Every year beginning on November 1st and ending abruptly on Decmeber 24th, the major networks and streaming services broadcast about 20,000 movies, all with the same plot: A woman with a highly successful career in a horrible, heartless Big City is forced to spend Christmas in a Small Town. At first she rebels, but gradually she is drawn in by the warmth, caring, and overall wondefulness of the Small Town. Plus she falls in love with a local boy. So she gives up her job and stays.
Moral #1: Small towns are heaven.
Moral #2: Women shouldn't work outside the home.
But it was Christmas movies or more Halloween horror, so I picked A New York Christmas Wedding, wondering how they were going to get the girl to the small town.
Azrael, the Angel of Death in Islam and Judaism, narrates. He's going to show us his favorite "love story." Does it end with death?
Scene 1: A middle-class home in Queens. Jennifer, a Hispanic woman -- racial diversity in a Christmas movie? -- is making Christmas cookies and eggnog while her father or husband reads the newspaper.
Meanwhile, in an artsy apartment, Gabby a white woman, is getting a foot massage from her boyfrined, Vinny (not listed in the cast list, but there's an Anthony, played by Joe Perrino, bottom photo). Closeup of them kissing. Jennifer calls and yells at her: "You promised you'd be here to help decorate the tree! You can't keep blowing me off!"
"I don't belong to you! We're not dating!"
"Our friendship is over! You're dead to me."
Wow, all that drama over not decorating a Christmas tree!
Scene 2: 20 years later. What? They were talking on cell phones. The middle-aged Jennifer is the assistant to a veterinarian. They just euthanized a dog, and Jeniffer is triggered because her Dad and best friend died at Christmastime. This isn't a comedy, is it?
On the way home, Jennifer sees a lesbian couple on the subway and reacts with disgust. We're here, we're queer, get used to it, homophobe!
Scene 3: Jennifer arrives at her apartment. Her boyfriend David (Otoja Abit) -- African-American! More racial diversity! -- grabs and smooches her, even though she explained that she was upset over the dog. Inconsiderate! The horndog wants to mount her right in the walk-in closet, but his parents are visiting.
Elegant, refined Mom is being passive-aggressive critical and helicoptering the upcoming wedding:, "Since you seem to be incapable of making decisions, I've arranged for a wedding dress from Vera Wang! And we've booked the church on Christmas Eve!"
Um...aren't churches usually busy on Christmas Eve? Besides, Jennifer's father and best friend died on Christmas, so....
Jennifer rejects the idea, Mama's Boy supports it, they argue, Jennifer storms out.
Out on the street, a bicyclist -- the angel Azrael! (Cooper Koch) --gets hit by a car.. Jennfier rushes to the rescue and pesters him: "Are you sure you're ok? You might have a concussion! Let me call 911!! Are you sure?" Then she pours our her problems to this complete stranger
in the middle of the night in New York. Not about the wedding -- about her fight with Gabby 20 years ago.
Which was your fault!Azrael gives her platitudinal advice: "Never underestimate the power of love at Christmastime! Life is full of love and hope! In the morning, all your questions will be answered." Very upbeat, for the Angel of Death.
Back home, Jennifer climbes in bed with David. No sex.
Scene 5: Jennifer is awakened by a dog licking her. But she doesn't own a dog! David isn't there. A woman she has never seen before is getting dressed, telling her to hurry or they will be late for their meeting with the priest. Gabby! Has there been a time reboot?
She goes out to walk the dog, runs into Azrael again, and asks "WTF? What's going on?"
Azrael zaps them to David's house. He's doessn't know here. He's married to someone else and has a daughter.
Back. Azrael explaisn that he's doing an "it's a wonderful life " thing, zapping her into a universe where Gabby didn't die and they fell in love and got engaged 20 years later. You know, there are other women out there. You could still be a lesbian without Gabby.
He continues: compare life with Gabby and David. You have until the end of Christmas to decide.
So she has until the end of Christmas to decide whether to be gay or straight? I didn't know you had a choice. Couldn't she just be bisexual?
I'd pick Gabby's world. More people are alive.
I'll fast forward.
About halfway through, we get Gabby and Jennifer's wedding --at a Catholic church. You know that Catholics don't perform same-sex weddings, right? Maybe they do in this parallel world.
Then, back in David's world, David and Jennifer investigate what happened to Gabby 20 yers ago. She got pregnant, and her family disowned her (in 2000? really?), so she sought refuge in the Church. They arranged for her to have the baby in a home out West, to avoid the disgrace (in 2000? really?). But the baby was stillborn. She named him Azrael.
You know that angels aren't actually the ghosts of dead people, right?
So after all that, how did Gabby die? Pregnancy complications? Suicide? No, car accident.
Then why go through all that back story? Just say "Car accident." Geez!
Jennifer still can't decide on David's or Gabby's world, so Azrael offers to send her back in time all the way, 20 years, and have her start over. Of course, then he will cease to exist.
If guardian angels can do all that, I have a few requests for mine.
She decides to go back. Azrael tells her to click her ruby slippers together three times and say "There's no place like home." Just kidding. He tells her to say "Love deeply, trust your heart, and be brave."
Don't try saying it at home, or you might get zapped back to high school.
And Jennifer is back making Christmas cookies and eggnog and waiting for Gabby to come decorate the tree. But this time, when Gabby blows her off, she doesn't get all dramatic and yell "You're dead to me!" She says "It can wait." And Gabby feels guilty, so instead of sex with Vinny, she rushes over anyway. They kiss. The end.
Whoa, that was not at all what I was expecting. And the title was completely misleading. I guess there was a wedding and it was set in New York, and Christmas happened, but...whoa.
Question: Was this all a fantasy in Jennifer's mind?
My grade: B for the movie, A for the suprise.