Image courtesy of Netflix |
Lindsay Lohan, last seen in a major film production over ten years ago, has made her triumphant return to entertainment! When I heard the news, I figured that (with all this buzz) it must be a big-time studio picture, finally giving her the positive attention she deserves after years of brutal real-world difficulties.
But no! Lohan’s “triumphant return” is in Falling for Christmas, a Netflix original Christmas movie (released in mid-November), in which Lohan plays a spoiled heiress who loses her memory after a skiing accident, which places her into the care of a local lodge owner and his all-too-cute and innocent family. There are some subplots designed specifically to stretch this film into a feature length which are barely worth mentioning, but safe to say, there’s not much else to hold one’s interest for an extended period of time. This is as cookie-cutter as they come.
The only thing that Falling for Christmas has going for it that sets it apart from every stock Hallmark movie is the undervalued talent that is Lindsay Lohan. You could argue that the presence of Chord Overstreet, who plays the hunky lodge owner, could constitute the same magnitude, but this movie would not be on anyone’s radar without Lohan’s (heavily marketed) involvement. It may be blasphemy to all the Loheads out there, but her performance here isn’t even anything special. It’s embarrassing, frankly, that they got her only to repeat cheap tricks like forcing a scene in which her character sings “Jingle Bell Rock” (Mean Girls, anyone?) and delivers some of the most painful dialogue I’ve heard in a while. She deserves so much better.
Image courtesy of Netflix |
Falling for Christmas is streaming on Netflix now.
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