Love the Coopers
audience Reviews
, 37% Audience Score- Rating: 4.5 out of 5 starsThis was a very interesting movie. I did not watch it just for Timothée Chalamet...definity not. It encompasses a family and all the struggles of being in one. It was a great Christmas movie though and I did enjoy it.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 starsI love watching this movie - multiple times every Christmas since discovering it. It’s a Christmas movie - it’s fun, funny, awkward, kind, and sassy too. The music helps to make it great for me…I’m a sucker for Diane Keaton, and I like this movie much more than The Family Stone.
- Rating: 1 out of 5 starsThe writing is so forced and akward even this talented cast cannot pull it off. I did not Love the Coopers.
- Rating: 3.5 out of 5 starsA well observed intertwining story of the pressures of family life and the expectations we put on ourselves all through an amplified lens of Christmas. Whilst there are some less effectives moments, it worth more than the 18% score
- Rating: 5 out of 5 starsI really enjoyed this heart warming movie. I even cried in the end.
- Rating: 4.5 out of 5 starsI love this film. Great cast, so perhaps should have realised it would be this good. Watched it twice on consecutive nights the first time I saw it and have watched it several times since. Has become the must see film at Christmas in our house. Warm, clever and uplifting. A total hidden gem
- Rating: 5 out of 5 starsLoved this movie. Very heartwarming.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 starsChristmas means comfort, joy and chaos. Love the Coopers (titled Christmas with the Coopers in the UK and Ireland) is a 2015 American Christmas comedy-drama film directed by Jessie Nelson Can’t recommend it. Meh, it passed the time. Sort of. 😕 When four generations of the Cooper clan come together for their annual Christmas Eve celebration, a series of unexpected visitors and unlikely events turn the night upside down, leading them all toward a surprising rediscovery of family bonds and the spirit of the holiday.
- Rating: 2.5 out of 5 starsI started out thinking this would be a fun respectful movie but became very disappointed. As a Christmas movie I had an expectation that there would be recognition of the Holy Day that is celebrated by the family that gathered together. This did not happen. When the family is at the table ready to dig in, the soldier said something like, "what about saying Grace?" Everyone seemed to believe that was a good idea except that no one knew how to say a prayer. The soldier volunteered to say a prayer but part of the way through it the family got wild, interrupted the prayer flailed their arms and showed more disrespect than had there been no reference to a prayer. It was awful and the soldier was left looking embarrassed as though he had done something wrong. At that disrespectful moment the movie became a 1 star. I can't help but wonder how such a monstrous mistake was made. My thoughts turned sour and I wondered what Americans believe in when they think about Christmas. Santa Claus? presents? Mistletoe? but not our Saviour? I am very sad!
- Rating: 3 out of 5 starsOh, this movie gets an extra star just because it's a Christmas movie. it's not good at times it is mixed up and confusing. But still, there is something about it that I watch it every year. Talk about privileged people everyone has a problem. They are all hurt and mad and weird for no reason after all they have everything and should be happy but they are not. It is the course of not having to struggle not having to suffer those really bad things so they create them. Struggling makes you appreciate things.