Friday, 25 December 2020

25 days of Christmas | Julenatt i Blåfjell (2009)


"Long ago, the world was shrouded in eternal darkness. Nothing grew, and there was no life, except in one place, the Blue Mountain where the Blue Gnomes live. By the light of the moon, on top of the Blue Mountain, grew the juiciest blueberries. And one day these blueberries changed everything, because there is something else in the Blue Mountain, the Magic silver. By a small accident, the gnomes discovered the secret of the Magic Silver. That's how the very first magic hour began. But good things never come without obligations. The mountain understood that it was a secret to be kept, and every blue gnome that's outside when the mountain closes will disappear forever. Because you cannot just come and go as you want if your job is to create light to bring to the world. Every morning and every evening we make the magic hour and bring night and day to the world. That is the reason for our existence."

The king of the blue mountain is immensely old. He has lived a long life, and he now sees only grey. It is the way of the world, they know, but when a gnome looses his blue vision, his time is near. The king has a daughter, Bluerose (Fjellrose), princess of the Blue Mountain, but the princess is not ready. Her crown sits in the cave of the ancient ones, but it does not shine, because a royal crown can only shine when its bearer had performed deeds that make him or her worth it of their position. Bluerose has never done anything. She has never even left the mountain.

Every day, during the magic hour, the children of the mountain go outside and play in the sun. They look for pine cones (that are more or less like balls to them), ride toboggans and play in the snow. Then, when the mountain is about to close, the bell rings, and they rush inside, only to do the same thing again the next day. But Bluerose never joins her friends. She is afraid. What if the sleigh goes too fast and I can not stop? The king tells her about a time when he was as many winters old as she is now, when he went outside, the cold bit into his cheeks and he had butterflies in his stomach. He knows, however, not to push her. She has to make the choice to go out on her own.


"If a gnome is afraid of almost everything, how can she ever become courageous?"

"If you are never afraid, you can never be brave."

Bluerose didn't know how sick her father actually was. When she finds out he's lost his blue vision, she asks the elders for help (ancient genomes, claimed by the mountain long ago, whose faces now speak from the rocks). One of the ancient ones remembers something. When he was young, he once heard house dwellers talking about a powerful thing. Someone was sick, but they said if they had that one powerful thing, they could cure him. The thing was called "money". The ancient one has never seen it, but if it cures diseases, it must be very powerful.

The trouble is, in order to get some, Bluerose will have to travel to the farm at the foot of the mountain. She doesn't know it yet, but the farm is home to the Red gnomes, and the farmer is already suspicious of gnomes stealing his precious things. The taking of another coin will have repercussions Bluerose could never have imagined.


I loved this movie! It's such a classical fantasy story, but it is so well-done. I loved how carefull the worldbuilding was, and also, the way in which it was presented in the story. This movie really masters the art of "Show, Don't Tell". We learn the details of what makes this universe slowly, little by little. Things like the fact that kings and queens must earn their crowns and make them shine with their actions, or that a gnome (red or blue) disappears if a housedweller (a human being) set eyes upon them. The gnomes have rules. Things like "we always give back what we borrow" and "gnomes always help each other", which reminded me a lot of the rules of Dinotopia (another story with fantastic worldbuilding, in my opinion).

Be that as it may, the worldbuilding is never overwhelming (it never feels like we're getting too much at once), but everything in the world seems magical and a little bit different. Even the expressions they use. When Bluerose looks sad, for instance, her father asks her:

"Why do you look like you lost your blueberry basket?"


When Bluerose reaches the farm, she meets Dreng, king of the Red gnomes. Well... aspiring king. His crown shines, but only because of his mother who is now very old. It is time Dreng earns a crown of their own. In a way, his journey and Bluerose's mirror each other, and they form a great partnership. They can accomplish more, when they are together, but even they cannot do everythng by themselves. The future monarchs need the other gnomes, an idea beautifully expressed in a scene in which they need to lift something, but it's simply too heavy for the two of them alone - I love the simplicity of it. It's great storytelling.

All of these adventure are happening around Christmas, when the farmer is getting ready to propose to a young woman. The movie is set in the past, which is a lovely little touch. His Christmas tree is decorated with lit candles, and he dedicates great effort to setting up the table for the Christmas meal. Bluerose and Dreng end up stuck hiding under that table by the way, at some point, and it really looks like they aren't gonna make it.


Julenatt i Blåfjell is a 2009 Norwegian movie, based on a Norwegian Christmas TV show - I wonder if I can find this anywhere to watch? I love watching movies in foreign languages, love discovering little things about faraway, exotic places, and nordic languages in particular (this movie is in Norwegian) sound very musical to my ears. It's an added special little detail that blue roses are my favourite flowers, so you can imagine how much I liked the name of the main character.

I wish there were more movies like this, in fact, I wish I could write a story like this one day...

It's December 25th. Merry Christmas :)



We never learn the name of the country, or if indeed it is a fictional one. The story is set on the Blue Mountain and on the village and farm at the bottom of it. 

Bluerose, Princess of the Blue Mountain

Dreng, King of the Red Gnomes

The original soundtrack of the movie (by Magnus Beite) is awesome



I loved the detail of the Christmas three decorated with lit candles, like they did it in the old days, before electric little lights. It's a detail also present in The Nutcracker and the Four Realms, which I watched earlier this week. 

The Table set for the Christmas meal at the farmer's house (and even the gnomes table, ready for the Christmas porridge later). In the past, people used to dress up for dinner, even if it was dinner in their own homes. I think there's something special there, and something we missed when we started not to care about such things. We now eat wearing whatever we wore to work, or old t-shirts and shorts, or pajamas... But not at Christmas... At Christmas everything becomes special again, and we pay close attention to the meal table. Use the best plates and cups, beautiful napkins, all to go along with the delicious meal. I think it's a lovely tradition.  

This is not really a romantic movie, specially because the main characters are too young, but in the end, when Bluerose and Dreng say goodbye, there's totally a vibe that they will walk that path when they become a little older. 

The Christmas Hallmark moment definitely happens when Bluerose and Dreng are trying to rescue the Magic Silver from the farmer's house. The caldron is too heavy for them, but they are ingenious, and come up with a relay system that allows them to lift the thing. When it's on the sleigh though, it is definitely too heavy for them. And that's when help arrives. It's a beautiful moment of cooperation, that brought a smile to their faces, and mine. 


Julenatt i Blåfjell | Norway | 2009 | Direction: Katarina Launing, Roar Uthaug | Screenplay:  Gudny Hagen, Thomas Moldestad  |Cast: Ane Viola Semb, Johan Tinus Lindgren, Finn Schau


25 Days of Christmas | Risen til julestjernen (2012)


"Once upon a time, a long, long time ago, there was a beautiful princess, named Goldenhair. One Christmas, while decorating the tree, Goldenhair asked her mother if they could place the Christmas Star at the top of the tree. The Queen explained that the Christmar Star shone in the sky for everyone on Earth. And that it would always be there for you, if you give your heart. The Queen gave her a golden heart, so that she would always remember. But the King's cousin, the Count, also wanted to be king. For that to happen, the King and Queen had to die childless. He sought help from the evil Witch. In return, she was to receive half the kingdom. The Count told Goldenhair that she could have the Christmas Star if she gave it the golden heart her mother had given her. The Princess snuck out into the dark forest to find the Christmas Star. The evil Witch was waiting in the forest. She cast a spell in Goldenhair, who then vanished. The King searched the kingdom for his beloved daughter, but she was nowhere to be found. The Queen's heart was broken, and she died of grief. The King cursed the Christmas Star blaming it for all his misfortune. The Star disappeared, and a cold darkness descended upon the kingdom. But an ancient sage prophesized that if the King could find the Star before ten years had passed, Princess Goldenhair would return. Those ten years are about to run out. Today is Christmas Eve. It's the King's last chance to find the Star so that his beloved daughter will return. "


That is the prologue of Journey to the Christmas Star (Reisen til julestjernen), the 2012 remake of a 1976 Norwegian fairy tale movie based on a play by the same name.

When the story begins, the King is desperate to find the Christmas Star and with it, his way back to his only daughter, but there doesn't seem to be much hope. He looks for help in all the wrong places, asking the count, of all people, to find him an astronomer capable of search the skies for the missing Star. The King believes the man wholeheartedly by the buffoon brought by his cousin to the palace is obviously a con artist.

It's actually in the middle of that audience with the astronomer that the King meets Sonja.

Sonja is a poor girl. She lives in the medieval village outside the castle walls, and because she refuses to steal for a living, she is forced to scrub floors and do other domestic tasks to get by. She dreams, however, to get away from there. It's when she is running from the thieves that share her house one day that she manages to find herself inside the palace, and either by accident or by faith, ends up in the presence of the King.


The King tells his guards to let go of the girl and takes her to a private room, where they talk for a while. Sonja overheard his conversation with the astronomer and, feeling for the old monarch, tells him she's going to find the Christmas Star for him. The King smiles at her with benevolence, explaining that he's been searching for nine long years, without success, trying to make her understand what an impossible task finding this star actually is. Sonja, however, answers him with simplicity:

"Have you tried giving it your heart?"

"My heart?"

"I was told that you have to give it your heart."

"Nobody would want my heart. It became ugly and black when I cursed the Christmas Star."

"But do you think it might want mine?"

"I do."

"Then I will give it my heart."

The journey is marvellous. The staff at the palace gives Sonja a beautiful light blue cape and she sets out on a path that takes into the house of tiny gnomes, travelling in the back of a big bear with a fondness for blueberry pies all the way up a mountain where she meets the North Wind and asks him to take her North, to meet Santa Claus.

Santa Claus' factory is as chaotic as one would imagine, with elves running up and down since it's Christmas Eve and all, but Santa still finds time to talk to Sonya, dressed in a beautiful red cape (a very Nordic Santa indeed). He takes her into a forest and explains to her that every person in the word has a Christmas tree in his forest. When the person is good, the tree flourishes. When it's bad, the branches wither and die and that's how he knows who has been good and who hasn't. It is i that forest that Sonja's journey comes to a critical point and we learn whether she will be able to find the Christmas Star or not, and all the while, the Count and the evil Witch are chasing her to stop her from giving back to the King that which they took from him.


I enjoyed this movie enormously. It's such a classic fairy tale, and it was a joy to watch, after this ocean of Hallmark Christmas stories I've been seeing, which, however fun, can feel a little repetitive after a while. Journey to the Christmas Star was something else entirely, and I really wish I knew of more movies like this to watch around Christmas time.



A small kingdom, a place in Wonderland

Princess Goldenhair

The forest of Christmas trees... It`s a beautiful idea, the way Santa Claus knows who`s been good and bad is by how their tree in the Christmas tree forest looks... I had never heard this theory anywhere else.
 
The Christmas Star, of course. But there are lots of wonder in this movie... The idea of riding a bear to meet the North wind and then flying in this wind to the North Pole... 

Probably the conversation between the king and Sonja, when she promises to give her heart to find the princess. Her selflessness is so admirable... That said, the ending was pretty sweet as well. 



Risen til julestjernen | Norway | 2012 | Direction: Nils Gaup | Screenplay: Kamilla Krogsveen | Cast: Vilde Zeiner, Anders Baasmo Christiansen, Agnes K
ittelsen




Thursday, 24 December 2020

25 days of Christmas | The Princess Switch: Switched Again


Two years went by since Stacy DeNovo entered that prestigious baking competition and left her pastry shop in Chicago behind. Now Stacy is the Princess of Belgravia and her doppelgänger, Margaret is preparing to ascend the throne of Montenaro, following the abdication of her cousin Howard, the king's only son. A lot has happened since the mess they made switching places in the first movie, and not everything went smoothly. Stacy and Prince Edward are happily married, but there seems to be something of a disconnect between them. Margaret is very much in love with Kevin, and him with her, but the change in her position and circumstances seem to have created a hard wall between them.

The four of them meet in Montenaro. Margaret's coronation is scheduled for Christmas day, and although Kevin wasn't planning on attending, Stacy flies to Chicago specifically to bring the friend with her. Upon realizing how miserable Kevin has been since the breakup, she takes it upon herself to play cupid and get Margaret and Kevin together again. They clearly have chemistry, and they're crazy about each other, but things are not so simple now that Margaret is to become a queen. Complicating matters further is her relationship with Antonio (Count Antonio Rossi), her chief of staff and childhood friend, who is by any measurable standard, a much better match to a future queen.

Margaret is so busy with the coronation and everything that she hardly has any time to spend with Kevin so they can mend their fences and figure out where to go from there. It is Stacy that comes up with a solution: they have to switch places again, just for a day: Stacy will handle Margaret's royal duties while Margaret gets to spend some quality time with Kevin for a change. There's only one small hiccup to the plan: Margaret's cousin, Fiona Pembroke - a third doppelgänger - intends to ake a switch herself and be crowned queen in her cousin's place.

In many ways, the first movie, A Princess Switch, was just another modern retelling of the classic tale of the prince and the pauper, dressed in a romantic Christmassy coat. Switched again goes a bit further, in that it introduces a third doppelgänger to shake things up: an original twist I have never seen in a story like this. It's a great credit to the movie that it manages to do something fresh with a genre that is dangerously overused.


I also loved the way they handled the subplots of the movie, in particular Stacy's romantic subplot with Edward. The movie hints that there's something off with the two of them since the moment they first appear on the screen, and it doesn't take long for us to realize that Stacy has been neglecting Edward. As I watched, I feared the moment when the two of them would inevitably break up temporarily, due to some misunderstanding that could be fixed if only they had talked to each other - that sad depressive dive that happens in so many romantic comedies, three-quarters of the way in. Here too, however, the movie was surprising: the depressive dive never came. As each of them navigated their own adventures (Stacy trying to escape the captivity imposed by Fiona's minions and Edward's shopping trip with Olivia), the two of them came to see what they themselves were doing wrong. Stacy promises to make more time for them and Edward promises not to smother her too much. We got a beautiful and romantic reconciliation without ever having to go through the ugly argument part.


I have to say, the wedding at the airport scene was a tad much for me when I first watched it, but it was so in keeping with the whole "being spontaneous" thing that kind of defined Kevin and Margaret as a couple, that I suppose it had to be there.

The coronation was the perfect way to end this movie. I couldn't believe it when I saw the royal family of Aldovia (from the "A Christmas prince" trilogy) in the church! It was particularly special because there won't be a new movie in Aldovia in 2020, and I came to look forward to these films for the past couple of years... I suppose there is a "Christmas-royalty-cinematic-universe" now, and I can't wait to see more of their movies (even though, as I said in the review to The princess Switch, this Universe is actually very, very complicated!). I am not sure there will be a sequel to this one next year (I also want a sequence to The Knight Before Christmas, and since it`s the same actress, perhaps this sequel will be next). Regardless, I am eager to see more of Edward and Stacy next time... They rock :) 


Montenaro

Margaret Delacourt, Duchess of Montenaro


Not so much the hero as the romantic partner of the heroine... But, Kevin is a baker


I loved the carol they sang at the concert... I wish I could go to a concert like that this Christmas... I suppose something online will have to do... 

The palace at Montenaro, without a shadow of a doubt! The decorations were amazing, from the lights outside to the Christmas tree, and especially the way in which Edward arrived with the huge tree, in a vehicle... Really galant.

"Let's deck the halls" =) 
The tradition of decorating the house together. This time there isn't even a cliche mention to how it is the staff and the castle decorator who are supposed to fix things up. 

(The Baking session was also pretty cool)

There are a few... One that deserves mention is when Kevin and Margaret are building their snowman and they declare their love for each other. 

There's a moment somewhere in the middle when Edward approaches Margaret to talk. He asks her about his wife, if she's been speaking about him. Tells her that he loves Stacy with all his heart, but that he's feeling her more distant from him. That he doesn't know what's wrong. He doesn't know it yet, but he is actually talking to his wife. It's the first time She realizes what is going through his mind. She smiles at him and promises him everything will be alright. It’s a beautiful moment, sealed with that kiss in the snow. 

(Forgiving the evil cousin - whilst punishing her for her wrongs) was also pretty Christmassy.)
 

The Princess Switch: Switched Again | USA | 2020 | Direction: Nike Rohl | Screenwriting: Robin Bernheim, Megan Metzger | Cast: John Jack, Vanessa Hudgens, Sam Palladio


It`s Christmas Eve!!!!! One day left!




Wednesday, 23 December 2020

25 days of Christmas | The Princess Switch

Stacy DeNovo is a baker, and the owner of a successful pastry shop in Chicago. She works with her best friend, Kevin, and his little girl is around all the time. Olivia loves ballet and looks up to Stacy as a big sister. They are pretty happy, but there are some pieces missing, and Stacy in particular is a little blue after breaking up with her boyfriend, Paul, a few days before Christmas. It is because he wants to cheer her up - and because he believes she's good enough to win - that Kevin enters their shop in a prestigious baking competition in the kingdom of Belgravia, in Europe.

The competition is fierce. Stacy's former classmate and rival, Brianna, is there, and she's the current champion of the contest. It is because Brianna "accidentally" spills coffee on Stacy's apron that the protagonist hushes outside, to get change and when she does, she stumbles upon Lady Margaret Delacourt, Duchess of Montenaro.

The two of them are physically identical, it is as if they were long-lost twins.

In every other respect, however, they aren't very much alike at all.

Stacy is focused and serious. She likes schedules, plans, and even a little bit of formality every now and again. In fact, that's the reason why nothing has ever happened between her and Eric. Olivia wants them to become an item, but her dad explains that he and Stacy know each other since high school and she's a little too intense for him. He is far more spontaneous and it's the quest of his life to push his best friend into being a little bit more like that.

Duchess Margaret on the other hand is a very spontaneous girl. She feels trapped by her circumstances, having lost her parents at a very young age and now a mere few days away from becoming a royal, before she even had the time to discover who she is. Margaret is betrothed to Edward, the crown prince of Belgravia. He is... okay, but too formal for her taste. Still, she would never back away from the engagement, as she sees such an action as a betrayal of her parents' wishes.

Mirror, mirror, on the wall...

Be that as it may, the duchess sees her chance encounter with her doppelganger as an opportunity. She's desperate for some time on her own, to sort things out and live like a normal person. She proposes that the two of them change outfits and live each other's lives for a couple of days. Stacy isn't too keen on the idea, but when Margaret offers to sponsor Olivia's entrance in a prestigious summer ballet program, Stacy says yes. Beside, she says, it's only for two days, and Edward will be away, and there aren't any official engagements on her schedule. All Stacy has to do is relax. They will change back before the baking competition.

What happens next is a comedy of errors that unfold as the two women try to live each other's lives. Stacy was supposed to have an easy time, but Margaret's fiance - Prince Edward gives up on his trip unexpectedly and seems intend on spending time with the woman who is to become his wife. The poor prince has no idea that the woman he's speaking to is not actually his betrothed.

Margaret on her side, spends more and more time with Kevin and realizes she loves being spontaneous and unchained from the responsibilities of a royal life. The two of them, as it was expected, fall in love with whom they shouldn't: Stacy with the crown prince who is certainly not supposed to be with a commoner, and Margaret with her doppelgänger's best friend, who is not the man she is supposed to marry either. And all of this happens while there's a baking competition going on, and one Stacy intends to win!

Perhaps because she knows she will be gone in two days, Stacy doesn't hold back on being who she is. She speaks her mind, even when she shouldn't. She's never outright rude or offensive. She merely care about the topics, and she evens calls the prince out when he tries to push her away from a conversation about affairs of state.

"Sometimes the affairs of state tend to be a burden"

"Burdens usually aren't so bad when you have someone to share them with."

"I doubt you'd be interested in the details of foreign trade."

"Why not?"

"You shouldn't have to worry about that."

"Because I'm not bright enough?"

"No, because you have a wedding to plan"

"So I should stick to things like polishing my tiara?"

Needless to say, the prince is horribly embarrassed after that conversation and that moment actually turns out to be a pivotal moment in the story because Edward's attitude towards her changes completely from then onwards. He learns a lot from her, like how to understand people and how to reach out to them. It is through these things that he falls in love. Stacy falls in love with him too.

Stacy looked gorgeous in her dress... This is one of the best parts of the movie

Their life at the castle has countless opportunities for romanticism. Horseback riding in the snow, wrapping presents for children together, ball dances and even a private little dance at a gazebo outside the palace. Just for practice. :)

On Margaret's side, Kevin is a perfect fit. They do nothing so grand as a piano duet as a ball, but it suits them just fine. Visiting a Christmas fair, having spaggetti for dinner, watching a Netflix Christmas movie... Sparks start flying between them.

(By the way, the movie they watch is A Christmas Prince. The "Netflix-Royal-Christmas-Cinematic-Universe" is very complicated. The princess switch, the knight before Christmas and A Christmas Prince are all part of the same Universe, in fact, the Characters will interact with each other in one of the sequels spoiler alert! - but here they watch the movie like it's just another movie... Kinda complicated).


Both women inspire their pairs, and each of the guys gets them a gift in the second evening of their life switching experience. Eric gives Margaret a locker with a picture of them, taken earlier that day, inside. Edward gives Stacy a necklace with his family crest, something that belonged to his grandmother: Truth, honor, love.

In the morning of the third day, however, they must switch back and face the unavoidable heartbreak.

In addition to all that there is the tension of discovering when their little prince-and-the-pauper routine is going to be discovered - because the truth always comes out - and what the gentlemen will feel about the girls' deceit. And let's not forget, there is also a big baking competition going on. The scenario of the baking competition was pretty cool, it looked like one of the food competitions I watched on Netflix with my family, only entirely decorated for Christmas, and the cakes looked beautiful!!


The secondary characters are pretty cool, starting of course with Olivia, Eric's sweet little girl, who loves the Nutcracker and has a secret handshake with Stacy. The king is played by the same actor who plays Fergus, the butler in "A crown for Christmas". There is even an angel, a character that no one knows but that seems to know everybody, who pops up everywhere and talks to people precisely when they desperately need someone to talk to.

This movie is a lot of fun, and I saved it for the final week of the marathon because the sequel just came out, a few weeks ago (the review will be up tomorrow)!



Belgravia. 

Prince Edward

Baker extraordinaire

I loved the indie song that opens the movie but the prize of best Christmas music definitely goes to Carol of the Bells. They were at the ball, and the king suggested "the duchess" played something on the piano, after all, her skills were legendary, or so they heard. He doesn't know at the time that the woman standing in front of them is actually Stacy who has no music chops whatsoever. But he called everyone to gather around and she's ushered to the piano. She sits down and everybody in the ball, literally everybody gathers around the instrument. It is immensely intimidating. But of course, Edward realizes she has "stage fright" and offers to join her. He sits by her side, chooses the perfect melody - Carol of the bells - and shows her the notes for the bells, he will play the rest.They play in beautiful harmony, and he even reaches his arm behind her, effectively embracing her to reach the final notes on the far left of the keyboard. It's breathtaking. 

The Christmas cakes are so beautiful that they definitely count as decorations to me!

. The tradition of wrapping Christmas gifts doesn't usually gets so much attention as it does in this movie and that's my pick for the best. Stacy explains that taking the time to wrap each gift is part of the gift itself. And she's right... I do it every year... It's a lot of fun. 

(An honorable mention to the city's legend about St Nicholas fountain... Every place has its own legends and some of those are related to Christmas, I guess.. In this case: "There is a legend that says St Nicholas fountain never freezes because of the warmth of the Christmas spirit". Beautiful.)

There are a billion romantic moments to choose... I definitely have a thing for the piano duet and the dance they have at the gazebo outside. But the best moment is when each of the guys gives their respective girls a gift. It's beautiful and touching and the presents reflect just how much of themselves they are giving the other person. Truth, honor and love, indeed. 


Well, every moment the "angel" appeared deserved mention, of course, but the Christmas Hallmark moment would have to be Edward's proposal to Stacy, in the aftermath of the baking competition. I loved how this movie managed to resolve the confusion without going through scenes in which the characters were all angry at each other and disconnected. There was no need to be angry after all... It was perfect to throw away the formula for how these movies usually go, and it made it more true to its Christmas nature. 


The Princess Switch | USA | 2018 | Direction: Mike Rohl | Screenplay: Robin Bernheim, Megan Metzger | Cast: Vanessa Hudgens, Sam Palladio, Nick Sagar