We have here the start of a classic antipathetic romance, and unlike most antipathetic romances in these Hallmark movies, the writers had the courage to carry the tense relationship deep into the movie ... almost to the end, in fact.
The man (a Frenchman with a disaster in his family's business) develops exorbitantly expensive ideas for ad campaigns. The woman (with a one year disaster of a marriage in her past) is practical and keeps her ad campaign ideas sensible.
Together they're assigned to travel to Paris to secure the account of a French diamond jewelry house who wants to expand into the USA.
The story of their conflicting ideas for the ad campaign needed to win the account drives the movie, and in the end they come to an mutual idea surprisingly easily.
However, the movie is charming, in my mind more because of the older French couple who own the diamond house than the stars.
The man (a Frenchman with a disaster in his family's business) develops exorbitantly expensive ideas for ad campaigns. The woman (with a one year disaster of a marriage in her past) is practical and keeps her ad campaign ideas sensible.
Together they're assigned to travel to Paris to secure the account of a French diamond jewelry house who wants to expand into the USA.
The story of their conflicting ideas for the ad campaign needed to win the account drives the movie, and in the end they come to an mutual idea surprisingly easily.
However, the movie is charming, in my mind more because of the older French couple who own the diamond house than the stars.