Time for Me to Come Home for Christmas: Directed by David Winning. With Josh Henderson, Megan Park, Lindsay Maxwell, Paul McGillion. When strangers Cara and Heath are stranded before Christmas, they embark on an unexpected journey that may give them the
Time for Her to Come Home for Christmas: Regia di Ali Liebert. Con Shenae Grimes-Beech, Chris Carmack, Grace Leer, Brian Markinson. Carly heads to a small town to lead a church choir at Christmastime, facing her first holiday season without her mother. W
Time for Us to Come Home for Christmas: Regia di David Winning. Con Lacey Chabert, Stephen Huszar, Lini Evans, Leon. Five guests are mysteriously invited to an inn to celebrate Christmas. With the help of the owner Ben, Sarah discovers that an event from
“Time for Her to Come Home for Christmas”Cast: Shenae Grimes-Beech, Chris Carmack, Grace LeerHallmark Movies & Mysteries, 8 p.m. ET Friday, December 1 “Candy Cane Lane”Cast: Eddie Murphy, Tracee Ellis Ross, Jillian Bell, Thaddeus J. Mixson, Ken Marino, Nick Offerman, Robin Thede,...
Time for Her to Come Home for Christmas Courtesy of Hallmark Movies & Mysteries 🎄 TIME FOR HER TO COME HOME FOR CHRISTMASPremiere Date: Thursday, Nov. 30 at 8 pmCast: Shenae Grimes-Beech, Chris Carmack and Grace LeerPremise: Facing her first Christmas without her mother and looking to...
From Home Alone and Elf to holiday classics both old and new (It's a Wonderful Life, Klaus), it's the ultimate nice list of great Christmas movies.
From nostalgic classics to animated family favorites, Netflix rom-coms and festive horror films for adults, these are the best Christmas movies of all time.
only to crank out a dozen more the very next year. Sure, a dose of forgettable cheese can make for a fun irony watch, but the cottage industry surrounding them has come to overshadow the truly great Christmas movies that exist – the ones weusedto watch every December to signal that the...
Lifetime is known for their amazing (or some would argue, amazingly cheesy) Christmas movies. Here are the films that are worth your time.
Few British movies divide opinion like ‘Brief Encounter’. Many view the film as cold, heartless, too stiff-lipped to be truly moving (check the current Time Out review by Dave Calhoun for evidence). But without wishing to cause offence to my esteemed colleagues, they’re dead wrong. Becau...