Welcome to Valentine
United States
403 people rated Follows Olivia, who lost her boyfriend and job at once and wants to return to her hometown in Nebraska, but in the way she meets George and gets stuck in the road with him, spending time together and realizing love is what truly matters.
Comedy
Romance
Cast (13)
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User Reviews
ألا بذكر الله تطمئن القلوب
12/05/2023 05:05
I'll gladly write a positive review amoung the sea of negative ratings. I enjoyed "Welcome to Valentine"! The leads (Katherine and Markian) were refreshingly natural in their performances. In Hallmark films, the actors/actresses can be noticably stiff in their body language, but I didn't sense that with Katherine and Markian. Also, the little boy who played Mickie accurately resembled the nature of a real child in all their energy and humour. His scenes were extremely sweet and funny. Overall, the whole cast had a natural chemistry with each other. When Olivia enters her sister's home by surprise, the way she embraces Mickie and Vanessa seemed genuine and unfiltered, rather than scripted and cookie cutter.
On the other hand, the storyline could have been more focused. I would loved to have SEEN the actual roadtrip. The travel to Valentine could have been used to develop Olivia and George's relationship, since roadtrips confine people to a single space which forces them to interact (for good or for bad).
The plot point that bothered me the most was the repair mistake made by Vanessa's husband. I found this to be unbelievable. Why would a well seasoned mechanic mix up the cables? The writers could have made the car break down any other way.
All in all, despite it's imperfections,"Welcome to Valentine" is a cheery and sweet Hallmark film that I enjoyed watching.
@chaporich
12/05/2023 05:05
6.0 stars.
He calls the little boy a "they"? I think I heard that correctly. So I realized at that moment that whatever else they want you to hear, or think, the agenda is for us all to slowly ease our way into woke. Ok, so I guess I'll talk about the film now. I always rate a film primarily on entertainment value, quality of lead actors, chemistry, dialogue, story, cinematography, the usual. "Welcome to Valentine" has zero chemistry between the leads. I'm sorry, the 15 seconds of a "moment", or the last 30 seconds of the film are insufficient to meet the definition. This story is so overdone and boring. The dramatic part about their careers is so understated, it's practically non-existent. Will he measure up to the man his father wants him to be to run the company? Frankly, I don't care. Will she someday attain her dream of being the true artist that everyone knows she can? Actually, no she won't. Her art is pedestrian and amateurish. I've seen teenagers with a flare for that sort of art doing similar paintings with more skill. Waste of time this movie.
marouaberdi
12/05/2023 05:05
I'm halfway through the movie, but the leads are still bickering with each other. I really want Hallmark movie writers to stop making the leads behave in such an antagonistic way. It doesn't add any drama to the plot since we know how these movies all end. It just makes it hard to buy into the couple and makes several scenes unenjoyable to watch.
It was also tough to cheer for Olivia since she was lazy producing any art, incompetent enough at her other job to get fired, mooching off her friend by sleeping on her couch for months, moving into her sister's place for free, and volunteering to work on a parade instead of actually getting (and keeping) a job to pay her own way through life. What a catch!
Manisha patel
12/05/2023 05:05
In the commercials, Welcome to Valentine looks like a road trip movie, which morphs into a "let's put on a show" movie. And that's all true. But this movie seems to want to be a lot of different things.
The hero is poised to take over the family business, while the heroine wants her artistic career to begin with the help of an influential gallery owner. Within the first ten minutes, the hero causes the heroine to spill food on that gallery owner. She loses her cater-waiter job and her apartment. (Calgon, take me away!)
Oh, if only she had a way to get back to Nebraska. The hero has a car, and we're off.
With all these well-worn tropes, a lot of the plot (and the dialogue) is going to be predictable. Follow your heart. The show must go on.
I liked it. The leads were attractive and they had good chemistry together. Is this the best movie ever? Of course not. But it's cute and sweet and exactly what I expected. I don't think that's a bad thing.
user1117757000624
12/05/2023 05:05
This story was just everywhere and not in a good way. Starts off with a waitress job that is ruined, her roommate gets a job so is leaving, causing her to be homeless and unemployed and "encouraged" to go home. The road trip was very short and seemed like it would be more of the focus but nope! Then comes all the screaming- hey yahhhhhhhhh! A mechanic shows up and is so incompetent and destroys this super expensive car. The guy freaks out (very justified) yet everyone gets angry at him. For the rest of the movie the mechanic isn't even fixing the car he promised to and it's just this CEO guy who is working away at the car. I don't think it was on purpose but it did seem like people of certain backgrounds got along with similar backgrounds over others. I found this really strange in a world that is trying to promote diversity yet the way the characters were scripted to like or dislike each other was very backwards. Overall the acting was very poor. Nearly everyone overly reacted at some point and their personalities went from hot to cold in a flash- wasn't consistent. The kid was veryyyyy annoying, I would rather see more of the dog than the kid. The main characters are all over the place. The side characters could save this movie either. This movie was a big miss and I can see why it aired in March instead of before Valentine's Day. It really should not have been made!
𝐈𝐒𝐌𝐀𝐈𝐋 𝐌𝐎𝐔𝐍𝐓𝐈𝐉𝐄
12/05/2023 05:05
I'm a huge Hallmark movie fan but this movie was too weird and unsatisfying for me. I didn't have a problem with the leads, but their story was uninspiring.
As the movie opens, Olivia is a struggling artist who's been in New York City for two years but is still crashing on her friend's couch (??). She has a job at a catering company with that friend but she's a terrible employee. After being fired (shocker), she finds out that she's losing the couch that she's been crashing on (her friend is suddenly moving and tells her she only has the place for another week).
So she catches a ride home with George, a high flying "40 under 40" golden boy and future Big Company CEO who, bizarrely, is driving an old car 2,800 miles across the country during the winter. Huh? He agrees to drop off Olivia in her hometown of Valentine, Nebraska but his old car breaks down once they get there (shocker). After the town's only mechanic incompetently fried the entire electrical system of his car (by putting the jumper cables on the wrong battery posts), George becomes understandably frustrated and calls the town "Nowhere, Nebraska".
But that town is, in fact, literally located in the middle of nowhere and only has a population of 2,603. I love how Hallmark has become more diverse and inclusive but the real town of Valentine only has one Black person. Just one. And yet virtually everyone featured in the movie (Olivia, her sister Vanessa, Vanessa's son, the restaurant owner, the town's only mechanic, and some random people in the parade) were all people of color. It came across as well intentioned but unrealistic.
When I watched this movie's premiere in February when the movie supposedly takes place, it was literally 24 degrees in Valentine, Nebraska. But some little old lady name Mrs. Hacky spent most of the movie sitting on a little stool outside in the freezing cold, staring at a barn.
Everyone was acting like the annual Valentine's Day parade in this cold tiny town was a huge event. Really?
I hated George's unnecessary lying about Olivia's "success" .
I thought her art was unimpressive.
I thought George's career crisis was poorly set up ("I don't want to spend my time making money for my company, I just want to spend my time giving its money away").
It wasn't as though he had some other clear path or passion that he wanted to follow like Olivia.
Nothing in the movie rang true for me and it was hard to root for anybody in a movie that just didn't make any sense, especially the fantasy ending.
Misha ✨
12/05/2023 05:05
Acting is BAD. Story stupid. Show me a small town in Nebraska that gas this many Black People. Hallmark would have done better to set the location in Lincoln or Omaha. Not small-town Valentine.
From Wikipedia: 2010 Census: The racial makeup of the city was 86.3% White, 0.1% African American, 9.1% Native American, 0.5% Asian, 0.7% from other races, and 3.3% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 1.6% of the population.
The town is off the beating path - northern Nebraska close to the South Dakota state line. Not on anyone's map to get to LA
Silly movie. No chemistry. Silly premise. Rate it a THREE.
Lydia Forson
12/05/2023 05:05
Very bad acting. How did they pick the actors, out of a hat?
The story was stupid. I watched an hour and it was more than enough, although I did check back on it and it wasn't any better. Hallmark used to be my favorite channel but not anymore. They did nothing to put Valentine, Nebraska in a good light.
Gone are the days of the good Hallmark movies. They are producing movies of quantity, not quality. Hugely disappointing channel.
I hope to never see any of these actors again, except for .Sophie Bastelle. She did an okay job.
The story made the family appear low class and, frankly, weird.
The two main actors had zero connection or chemistry; a very odd couple.
Tik Toker
12/05/2023 05:05
This was flat and dull. Not funny, not romantic, not dramatic...there was nothing to the story line.
Acting was listless and we bailed out on it. As reviews come in, the rating will drop. The father-son interaction was forced. Giving up the CEO position was cliché and not realistic. They only had one "Frankenstein-face" (bad plastic surgery) which is at least consistent but they didn't do any facial close ups, mercifully. Opening seen with two women and a boy rolling on top of each other was cringe worthy. The actors are talented but they deserve good writing. They had nothing to work with.
Maybe new writers?
ʊsɛʀզʊɛɛռ B
12/05/2023 05:05
Yes this is a Hallmark movie, and there are rules to Hallmark movies: There is the small town with a big heart, the icy business man who needs a small-town makeover, the parentless protagonist etc, but this movie felt playful. I appreciate the sense of humor throughout- it was very refreshing. Mickey is the cutest child ever- he was so sweet! My heart melted for him and his valentine for his dad! The woman who played Miss Hackey is perfect.
"The parade is nigh" is a hilarious line. There is good dialogue cracking through. I want more movies like this! More funny Hallmark movies! More writing like this!