I'll Be Home for Christmas (TV Movie 1997) Poster

(1997 TV Movie)

User Reviews

Review this title
11 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
Jack Palance Shows a Tender Side
Christmas-Reviewer26 August 2016
What the community of St. Nicholas, Iowa lacks in size, it makes up for in enthusiasm. So when the mayor and local veterinarian, Sarah (Ann Jillian), reveals that a doctor is needed to keep the area hospital open, the town jumps at the chance to fill the position. The top candidate is hometown hero Mike (Robert Hays), the widower son of a local man (Jack Palance), who is a practicing surgeon in the city. St. Nicholas welcomes Mike and his daughter with open arms when they visit for Christmas, but moving back to town permanently is more complicated than it seems. Since losing his wife, Mike has struggled in his profession and his love life...both of which he must confront if he returns to St. Nicholas for good.

This film is really good. For adults but it is family safe. People with short attention spans will be bored. However movie fans will enjoy this because Jack Palance isn't playing the heavy. In this he plays a NICE GUY/GRANDFATHER. HE is wonderful and I just wish the film had more of him in it.

This film is really cheap to buy. It's on Amazon but be careful. There is several films that have this title however this is usually in DVD Multi Title Packs where you get more than one movie in a single purchase.
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
"Strickly By The Numbers X-mas Film"
gattonero97524 December 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Just another run-of-the-mill,Hallmark-like,tear-jerker Xmas movie.

It's set up so syrup-like, especially the music, that it had me looking at my watch. (not a good sign). You know exactly how it's gonna end way before the ending and that to me just doesn't make for good movie watching experience.

This would have been a great half hour episode of some Christmas show But you can't really get all the dynamics of the storyline in that time frame either.

Everyone involved especially the main stars, Ann Jillian, Robert Hays, Ashley Gorrell and the late great Jack Palance were good.

I definitely could see the beautiful Ann Jillian as the mayor and vet of the small Mayberry-like town and the always reliable Robert Hays as a surgeon who has lost his confidence and courage in himself and comes back to this his hometown and try to find himself, The young Ashley Gorrell did OK as his daughter and the wonderful late Jack Palance as grandpa Bob was a special treat.

I did not care for the falseness of the towns people who because they need a doctor, act like they so much care for the Hays character so he will stay on. I just feel the hypocrisy of the people and they act like that because of what they want. If they didn't need Hays, they would have care less he was back in town type of deal. All fake for me.

All in all not a bad film but for me a one time viewing only type of deal. So , get a box of Kleenex and warm up the hot chocolate and marshmallows, and see it for yourself.
2 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Very Good for a TV Movie
meloda8 January 2017
For a made-for-TV movie, this is very good. Don't expect a classic, but it's very heartwarming and touching for a family to watch around the holidays.

A man (Robert Hayes) comes home to his hometown with his preteen daughter (the talented and beautiful Ashley Gorrell, always one of my favorites as a kid and my first childhood celebrity crush!) who is very adorable in this movie and plays her part very well. Hayes is always very talented and a good dad in every movie he's been in, and this is no exception. He plays a very good man who returns to his hometown and gets reacquainted with many people. He has created himself a new life in his new town, and faces a lot of transitions when returning home. This leads to a lot of confusion for the man, being a widower and single dad. He faces a lot of choices and challenges in the process to make possible life changes. All everyone wants is for a Merry Christmas in this dying small town, which creates a lot of confusion and difficulty for many. A lot of surprises happen along the way to throw many expected things off course. Every character is very likable, however, and it leads to a very positive ending.

Being from a small and dying town myself, I can relate a lot to it; and only wish such things could end so well in my area. This movie is well worth watching around the holidays if you are in the mood for a good spirit and good family time. No classic, but enjoyable if one keeps expectations low and realizes it's just a TV movie.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
A Great Holiday Treat.
SanDiego20 December 2000
Surprisingly entertaining feel good comedy-drama about big city surgeon Michael (Robert Hays) and his daughter who are courted to return home to the small town he grew up in to run the local hospital. His father Bob, played by Jack Palance, talks the surgeon's old girlfriend Sarah (Ann Jillian), now an animal vet and the only doctor in town, into warming up to her old boyfriend. The entire town, old friends of Michael, do their best, but Michael can't get past the recent death of his wife. Will Michael and Sarah rekindle their romance? Will Michael raise his daughter in the wholesome Mayberry town he grew up in? Will Michael run the small town hospital? We all know the answers, but the fun is watching it all unfold. Colorful supporting cast, small midwest Christmas town atmosphere, and sweet performances from the leads make this a holiday treat.
10 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Home is mores somber than other Holiday films but its a sweet story
inkblot1115 April 2014
Sarah (Ann Jillian) is the part-time mayor of a town that is big at holiday time, St. Nicholas is its name! With her other work time, she is the area's vet. Unfortunately, the village is rather remote and the town's doctor has just passed away. With simple cases, Sarah has been helping out in medical emergencies but she can't truly practice human medicine. Now, word comes that longtime, older resident Bob (Jack Palance) is going to have visitors. This would be his physician son, Michael (Robert Hays) and his tween daughter. Every resident is eager to greet Michael and persuade him to move back and be the doctor that they need. Unfortunately, there are complications. Michael has lived and practiced in a big metropolitan area, so he may not want to "go back home". But, more importantly, he is having anxiety attacks and loss of confidence in his skills, due mostly to the death of his wife a couple of years before. At the hospital where he has been treating patients, a supervisor is ready to grant him a professional leave, so that he can seek help. Maybe just going back to be among family and friends will do the trick. Here's hoping. Also complicating matters is the fact that Sarah was Michael's high school sweetheart and she has never married another. Will a rekindling of romance be possible? This is a nice family Christmas flick but it is not lighthearted in subject matter. Michael truly is going through an emotional crisis that has to be dealt with seriously. Also, Sarah is not certain she wants him back in town, for she is afraid her heart may be broken again. In addition, Bob is difficult to get to know well, making a hardship for the granddaughter who doesn't think her g-pa likes her very much. On the plus side, the cast members are quite fine, the setting is very lovely, while the script tackles issues with a caring story. Overall, if you want a holiday movie, this is a good one, yes, but just be in the mood for something more reflective and less light-hearted.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
So very much to love
trpdean20 December 2004
I adore this movie. It very much reminds me of excellent Hollywood movies from the 1940s - and should probably have been released in theaters.

There are a number of very interesting conflicts in this movie - the appeal of small towns vs. big cities, the psychological conflict within the male protagonist regarding his competence and career, the efforts by small Midwestern towns to remain viable, the awakening of the female middle aged protagonist to her own loneliness - and her subsequent defeated effort to resolve it, the granddaughter's past minimal relationship to her rural grandfather.

So many of the issues in this movie ring true - especially for those in the Midwest but not exclusively.

So many small towns have faded as the young and ambitious left the town far behind them when they went away to college - schools, hospitals, department stores, are shut down as the dwindling population no longer requires - or can support - them.

Similarly, the burn-out of an upper middle class professional after two decades of practice - and without a spouse to sustain him -- is true in countless cases.

Finally, the unlikelihood that a single woman doctor (in this case a veterinarian) will fall for someone of similar interests and education -when she returns to the small town after many years away at college and veterinary school, is very true.

The acting by all the principals is wonderful - Ann Jillian is graciously lovely, vulnerable and far more understated than in most roles I've seen her in, Robert Hays is his very credible gentlemanly self, Jack Palance is extraordinary - again far more understated than I've seen him in other roles, and the actress playing the girl plays her part so well - her trepidation, enthusiasm, directness, warmth.

One thing that I particularly liked about this movie was the pairing of Ann Jillian and Robert Hays. They're two actors I'd never have thought of together - the former has played such brassy and showy roles in so many productions and the latter is so self-effacing, almost shy. Yet this fits their parts perfectly - you can see in their looks and intelligence why they'd have been drawn together in high school - and yet not wanted to continue the relationship when both went off to college.

In the very different personalities of the actor and actress, you feel they're perfect as a FORMER high school couple. And yet as the decades have passed, one can readily accept the growing vulnerability of Ann Jillian's character - one can readily see how the vet's once spectacular attention-getting looks have (gently) faded as she's lived her life of activity and entrepreneurship, taken charge of necessary things - and taken little note of her own self. In this sense, the (still beautiful) Ann Jillian's current round figure and her character's dowdy camouflaging clothes perfectly fit the self-heedlessness of her character.

Similarly, the lines (on which the camera focuses) upon the face of the still boyish looking Hays character are testament to the loss of confidence suffered in the years since the death of the once brilliant funny wife who had fortified his own sense of being successful. His wife no longer shields his lack of confidence. Hays looks careworn and doubtful - and few of his body movements, even the way he looks at others, are committed.

In their current situations, these characters' emotions, hesitations, decisions - even their lies - are very well-written and very credible because they're wonderfully portrayed.

The small town is well-portrayed (especially the speed with which news told to one is passed around), and not overly sentimentalized. Moreover, the big city (Minneapolis? St. Paul? Rochester Minn.?) is - surprisingly and wonderfully - NOT made to look bad to make the small town look appealing. The availability of fun ice rinks, great shopping, a well-run major hospital - ARE advantages of the big city - and they're not downplayed in the interest of the story.

These are real adults - and this is a wonderfully adult movie. If you liked movies with say, Barbara Stanwyck or Bette Davis, Katherine Hepburn or Irene Dunne - this movie's for you. It evokes truly strong emotions in the viewer because it all feels so very true.

I hope this becomes one of those movies that steadily gains enormous favor over time - and becomes ritual viewing across the country.

It's that good.
20 out of 20 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
If you're going to get sick, do it in St. Nick!
mark.waltz22 December 2021
Warning: Spoilers
A town in need of a doctor becomes thrilled when one of their own (Robert Hays, now a big city physician) comes back for the holidays, and they pester mayor and Jillian into trying to get him to take on the role of the town's doctor. It's only a community of 1,200 people but it's a popular tourist attraction apparently because of its Christmas themed name. Certainly, the town of Saint Nicholas does seem to be the perfect place to raise a child in, but the widowed Hayes has already accepted a promotion at his job and his teen daughter really doesn't seem interested in doing a small town girl. His pop, a very sedate Jack Palance, schemes with other members of the town to keep him there.

Sweet and sentimental, this is the third Christmas movie I know of May for TV to have the title of the popular 1940's Christmas carol. It's a nice romantic drama with comic touches, and Hays and Jillian are certainly very likable. There's something about the guilt that some of the townspeople try to put on Hays that becomes a bit annoying after a while, and it's certainly not a gossip free community. This is probably the calmest I've ever see Jack Palance be in a movie, playing a lovable old grandfather living by himself on the family farm, with a pregnant pig as his companion.

The script does go overboard a bit with the sentimentality, and for a town of this size, there certainly are a ton of people walking around the main square, something you don't see when driving through other small towns, let alone with snow on the ground. But I'm not going to be a Scrooge and call this movie a disappointment. It is enjoyable for what it is, but it's obvious how things are going to turn out. I did feel the spirit of the holidays, and it reminded me of some of the more festive moments when I lived in a equally small town of the same size. Just wait until you see the baby piggies just born. If that doesn't melt your heart, nothing will.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
A generally lame movie...
WstPhxMom20 December 2004
Warning: Spoilers
I adore Christmas movies and had hoped this one would be another to add to my long list of "must watch" movies during the Christmas season. Unfortunately, it wasn't.

Spoiler follows----

The story line, while plausible in some aspects (small towns without physicians) became so unbelievable that I spent the second hour shaking my head and muttering "no way" under my breath. I am an ER RN and there was not one iota of accuracy anywhere in the climax of this movie. The ER physician couldn't seem to decide whether his still speaking patient was in "cardiac arrest" or in "tachycardia" since he stated "cardiac arrest" first. All the while the actual rhythm shown on the monitor was atrial flutter. No physician would ever be allowed or presume to take over a surgery on his own family member. It is unethical at the least. A stranger wouldn't be told anything about a staff physician by the admin of the hospital, especially medical information about the physician's "panic attacks" unless she came armed with a subpoena. These were just a few of the completely unbelievable moments.

There was so much potential to this movie but unfortunately because of the above, my recommendation is to pass this one by.
6 out of 18 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
its all good
XcrossbonesX_black22 December 2006
this movie is so good to see. i saw it last week with my dad and i wanted my mom to see it as well. i want to buy it for Christmas even! it made me cry because of the great acting cast and storyline as well as the script. this movie feels like home to me and i love the way it is filmed in Toronto, Canada but set in Iowa, USA. i love the snow scenes. everybody did a terrific job on this movie and i congratulate them all. i wish it was shown every year in December and made a big deal of like other Christmas movies are, like "The Santa Clause". somehow this movie made me to want to keep watching, even though i knew it would entail a happy ending. i like movies with happy endings. this movie is so cool and i recommend it to every family out there who believe in the spirit of Christmas.
5 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
A heartwarming story
citizenjerry16 October 2005
I liked this movie a lot for its old-fashioned romance and watching Mike come to realize just how important home and family are to the soul of man.

Gee willikers! It's just a movie. I hear plenty of people criticize every movie or TV show because "that's not how real cops would do it" or "that's not how real doctors would do it." Do we criticize a movie about time travel because that's not how it's done in real life? The magic of movies can only work when we're willing to suspend our disbelief and let the movie create its own reality.

So rather than negatively comparing movies to real life, I think we should just enjoy the film for what it is. And this one has a real sweetness to it.
8 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Wonderful - Ashley Gorrell should be in more movies.....
rzjacobs-128 December 2005
This is a great movie.(I would rate this as one of my all time favorite movies) I usually cannot watch movies a second time but this is one movie I can watch over and over. Ashley Gorrell is awesome in this movie and the cast all seem to click together. This is a movie everyone can enjoy. You will need a box of Kleenex when watching this movie. Ann Jillian, Jack Palance, Robert Hays, Ashley Gorrell are great together. I would love to see a sequel to this movie You won't regret purchasing or renting this movie. I'll Be Home For Christmas is a must see every year at the holidays and gets one ready for the holidays. It puts Christmas in perspective and makes you realize how important family, friends and community are. A+
4 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed