Sunday, February 3, 2013

Watch The Fitzgerald Family Christmas Movie Online No Survey

Watch The Fitzgerald Family Christmas Movie Online No Survey


With THE FITZGERALD FAMILY CHRISTMAS, Burns returns to the working-class, Irish-American roots of THE BROTHERS MCMULLEN. Reuniting with McMullen co-stars Connie Britton ("Friday Night Lights", "Nashville"), and Michael McGlone, along with Noah Emmerich (LITTLE CHILDREN, BEAUTIFUL GIRLS), Kerry Bishé (ARGO, RED STATE) and Caitlin FitzGerald (DAMSELS IN DISTRESS, NEWLYWEDS) Burns seamlessly weaves an ensemble story of adult siblings dealing with the desire of their estranged father (Ed Lauter, THE ARTIST, THE LONGEST YARD) to return home for Christmas for the first time since he walked out on his family 20 years ago. Family rifts emerge, and like with any family, Christmas brings a mixed bag of complicated emotions and dynamics. Alliances form, old wounds are reopened or glossed over, and the possibility for a new hope and forgiveness emerges. (c) Tribeca
Release Date The Fitzgerald Family Christmas Dec 7, 2012 Limited
The

Actors For The Fitzgerald Family Christmas

Kerry Bishé,Edward Burns,Heather Burns,Marsha Dietlein Bennett,Caitlin Fitzgerald,Anita Gillette,Tom Guiry,Ed Lauter,Michael McGlone,Nick Sandow,Noah Emmerich,Connie Britton,Joyce Van Patten,Dara Coleman,Brian d'Arcy James,Malachy McCourt,Daniella Pineda,John Solo,Michele L. Harris,Kevin Kash

Genres The Fitzgerald Family Christmas : Drama

User Ranting The Fitzgerald Family Christmas : 3.4
User Percentage For The Fitzgerald Family Christmas : %
User Count Like for The Fitzgerald Family Christmas : 359
All Critics Ranting For The Fitzgerald Family Christmas : 6.4
All Critics Count For The Fitzgerald Family Christmas : 25
All Critics Percentage For The Fitzgerald Family Christmas : 64 %

Review For The Fitzgerald Family Christmas

Resentments, pregnancies, cancer, spousal abuse and the struggle of a recovering alcoholic all come and go on cue.
Michael Phillips-Chicago Tribune

These Fitzgeralds are loud, selfish and often maddening, but they're a loving group, and you wouldn't mind spending more time with them.
Connie Ogle-Miami Herald

Burns remains an agreeable presence throughout, and the emotions mostly ring true, even if the comic elements feel overly broad and individual episodes are hit-and-miss.
Andrew O'Hehir-Salon.com

A holiday-themed piece shot through with humor and heartbreak. No bull. And low on sappy.
Peter Travers-Rolling Stone

Too much of the film is taken up by creaky plot devices and one sibling vowing to track down and talk to another one to resolve a problem.
Sara Stewart-New York Post

Manages the considerable feat of interweaving the personal dramas of nine members of a boisterous Irish-American clan into a coherent mosaic with a streamlined narrative drive.
Stephen Holden-New York Times

[A]chingly lovely... so full of bittersweet melancholy and yet so fixedly hopeful without ever having to touch on the sentimental...
MaryAnn Johanson-Flick Filosopher

The ensemble cast is mostly agreeable, but the script eventually bogs down amid too many characters and too many contrivances.
Todd Jorgenson-Cinemalogue.com

The dysfunctional silbling-squabbling delivers diluted holiday cheer.
Susan Granger-SSG Syndicate

Burns' latest demonstrates the workmanlike skill with which he's produced a new relationship drama every one or two years.
Annlee Ellingson-Paste Magazine

A fertile battlefield of sibling discontent and parental resentment, creating a prickly but inviting familial atmosphere that offers enough variation in woe to ease the script out of its occasional dalliance with clumsy melodrama.
Brian Orndorf-Blu-ray.com

Burns gives a rare picture of another borough, showing the working-class environment he grew up in, and eulogizes: Queens, and even the beaches of Long Island when not in high season.
Marsha McCreadie-Film Journal International

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