A teenage chorister from a small Appalachian town dreams of becoming a country music star.A teenage chorister from a small Appalachian town dreams of becoming a country music star.A teenage chorister from a small Appalachian town dreams of becoming a country music star.
Photos
Morgan Motley
- Shelley
- (as Morgan Addison Motley)
Meli Alexander
- Lady in Green
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe first of seven original Christmas-themed films that premiered on Lifetime in 2013.
- GoofsThe movie takes place in Tennessee and the license plates on the cars shown are Tennessee tags; however, they don not use front tags in Tennessee.
- ConnectionsReferences Hee Haw (1969)
- SoundtracksO Holy Night
(performer)
English words by John Sullivan Dwight (uncredited), French lyrics by Placide Cappeau (uncredited) and music by Adolphe Adam (uncredited)
Featured review
I'll cut to the chase. This is yet another movie that unnecessarily portrays a black man as an absent father. He's abandoned his family to be a bartender while he works on his music. This story could've been written so that the father was an active member of the family and supportive of his daughter's musical aspirations. Instead it uses the damaging trope of the black father that's abandoned his family to create tension in the story.
Studies have repeatedly shown that the pervasive myth about black fathers being absent from their children's lives is just that. A myth. The CDC has found that black fathers are "more involved with their kids on a daily basis than fathers from other racial groups."
The presence of this harmful stereotype in this movie is a continuation of the subtle and systemic racism that makes it so difficult to be a black man in America.
How wonderful this movie would've been if it showed both a mother and father fully engaged in their child's life, encouraging them, and helping guide them to work towards their dreams. It could have portrayed a black man as a positive role model and rejected harmful stereotypes while still telling its story. Because it failed to do so, this movie does more harm than good.
More than anything, I am so disappointed that Dolly Parton signed on to this movie. She seems like such a wholesome and caring person that I assume her involvement is out of ignorance rather than malice. Regardless, her involvement is shameful.
Rating it 1/10 stars due to systemic racism.
Studies have repeatedly shown that the pervasive myth about black fathers being absent from their children's lives is just that. A myth. The CDC has found that black fathers are "more involved with their kids on a daily basis than fathers from other racial groups."
The presence of this harmful stereotype in this movie is a continuation of the subtle and systemic racism that makes it so difficult to be a black man in America.
How wonderful this movie would've been if it showed both a mother and father fully engaged in their child's life, encouraging them, and helping guide them to work towards their dreams. It could have portrayed a black man as a positive role model and rejected harmful stereotypes while still telling its story. Because it failed to do so, this movie does more harm than good.
More than anything, I am so disappointed that Dolly Parton signed on to this movie. She seems like such a wholesome and caring person that I assume her involvement is out of ignorance rather than malice. Regardless, her involvement is shameful.
Rating it 1/10 stars due to systemic racism.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Nashville Dreams
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime2 hours
- Color
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content
Top Gap
By what name was A Country Christmas Story (2013) officially released in Canada in English?
Answer