Every year at Christmas, we are bombarded with the many
different holiday specials. On network
television, you get your Rudolphs, Frosty the Snowmans, and Charlie
Browns. On cable channels like ABC
family, you get your 25 days of Christmas programming. On Hallmark and Lifetime, you end up with
countless television romantic comedy movies.
It’s all Christmas all the time for the month of December. That’s just what television ends up being
this time of year.
I don’t know how Roxanne’s Best Christmas Ever came
about. I can’t find too much information
about it. When I was trying to find the
full cast, I had to use the credits in the movie for it. It’s a tough movie to find anything
about. Well, perhaps it’s not a
movie. It’s only 24 minutes long. I’m still going to call it a movie. I consider it a short film. The only thing separating it from most of the
films that I have featured thus far in the Sunday “Bad” Movies is the length. It’s simply not feature length. That’s beside the point though. The point is that I had to use the actual
movie to jot down who was in it, who directed it, and how long it was. I was having trouble finding anything about
it online.
Most of you have probably never heard of Roxanne’s Best
Christmas Ever. Neither had I, until I
bought the 10 Movie Holiday Collector’s Set at Walmart. It was in the five dollar bin. Fifty cents a movie? Sure, I’ll buy that. It’s another addition to my collection of
Echo Bridge bad movie sets. And I didn’t
have high expectations for it. I never
do with these movies. Sometimes they
surprise me and sometimes they don’t. In
this case, it didn’t impress me. It was
as bad as I expected it to be.
What happens in Roxanne’s Best Christmas Ever? Let me tell you. Roxanne (Jane Seymour) is a dog living in a town full of
animals. She’s a bipedal, talking
dog. As are the other “people” of the
town. Christmas is nearing, and she
still has yet to get at tree. But when
she sets out to find the perfect tree for her holiday celebration, Roxanne
realizes that there are no good trees left.
What is Roxanne to do?
Now, I’m not entirely sure what this Christmas special is
trying to say. It could be saying that
you shouldn’t leave your Christmas shopping until the last minute. There is a stereotype of sorts that people wait
until the last possible moments of the holiday season to finish their
shopping. And Roxanne’s Best Christmas
Ever is a sort of cautionary tale about this kind of thing. But the ending completely undermines that
message in every way possible. Everything
works out fine. It could be about Santa
and his giving nature. All of the
characters believe in Santa, and the ending depends upon Santa in order to
work. Yet the story isn’t about Santa
until the ending, which makes it seem less like this is the case. So I really have no idea what the movie is
trying to say. Maybe it’s just trying to
tell a story. It does that.
Whatever the point of Roxanne’s Best Christmas Ever, that
doesn’t make the movie any good. The
animation is okay, but the voice acting is flat and the story itself is more
irritating than engrossing. The saving
grace for the movie is the short runtime, which even then, didn’t manage to
keep my attention all that well. But I
guess losing my attention for twenty minutes is better than losing my attention
for ninety minutes. It could have been a
much longer movie that bored me.
Now you might be asking, “Why would you choose a Christmas
movie from an Echo Bridge set when you could have chosen something like Jingle
All the Way 2, which you probably would have had a better time with?” That long question is a pretty good
question. I have a split history with
the Echo Bridge movie sets. There have
been movies in these sets that delighted me.
I’ve liked movies like Backwoods Bloodbath and Bachelor Party in the
Bungalow of the Damned, which came from these sets. There are some unknown gems mixed in with the
crap that I sometimes end up watching.
So there’s that. The other big
factor in me choosing movies from the Echo Bridge sets is that I own the Echo
Bridge sets. This means that access to
these movies is much easier than access to Jingle All the Way 2, which was only
just released on video. I don’t need to
buy the movies. I don’t need to
illegally find them online. I already
have them. It makes more sense for me to
choose one of them, especially since there are ten movies in the set. Get something out of the way, you know?
That’s all I have for Roxanne’s Best Christmas Ever. It’s not a movie worth watching, and that’s
most of the reason why it was buried in a set of ten movies that I found in the
bargain bin at Walmart. It’s only
twenty-four minutes long, but it’s twenty-four minutes that I could have spent
watching something much better and worth my time. It’s too bad.
With the movies that I sometimes manage to find in these sets, my hopes
were high. My expectations were low, but
my hopes were high. I wanted something
fun. I wanted something decent. What I got was a boring short film that did
nothing to entertain.
And now for the little bit of notes:
- I mentioned a couple movies in the review that I have covered. Bachelor Party in the Bungalow of the Damned and Backwoods Bloodbath.
- Have you seen Roxanne’s Best Christmas Ever? Have you even heard of Roxanne’s Best Christmas Ever? Are there any other bad holiday shorts that you want to bring to my attention? How about Echo Bridge? Do you own any of their sets? Do you like any movies you’ve found in them? If you want to answer any of these questions, feel free to do so in the comments section below.
- If you would like to suggest any movies for the Sunday “Bad” Movies, you can do that in the comments below. Or you can message me on Twitter or email me at sundaybadmovies@gmail.com.
- Next week there will be two posts. One inspired by the movie Money Train, which is next week’s Sunday “Bad” Movie. The other one is a bonus post I’m going to do about my ten worst movies of 2014, out of what I’ve seen so far. It was going to be one where you guys participate, but only one person submitted anything. If anyone else does, I’ll include it. If they don’t… Oh well.
No comments:
Post a Comment