the convoluted business struggle really dragged on the romance, despite nice chemistry between the leads.
What tied this film to any particular Tennessee setting is anyone's guess?
It's too bad their story had to coexist with not one, but two cliched subplots.
It's a coin toss as to which trope is more overused in this genre: the 'real' Santa as hero, or the big developer versus the sincere but failing business owner (who is nearly always a single parent and/or carrying on a family tradition).
Here, the convoluted business struggle really dragged on the romance, despite nice chemistry between the leads.
What tied this film to any particular Tennessee setting is anyone's guess?