The Heartland episode, A Heartland Christmas, written by one of Heatland's best writers, Heather Conkie, encapsulates what is, at least for me, so wonderful about this CBC series. There is the breathtaking beauty of the Rockies, a place I know well. There is the inner strength of the Bartlett clan even in the face of adversity. There is the community coming together to help others, in this case horses trapped in a canyon. And then there are those Heartland themes of healing and redemption. All of these things tie this episode to the holiday season, something missed by that ideological, manichean, and simplistic bull hockey masquerading as a review that Stan Canada is shovelling around. This episode is not to be missed for the wonderful performance by Nicholas Campbell and the final scene between him and Shaun Johnston. As for the deduction, I took some points away from this episode because it doesn't seem to square with the continuity of Heartland seasons one through four.
Plot summary
Christmas comes to Heartland, along with an anonymous call about starving horses stranded by an avalanche in the Rocky Mountains, which send Amy and Ty to their rescue.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
November 09, 2019 at 04:35 AM
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A Wonderful Episode of a Wonderful Series...
How did this mess happen?
I've watched all of the Heartland shows up through the sixteenth season and give it 10 stars. I just found out about this movie and I wish I hadn't. It isn't close to Heartland's normal greatness, just using the actors and forcing them to act out a horrible script, making the wonderful characters be mean to each other and paper thin. Heartland ruining Christmas???? What kind of idea is that?? How did this make it past all of the people who have made such a wonderful show? I have to give it 7 stars because it's part of the Heartland story, but that's a big drop from my usual rating of such a wonderful show.
Something Hollywood would never produce now
A lovely film about a normal family. Something that has become unfortunately rare these days. There is no propaganda and nor diversity quotas. Just an enjoyable film.