Snowkissed

2021

Action / Comedy / Romance

4
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 95%
IMDb Rating 6.1/10 10 1642 1.6K

Plot summary

A travel-averse journalist chases her dream assignment where she unwillingly finds herself mentoring a handsome B&B owner who wants to be a tour guide.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
March 20, 2021 at 02:09 AM

Director

Top cast

Stephanie Sy as Corrina
Jen Lilley as Kate Daniels
Amy Groening as Jayne
720p.WEB 1080p.WEB
772.62 MB
1280*714
English 2.0
NR
Subtitles us  
30 fps
1 hr 23 min
Seeds 3
1.55 GB
1920*1072
English 5.1
NR
Subtitles us  
30 fps
1 hr 23 min
Seeds ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by wwaigl 5 / 10

This would have been a much better movie had the lead female roles been reversed.

This would have been a much better movie had Amy Groening been the lead instead of Jen Lilly. Far more energy and charisma. I thought the male leads were fine but their parts were written a bit stilted.

What shocked me is that Hallmark actually let characters be from some place in Canada, a first in my experience.

Banff was the real winner here as people glimpsed at least a very small taste of why it is so popular.

Give Amy some lead roles. Jen looked pale and a shadow of herself and maybe she is just done for this format of movies.

Reviewed by savethewatchmaker 2 / 10

Truly a dud.

This is one of those films where one can't help but wonder how it ever got past the drawing board. For a cast that's shown themselves to be much more talented than what this movie's giving them, I actually feel a bit bad that they had to act in this catastrophe and try to make something out of it.

The film's weakest point is easily Jen Lilley's character, Kate, who everyone in the reviews (rightfully) is incredibly annoyed by. She is unbelievably neurotic and overanalyzes every possible human task, and at first, I was intrigued by these traits, because most Hallmark female leads don't have a personality outside of "driven businesswoman," which is the default template of a woman through which every lead gets recycled. I applaud (but not energetically) Hallmark for trying to make their characters be less two-dimensional, but they failed extraordinarily in this venture by making Kate so overwhelmingly obnoxious in her constant anxiety. To make matters worse, she's not actually consistent in this anxiety. She's afraid of driving in a car in Canada, but has no problem getting in a taxi in New York. She fears everything, but gives her love interest Noah lessons on getting over his stage fright.

Some of the reviewers were charmed by the side couple, photographer Jayne and right-hand-businessman Simon, but I found them so out of the realm of realistic that I couldn't enjoy them either. As much as I love and appreciate a woman who makes the first move, she pursues Simon -- a man who gives her flirtations absolutely no reaction -- to a point where it's cringeworthy, until Simon, suddenly and miraculously, returns her feelings and makes it clear by buying out what looks like all the inventory of a flower shop. Cut to the next scene, they're cuddling in each other's arms and giving each other goodbye kisses. Simon himself attests to being a man of few words, but Jayne is somehow convinced that they'll make a long distance relationship work. Their entire relationship is so ludicrous that it was hard to take it seriously.

Also breaking the suspension of disbelief is male lead Noah, who wants to save his B&B business by becoming a tour guide. He is so laughably bad (and also laughably oblivious about being so bad) that it's hard to believe that he and Simon are hinging the success of their entire business on Noah's adventure tour. He obsesses over perfecting his script, never once considering that he might -- like all tour guides -- need to actually learn the information instead of just memorize and regurgitate it.

Needless to say, he and Kate -- inexplicably -- begin to fall for each other. Their chemistry is completely lost in the absurdity of this movie. Not helping their cause is the rocky beginning this couple has, having an awkward first meeting at the airport and, thereafter, uncomfortable scenes in which they do little but disagree. Kate pounds on the fact that she's from New York, the best city in the world, and is so stubborn in this short-sighted opinion that it's hard not to get bored of her repeating it every other scene. How Hallmark thought a grown woman who can't handle a car ride, is too afraid to order coffee in a foreign country, and is too closed-minded to think happiness exists outside of Manhattan, would be a likable character is beyond me. Her and all the other ridiculous choices made in the story made this movie downright bad.

All in all, I'd recommend skipping this movie and choosing another from Hallmark's winter line-up this year. Two stars for beautiful Canadian scenery.

Reviewed by MichaelByTheSea 2 / 10

Will not miss Jen Lilley when she moves over to GAC

I saw this once and didn't think much of it. It came on today after the far far better Her Pen Pal and after the first 15 minutes I was reminded how very very annoying the start of this movie was. I suppose there are people who are truly afraid of travel, heights, gondolas and their own shadows, but it's not enjoyable to watch them have the kind of ridiculous freak out moments that Lilley's character had. And even though Hallmark has increasingly featured strong independent female characters over the years, Lilley often plays insecure, whiny characters that are really off putting, especially in this movie. I kept thinking how I would have preferred the actress who plays her friend (Amy Groening) as the lead in this or, preferably, another movie. Although if she got the same direction to play an over the top character, she may not have fared much better than Lilley. Chris McNally was also stuck with an awkward sounding character that also wasn't really enjoyable to watch. A movie should hook the viewer during the first few minutes, or least during the first half hour. This just reminded me that I didn't want to watch it again.

Read more IMDb reviews

2 Comments

Be the first to leave a comment