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COUNTRY ROADS CHRISTMAS Review

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COUNTRY ROADS CHRISTMAS Review
COUNTRY ROADS CHRISTMAS is a 2022 Christmas family drama that’s now on UPtv. It follows the story of Harris, a successful country musician who seeks reconciliation with his family after abandoning them for years and believing they’re better off without him. After his daughter Skye becomes his tour manager, Harris begins to see she still loves him and desires a relationship with him, even after years of hurt. His heart softens and he seeks forgiveness from both Skye and her mother. Will his change in attitude lead to forgiveness and reconciliation?

COUNTRY ROADS CHRISTMAS is an entertaining movie that captures the spirit of Christmas. The artistic quality suffers sometimes from an unconvincing set, but the movie is both entertaining and touching. COUNTRY ROADS CHRISTMAS promotes strong Christian, biblical values such as repentance, forgiveness, family, and celebrating Christmas and the Birth of Christ together. Harris learns what it means to be a good and loving father and husband. He also realizes that it’s not good for a man to be alone, even if being a family man doesn’t match the image of a grizzled cowboy.

(CCC, BBB, A, M):

Dominant Worldview and Other Worldview Content/Elements:

Very strong Christian, biblical, moral worldview stresses repentance, forgiveness, redemption, and the importance of family, a man who has wronged his wife and daughter for many years comes to see that what he did was wrong and works to rebuild their trust, and reconciliation eventually occurs and the family is rebuilt, plus characters sing multiple faith-based Christmas carols, such as “Joy to the World,” “O Holy Night” and “Hark the Herald Angels Sing”;

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Foul Language:

No obscenities or profanities;

Violence:

No violence;

Nudity:

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No nudity;

Alcohol Use:

One scene with social drinking;

Smoking and/or Drug Use and Abuse:

No smoking or drugs; and

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Miscellaneous Immorality:

Dysfunctional family with a man pretending to have cheated on his wife to push her away and isolate himself from his family, because he doesn’t think he’s good enough for them, but he eventually realizes that what he did was wrong, and he seeks reconciliation and forgiveness.

COUNTRY ROADS CHRISTMAS is a 2022 Christmas family drama that’s now being run on UPtv. It follows the reconciliation journey of a famous country singer, Harris, who works to reconcile with his family after abandoning them for years and believing they both would be happier and better off without him. The journey to forgiveness, however, isn’t so easy. His wife and his daughter are not quick to trust him after so many years of hurt. Instead, Harris has to prove to them that his heart has changed. At the same time, he realizes that even grizzled cowboys need a family.

Harris’s reconciliation with his daughter, Skye, begins when she’s hired as his tour manager for his Christmas tour after getting fired from her previous job at a competing record label. Skye and Harris are both hesitant to have her join the tour, but Harris’s manager, Ryan, convinces them it’s a good idea. Ryan, who was serving as Harris’s interim tour manager, begins teaching Skye the ropes so she can take over the position in the new year.

Despite the history of hurt between Harris and Skye, the tour runs pretty smoothly until Skye confronts her dad about abandoning their family. When he doesn’t give her a response, she wants to quit her position and leave the tour. Ryan, however, comes to the rescue and serves as a peacemaker, keeping both Harris and Skye happy.

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As the tour continues, Skye learns that her father has sold his house and is now living on the tour bus year-round, a decision makes her extremely angry. Skye is mad both at her dad for his decision and at Ryan for allowing her dad to make that decision. However, she invites them to Christmas at her mom, Meg’s, house so her father can have a real home for the holidays. Skye doesn’t expect her father to accept her offer, because he’s been skipping out on Christmas for years. However, he shows up for Christmas, showing that his heart toward his family has begun to change.

When he arrives at Meg’s house, Harris asks his daughter for forgiveness for all the times he abandoned her, explaining that he believed she would be better off without him. Skye accepts the apology, though her heart is still hardened toward her father. Later, Harris apologizes to his wife for the same reason and can’t believe she still loves him after all this time.

Shortly after Christmas, Harris returns to his tour, however, he and Meg go out on the bus, leaving Skye and Ryan stranded at Meg’s house. Skye has been angry with Ryan the whole time because she doesn’t believe he’s been taking good care of her father. Over time, however, her heart begins to soften as she hears just how much Ryan has done for her father Harris.

Even before hearing about Ryan’s kindness to her father, Skye had developed feelings for Ryan. Once she realized just how much he cares, Skye fully falls for him. Lucky for her, Ryan falls for Skye too and romance blossoms.

However, can Skye fully reconcile with her father. Also, will her parents get back together?

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COUNTRY ROADS CHRISTMAS is an entertaining movie that captures the spirit of Christmas by teaching about the importance of family, redemption and forgiveness. Also, the movie features multiple faith-based songs, including “O Holy Night” and “Hark the Herald Angels Sing.” The artistic quality suffers sometimes from an unconvincing set, but the movie is both entertaining and touching. Furthermore, there is no foul language, violence, and only an extremely brief scene of social drinking, along with positive portrayals of romantic relationships. Thus, the movie is suitable for all audiences.

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Movie Reviews

Movie Review: ‘Avatar: Fire and Ash’ – Catholic Review

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Movie Review: ‘Avatar: Fire and Ash’ – Catholic Review

NEW YORK (OSV News) – “Avatar: Fire and Ash” (20th Century), the third film in the always visually rich franchise that got its start in 2009, brings forward thematic elements that had previously been kept in the background and that viewers of faith will find it impossible to accept and difficult to dismiss. As a result, it requires careful evaluation by mature movie fans.

Against the recurring background of the fictional moon Pandora, the saga of the family whose fortunes were chronicled in the earlier chapters continues. The clan consists of dad Jake Sully (Sam Worthington) and his wife Neytiri (Zoe Saldaña) as well as their three surviving children, teens Lo’ak (Britain Dalton) and Kiri (Sigourney Weaver) and tyke Tuk (Trinity Jo-Li Bliss).

Rounding out the household is Jake and Neytiri’s adolescent adopted son, Spider (Jack Champion).

As veterans of the earlier outings will know, Jake was originally a human and a Marine. But, via an avatar, he eventually embraced the identity of Neytiri’s Pandoran tribe, the Na’vi. While their biological kids are to all appearances Na’vi — a towering race with blue skins and tails — Spider is human and requires a breathing mask to survive on Pandora.

Lo’ak is guilt-ridden over his role in the death of his older brother, Neteyam (Jamie Flatters), and wants to redeem himself by proving his worth as a warrior. Kiri is frustrated that, despite her evident spiritual gifts, she’s unable to connect with Eywa, the mother goddess the Na’vi worship.

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For his part, Jake is worried about Spider’s future — Neteyam’s death has left the still-grieving Neytiri with a hatred of the “Sky people,” as Earthlings are known on Pandora. He also has to contend with the ongoing threat posed by his potentially deadly rivalry with his former Marine comrade, Col. Miles Quaritch (Stephen Lang), who is also Spider’s estranged father.

As if all that weren’t enough, a further challenge arises when the Metkayina, the sea-oriented Pandorans with whom Jake et al. have taken refuge, are attacked by the fierce fire-centric Mangkwan, led by Varang (Oona Chaplin), a malevolent sorceress. A three hour-plus running time is required to tie up these varied strands.

Along the way, the religion adhered to by the main characters becomes more prominent than in previous installments. Thus Eywa is both present on screen and active in the plot. Additionally, Kiri is revealed to have been the product of a virginal conception.

Director and co-writer (with Rick Jaffa and Amanda Silver) James Cameron’s extension of his blockbuster series, accordingly, not only includes material uncomfortable at best for Christians but also seems incongruent, overall, with monotheistic belief. Even well-catechized grown-ups, therefore, should approach this sprawling addition to Cameron’s epic with caution.

The film contains nonscriptural beliefs and practices, constant stylized but often intense combat violence with brief gore, scenes of torture, narcotics use, partial nudity, a couple of mild oaths, at least one rough term, numerous crude and a handful of crass expressions and an obscene gesture. The OSV News classification is L — limited adult audience, films whose problematic content many adults would find troubling. The Motion Picture Association rating is PG-13 — parents strongly cautioned. Some material may be inappropriate for children under 13.

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‘Gurram Paapi Reddy’ movie review: Naresh Agastya, Faria Abdullah’s con comedy is hilarious yet overcooked

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‘Gurram Paapi Reddy’ movie review: Naresh Agastya, Faria Abdullah’s con comedy is hilarious yet overcooked

If this week’s Telugu release Gurram Paapi Reddy were a human, it would most likely be a teenager. It bursts with energy, overflowing with ideas and wearing its unabashed enthusiasm like a badge of honour. The audience too might end up surrendering to its infectious energy. Yet, like a distracted teenager, the film also gets so enamoured by its very idea that it loses control and does not know where to stop.

The vibe is eerily similar to Jathi Ratnalu early on. Again, Brahmanandam (as Vaidyanathan), is a judge. Faria Abdullah, the actress in the former film, is the only female presence in the lead lineup here. The other oddball male characters — Gurram Paapi Reddy (Naresh Agastya), Chilipi (Vamshidhar Goud), Goyyi (Jeevan Kumar) and Military (Rajkumar Kasireddy) — are the not-so-smart ones who get entangled in a mess.

The similarities end there. Brahmanandam, who is in terrific form, sets the tone of the comedy, doling out harsh punishments to petty criminals, not for their crimes, but for their sheer stupidity in getting caught. Gurram, Chilipi, Goyyi and Military are the victims who reunite after their jail term. This time, they are joined by Soudamini (Faria).

Gurram Paapi Reddy (Telugu)

Director: Murali Manohar

Cast: Naresh Agastya, Faria Abdullah, Brahmanandam, Yogi Babu

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Runtime: 160 minutes

Storyline: A gang of four ex-convicts swap dead bodies for easy money and land in a ‘royal’ mess.

While their earlier heist at a jewellery store goes terribly wrong, the new plan is strangely simple. The four men need to swap a dead body from Srisailam with another body in a graveyard in Hyderabad for a meagre sum. While they execute it, albeit with difficulty, it gets messy when the motive behind the swap comes to the fore, dating back to a royal gift from the pre-Independence era.

The key conflict is established prior to the intermission, but newer problems surface later. Though the story idea is deceptively straightforward, the director builds many layers to the fun quotient and it’s evident that he treats comedy like serious business.

The actors react to the situations without trying too hard to impress. The scenes are not only thematically funny, but also packed with outrageously hilarious one-liners. Every time one feels the film’s trajectory is sorted, there is a surprise. The screenplay is busy with backstories and subplots.

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The second hour could have benefited from some economy in writing. Past connections are strung together, newer characters and their complexities are introduced, there are backup plans, flashbacks and a song is thrown into the mix. Thankfully, the humour quotient remains unaffected. Some breather would have been welcome.

The subplots involving Sangi Reddy, particularly the courtroom proceedings, and Markandeya Raju’s son crowd the screenplay, leaving the viewers with too many dots to connect. It’s inevitable for some restlessness to creep in towards the final 45 minutes — a stretch packed with several events and coincidences. A clever climax salvages the film.

Gurram Paapi Reddy is aware of the crucial balance between the goofiness of its characters and the seriousness of the plot. Too many characters and a packed, expansive narrative make the film exhausting, given its 160-minute runtime.

Naresh Agastya, Vamshidhar Goud, Faria Abdullah, Jeevan Kumar and Rajkumar Kasireddy share wonderful on-screen camaraderie and get ample scope to shine individually too. Yogi Babu, as a convict with night-blindness, brings the roof down even when he doesn’t dub for himself. Motta Rajendran’s antics look repetitive at times, though they land well.

This is also among Brahmanandam’s best on-screen appearances in recent times. It’s an absolute joy to see the veteran actor ever-hungry to prove his worth when he senses potential in a scene. John Vijay is in dire need of reinvention with his dialogue delivery and body language. Both songs in the film, composed by Krishna Saurabh, though well-shot, feel abrupt.

A narrative with lesser flab would have amplified the film’s impact. The makers tease the audience with a potential sequel idea, but appreciably it does not appear forced. The film is also complete in itself.

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Gurram Paapi Reddy is a smartly written and performed con-comedy that delivers laughs aplenty, though a few segments become indulgent.

Published – December 19, 2025 08:22 pm IST

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Movie Reviews

‘Avatar: Fire and Ash’ Movie Review and Release Live Updates: James Cameron directorial opens to mixed audience reviews – The Times of India

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‘Avatar: Fire and Ash’ Movie Review and Release Live Updates: James Cameron directorial opens to mixed audience reviews  – The Times of India

James Cameron clarifies Matt Damon’s viral claim that he turned down 10 per cent of ‘Avatar’ profits

Filmmaker James Cameron has addressed actor Matt Damon’s long-circulating claim that he turned down the lead role in Avatar along with a lucrative share of the film’s profits, saying the version widely believed online is “not exactly true.”

For years, Damon has spoken publicly about being offered the role of Jake Sully in the 2009 blockbuster in exchange for 10 per cent of the film’s gross, a deal that would have translated into hundreds of millions of dollars given Avatar’s global earnings of USD 2.9 billion. The role eventually went to Australian actor Sam Worthington, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

“Jim Cameron called me — he offered me 10 per cent of Avatar,” Damon says in the clips. “You will never meet an actor who turned down more money than me … I was in the middle of shooting the Bourne movie and I would have to leave the movie kind of early and leave them in the lurch a little bit and I didn’t want to do that … [Cameron] was really lovely, he said: ‘If you don’t do this, this movie doesn’t really need you. It doesn’t need a movie star at all. The movie is the star, the idea is the star, and it’s going to work. But if you do it, I’ll give you 10 per cent of the movie.’”

However, speaking to The Hollywood Reporter, Cameron said Damon was never formally offered the part. “I can’t remember if I sent him the script or not. I don’t think I did? Then we wound up on a call and he said, ‘I love to explore doing a movie with you. I have a lot of respect for you as a filmmaker. [Avatar] sounds intriguing. But I really have to do this Jason Bourne movie. I’ve agreed to it, it’s a direct conflict, and so, regretfully, I have to turn it down.’ But he was never offered. There was never a deal,” according to The Hollywood Reporter.

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The director added that discussions never progressed to character details or negotiations. “We never talked about the character. We never got to that level. It was simply an availability issue,” he said.

Addressing the widely shared belief that Damon turned down a massive payday, Cameron said the actor may have unintentionally merged separate ideas over time. “What he’s done is extrapolate ‘I get 10 percent of the gross on all my films,’” Cameron said, adding that such a deal would not have happened in this case. “So he’s off the hook and doesn’t have to beat himself up anymore.”

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