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  • rbsteury21 December 2013
    Each year I search for a Christmas movie with a Christian slant appropriate for the youth in the youth group my wife and I voluntarily lead. We've done all the big ones ("The Nativity Story", "It's a Wonderful LIfe") and some smaller gems ( "The Ultimate Gift" and the wonderful, under-appreciated "Noelle") but other than those we often are desperate for something that is not a completely cheesy Hallmark type movie with a nod towards the Christ story. Last year I used clips from old "ER's" which always had emotional and impact-full Christmas episodes.

    This movie is a little cheesy but lots of fun. For me, living in central-western Michigan, it has the allure of being shot in and around Grand Rapids with several local venues being shown. It is also a big plug for the Salvation Army, which is a very deserving organization (and also K- Mart which is, altruistically speaking, less deserving.)

    The story revolves around a local, hyper-competitive sports reporter (Will Dalton played a little over-the-top by Bruce Boxleitner) and his family consisting of his spouse and two children (his son Jason is played by Kenton Duty who does a great job.) Antonio Fargas as Melvin Lowell, a Major in the Salvation Army is also very winning.

    Will gets in trouble by carelessly but accidentally injuring a ref in his son's high school basketball game when he vociferously protests the ref's decision. This ultimately loses the game for his son, who quits the team in humiliation, and their father-son relationship suffers. In addition the referee presses charges for his (minor) injuries and Bruce must do humiliating (for him) community service by bell ringing at a Salvation Army kettle. Further, because his embarrassingly uncontrolled behavior has gone viral on social media, he loses his anchor spot at his work. There are some very funny developments and under the tutelage of Major Lowell the "go-for-the-win" Bruce begins to realize Christmas means more than who has the best home decorations or even who can raise the most money at his Christmas kettle.

    There is also a side story about a Central Michigan University football player who has just won the Heisman trophy. Obviously, this part of the plot is a complete fantasy given the big money and politics involved in who wins the Heisman. Somebody involved in this film is pretty clearly a CMU alum as there are Central Michigan banners up all over the place and nary a Michigan State University or University of Michigan appearance. I am an alum of both MSU and U of M but good for the little guys!

    The Christian content is gentle but central to the theme, so those who object to such proselytizing may dislike this film. But the main theme is very humanitarian and charitable, focusing on what Christmas SHOULD be about rather than what it so often is.

    Silver Bells was obviously shot on a very low budget and apparently released direct-to-video, and that sometimes shows. But it was indeed filmed during the winter season and the snowy scenes look very real. Some actors deliver their lines more convincingly than others but overall the acting did not make me roll my eyes. For an evening of smiles and basic truths being re-enforced, you could do a lot worse.
  • I want to write things like heart-warming but I didn't see that in more than a very superficial way.

    Most of the characters were over the top and there wasn't any real chemistry between them--or apparently, the actors. Antonio Fargas brings some warmth to Major Melvin Lowell but every other character seems to be a caricature.

    Holiday movies are a dime a dozen, and in fact, there is another Silver Bells movie that was only slightly more pertinent. Unfortunately, this ends up being a ~90 minute advertisement for the Salvation Army. Helping people is a good thing, but this movie wasn't a documentary and it wasn't in the least a deep, thoughtful attempt to show how good it is to help people. It only made me think that the Salvation Army paid someone to try to bring sympathy to their cause and it backfired, and that makes me sad.
  • Somehow I made it through the first half an hour of obnoxious, competitive behaviour centred around sports, the kind that really winds me up. Where parents force their own dreams on to their children and are obsessed with winning everything, including the best dressed house for Christmas. All that electric being burned and consuming the world and the money spent on it. Tone it down guys and donate the money you save to people that don't even have water or food or something (I know, I'm ranting again!).

    Once I got passed that, the film started to show how wrong that attitude is and that we should consider others and find love in our hearts for every stranger as well as our family. A good moral and a valid point.

    It gets a bit God-Bothery in places and I can see why The Salvation Army was selected for this film, but I can't really condone their attitudes towards the LGBT community. If I believed in a God, it would be an accepting God who loves us all equally and doesn't take attendance or expect repentance, but I don't which is why I find films like these, that use them as a way of promoting kindness, to be a bit much for my tastes. Being kind should be common sense, not because a mythological being has told you to do it.

    As you would expect, everything gets wrapped up in a lovely shiny bow in the end and Bruce learns his lesson, but I've said it before, it's not the things you do at Christmas, but the Christmas things you do all year through.
  • After reading most of the other reviews, I really felt compelled to write my own. I love watching movies this time of year because they can reach all people. I happen to be Jewish, and I appreciate that in the last couple years, there have been some Hanukkah movies, or Hanukkah/Christmas movies sprinkled in. But what this film had in its favor was the message of love and giving. We are living in very troubling times where people are being more torn apart due to religious views, among other things. When I watch the Christmas movies, it usually is about a couple eventually in love at Christmas time, not religion. I did not at all think of this is a movie for the Salvation Army. But why not? The Salvation Army is about giving to the masses, giving to those in need. Christ was a Jew, and my family has always celebrated Judeo-Christian values. But not in an in-your-face way! We were taught about unity and family and love. This film focused on a man without that understanding, and the Salvation Army was simply one way to showing sacrifice, and the important message of giving and caring for others apart from yourself. I thought the acting was good and I thought the message was perfect for these troubling times.
  • From Thanksgiving until Christmas those bell ringers and their pots are seen in all kinds of public places. Silver Bells has nothing to do with that familiar Yuletide favorite that Jay Livingston and Ray Evans wrote for a much better film. You'll note hear a note of it in this film Silver Bells.

    The film is a rather sappy salute and huge commercial plug for the Salvation Army and the good work they do. As a group that is notorious for discriminating against LGBT people I'm loath to say a good word for a film that plugs that organization.

    Bruce Boxleitner is a sports reporter on a local TV station in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan and he's a most competitive guy and instills that in his kids Laura Spencer and Kenton Duty. One night at one Kenton's basketball games he gets into it with a referee and he's arrested and gets community service with the Salvation Army over the Christmas shopping season.

    As this is a Christian film there are certain parameters and they are most strictly observed. The guy in charge of the local Salvation Army is Antonio Fargas, best remembered back in the day for playing Huggy Bear on Starsky&Hutch. I still remember Fargas calling them 'honorary soul brothers'. I thought that was as condescending a line as I ever heard on either the big screen or the small.

    Fargas like the rest of us is a little older and slower. He's also the only one who has an interesting character in the story.

    Couldn't they get the rights from Paramount to play Silver Bells at least.