The Christmas Retreat (TV Movie 2022) Poster

(2022 TV Movie)

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5/10
Another Christmas checklist
Jackbv12316 November 2022
The premise is one of the more common ones if you combine retreat themes with fleeing to hometown. Kim's boyfriend dumps her so she retreats to make herself more lovable. Mark gets fired and retreats to his sister's camp. The Christmas retreat is by definition a week of all the typical Christmas activities. The conflict, climax and ending are more things following the checklist. There are no great highs or lows or surprises.

Both leads, Mark and Kim, are unlikeable in the beginning. Kim is a real brat. Obviously the main theme of the story is that both of the main characters reform. Even after Kim changes, the immature girl is still there and her spontaneous decisions reflect that. This canceled for me any enjoyment from watching their relationship bloom.

The acting and dialogue are OK maybe even good.
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7/10
Good Effort from Rhiannon Fish
rebekahrox22 November 2022
Warning: Spoilers
This one was OK. The first time I really liked Rhiannon Fish was in the recent Hallmark Mystery, Nicky and Nora, Sister Sleuths. So went in to this one giving her the benefit of the doubt and she really came through, showing some good acting and comic timing. She is very very pretty, which is not always a plus.

She starts off playing a real pill and a bit of a brat. And she does it well, starting with her first chance confrontation with the hero, whom she steals a cab from. She is on her way to get engaged to her long term boyfriend who ends up dumping her instead. And you can't blame him a bit. She is all about her work and career, not even silencing her phone during what she expects to be a marriage proposal.

Her mother sees the problem and insists she spends Christmas with her at a Christmas Retreat, which surprise surprise ends up being owned by the guy she just screwed (as in tricked out of the cab, of course). He has just resigned from his company because he was unjustly passed over for a promotion.

As she spends time at the retreat with her mother and participates in the activities designed to help the visitors regain their Christmas spirit, she finally does. At first her reluctance to give up her phone and her bad attitude towards participating leads to some comedy and funny banter with Mark, the hero. Most of the middle got a little on the boring side, and the end was marred by Mark's behavior toward Rhiannon in the inevitable "big misunderstanding". Her ex-boyfriend shows up all contrite and wants her back, and Mark gets jealous, ignoring their strong connection and her practically begging him to admit their love. For a nice guy, he acted like a stupid jerk.

Anyway, he regains his sanity and goes after her resulting in the happy ending. They both give up their careers for a more authentic and easy-going life in the woods, spreading Christmas cheer all year long.
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7/10
Wholesome Christmas movie
mellie-1939524 November 2022
Warning: Spoilers
I liked this movie. It's light-hearted, the acting is pretty good, and it has a holiday warmth that you'd expect from the Hallmark Christmas movies. The romance is sweet between Mark and Kim, as well as her mom and Ted. I'm glad Kim had some character building throughout the film. She went from being self-absorbed, career obsessed, and conflicted emotionally woman, to a more grounded, kind, and loving partner and daughter. Her boyfriend, Steven, was a jerk and really was just the typical placeholder character in these sort of movies. Predictable, yes. Enjoyable, yes. It was a cute movie overall.
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6/10
Rhiannon Fish carries this
allmoviesfan17 December 2023
Warning: Spoilers
The Australia/Canadian actress Rhiannon Fish is an up and coming star, now making films on the regular for Hallmark and other studios as well.

In 'The Christmas Retreat', Fish plays a workaholic who is convinced by her mother to attend a Christmas retreat where participants rediscover the meaning of Christmas. There (and also randomly once earlier in the film) she meets the recently-unemployed finance guy Mark (Clayton James) whose family owns the retreat.

Naturally, the sparks fly as both of them get back in touch with their Christmas roots, and there is a long list of Christmassy activities - including cookie baking and snowball fights - that feature. So, a little (or a lot!) cliched, and the chemistry between James and Fish isn't great...but Fish herself is fantastic. I will watch anything she's in and thoroughly enjoy it, no questions asked.
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7/10
Fish out of water
MickyG33321 January 2024
6.9 stars.

The idiom "fish out of water" applies here, simply because she has been cast into a subpar film. She is the Fish that is trying to survive a perfectly average and totally mundane script. This film starts a few degrees off course, which was actually refreshing with the slightly different sorts of music and transitions and plotlines. The direction seemed to be even a bit on the original side for a while, but then it just merges into a normal run-of-the-mill Hallmark-esque film, meeting the usual standards of Christmas contests and treats and characters that are all impossible to distinguish one from another. Oh well, but Miss Fish is always a bonus, so this movie gets an extra half a star for her appearing in it; otherwise this would be a 6.4.
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4/10
Not enough heart.
adamjohns-4257515 November 2023
The Christmas Retreat (2022) -

At the beginning of this film it was really difficult to warm to either of the leading characters, Rhiannon Fish as Kim or Clayton James as Mark, because they were quite obnoxious and acting quite over the top. He was smug and she was cocky and their constant competition was just irritating.

I didn't mind Clayton James to look at, but he was no Luke Macfarlane or Jesse Hutch. Rhiannon Fish was just incredibly annoying though.

The supporting cast were no better - The Mother, Mary (Lynn Whyte) was too good for the weird Ted (James MacDonald), but she was a bit dodgy too. I didn't think that they blew the budget on actors that was for sure.

The narrative followed the standard formula and really didn't add anything new to it. A lot of it was just daft and the script could have been recycled from a thousand other films that the director, producer and writers had all obviously seen, because it was all quite basic, with no outstanding acting performances or artistic filming. Even the humour was forced and "Subtle" at best.

As another reviewer commented, it really was a tick list of snowball fights, gingerbread houses, ugly jumpers and wreath making. There were actually a lot of moments of nauseating schmaltz and moralistic realisations too and the production wasn't helped by the music in the background either.

By the end I really wasn't bothered who ended up with whom, because I didn't like any of them, except maybe Rae (Carly Fawcett), but even she needed to get rid of her partner Ivan (Vincent Ross), who was a knob.

This will not be featuring on my rewatch list.

429.03/1000.
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4/10
Love Ms Fish, but gave up on this
SunnyDaise22 December 2023
It is usually great to see Ms Fish in these roles 20 years since her child actor days on Aussie soap Neighbours - that is the legacy of soaps, love or hate the plots, they are great training ground for cast and crew alike. However, this character was too unlikeable at the start for me to continue - I get it, she is consumed and snowed-under at work, and that is perfectly realistic, but it just isn't fun to watch, especially in the chaos of the festive season. Most likely, we see a softer side as the movie develops but life is short and I didn't want to hang around to find out. I look forward to the star's next movie.
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5/10
It's Not Heavy Lifting
statuskuo30 December 2023
If you're lonely during the holidays, it isn't a bad thing to be watching these things.

In my case, I had a nervous system issue that kept me bedridden for a few days with enough energy to click on this through Amazon Prime.

It could've been some of the pain medication. But the haziness of the flick and the simple format was inviting.

The story is about Kim Jones (Rhiannon Fish) who is very consumed with her work, and whose boyfriend/potential fiance recently dumped her. She is whisked away by her Mother to relax during the holidays to this "special" retreat. The place is run by Rae (Carly Fawcett) whose big city brother Mark (Clayton James), just lost his job and is going up to the retreat to re-evaluate his life. The retreat is Christmas themed and the two big city folk are stripped of their electronics to do Christmas-y stuff.

Yeah, you see where this is going.

Rae is on the retreat because she wants to prove to her boyfriend that she can change. Mark's intentions are just to figure out what he wants to do in life.

We also discover that the lodge/retreat is going through financial hardships (dun dun DUN!). Call me a nut, but maybe it's because they can only take 8 people at a time, in a one week span. Logistics aside, we go through the rudimentary Christmas tasks that the retreat gets these people to do.

Baking cookies in movies have got to be dullest thing ever. Regardless of how you try to spice it up, it's mind numbing to watch any form of it. Including a predictable flour fight. Bah!

Mark and Rae obviously grow closer to together. What I do like about this flick is the very distinct personalities between the two. Though Mark is rigid and stern, Rae acts more like the Tasmanian Devil at life. One of the more convincing romantic chemistry in Christmas flicks. Credit to the actors

Overall though, the tone of the flick is upbeat. There's nothing offensive about it. Unless you're an atheist, in which case, they lean on God here a lot. I mean a bunch. Of course this is faith based funded. And, guys in Hollywood, faith based people do have a ton of money. It's just not spent for all the fun stuff. Sex, drugs and rock and roll.

It's spent on corny flicks like this.
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