Five worst-rated Christmas movies you’ll find on Netflix
Five worst-rated Christmas movies you’ll find on Netflix – It is Boxing Day and this means that most people come together with the whole family to celebrate the holiday together.
By Megan Sauer
Sometimes this also includes watching a nice movie, for example in the category of bad Christmas movies. You can also do this on Netflix.
Below are the five worst on the streaming service.
Single All the Way (2021)
Being the eternal single during the holidays: Peter no longer wants to be that person. When he enlists his friend Nick to act as a friend during the holidays, the plan falls apart when his mother interferes.
Directed by: Michael Mayer
Starring: Philemon Chambers, Michael Urie and Kathy Najimy
When watching this film, the sugar-coated sentiments didn’t really want to enter. The story is meaningless and runs on autopilot. Every ounce of creativity is missing.
Apparently the maker thought it was sufficiently creative to center his film around a male couple and to fill in the story in an easy way. Very boring. Very easy. Very meaningless. Very standard. -Collins _
The Holiday Calendar (2018)
Abby Sutton is a talented photographer who doesn’t get enough satisfaction from her job. This magical calendar could help Abby in her search for love.
Directed by: Bradley Walsh
Starring: Ron Cephas Jones, Kat Graham and Quincy Brown
“Christmas film with many beautiful atmospheric pictures, but that was it. I have seen many Christmas films, but this one is at the bottom of my ranking in this genre. I was not at all involved in the Christmas magic and as far as I am concerned there was no chemistry at all between the protagonists.
Felt no emotion. No love, no tears.
The attempt at some humor through the caricatured supporting role of a friend with exaggerated Christmas OBS was also an unsuccessful attempt for me. I watched this one because it is part of my annual tradition to spend as much time as possible watching Christmas films in the run-up to the holidays themselves.
And unfortunately, there are some poor ones among them.
A Christmas Prince: The Royal Baby (2019)
It’s time for a party again in Aldovia. There’s a royal baby on the way! It is not really enjoyable, because when Amber and Richard invite their emissaries from a remote kingdom to renew the truce, the treaty suddenly turns out to be untraceable. The relationships immediately come into focus.
Directed by: John Schultz
Starring: Rose McIver , Ben Lamb and Sarah Douglas
In this third part you now know the characters. That provides a kind of confidentiality that is quite nice, you get used to it quickly. Not that the film is good, but it looks okay.
However, King Charming remains a bit of a boring turd and there is no chemistry to be found. That whole story and that Asian royalty couple are actually completely unnecessary.
Holiday Rush (2019)
Popular New York radio DJ Rush Williams (Romany Malco) has been spoiling his children since they lost their mother.
Unfortunately, his children deliver their expensive wish lists just as he loses his job. To help Rush, his producer Roxy Richardson (Sonequa Martin-Green) and his aunt Jo (Darlene Love) decide to buy another radio station – provided the Williams family can save money and live more simply.
Directed by: Leslie Small
Starring: Romany Malco , Sonequa Martin-Green and Darlene Love
Not fun, way too much drama, not funny or romantic and bad acting. And there are annoying children too.
Operation Christmas Drop (2020)
Congressional aide Erica Miller pursues a promotion and forgoes a family Christmas to travel across the Pacific on behalf of her boss.
Upon landing at a beachside air base, she clashes with her guide, Captain Andrew Jantz, who knows her mission is to dismantle the facility.
The pilot’s pet project — Operation: Christmas Drop, a decades-old tradition of parachuting gifts and supplies to residents of remote neighboring islands — has led lawmakers to wonder whether his unit has too much energy left. Despite their initial opposing goals, Erica slowly softens.
Directed by: Martin Wood
Starring: Kat Graham , Alexander Ludwig and Virginia Madsen
The film is nowhere fun, nowhere romantic and terribly 2020. In addition, it is all supposedly justified that the American army is on an island somewhere 10,000 km from home.
The only thing they are good at is testing atomic bombs in those regions and destroying everything for financial gain. Dropping some goods once a year really doesn’t change that.
It’s like cutting off someone’s legs and then giving them a wheelchair. The fact that this kind of crap is allowed on TV says enough about the state of the world we live in.