Watched: 12/6/2024
Format: Hallmark
Viewing: First
Director: Dustin Rikert
Hey! Looks like The Finnish Line (2024) was directed by the same fellow who did The Christmas Quest. I guess he spent his year in very cold countries.
As I've tried to communicate, Hallmark has really been trying to branch out for a while. One way that materializes is in their Let's Go Europe movies where our hero goes overseas and explores the Christmas traditions of Norway, Germany, Ireland, etc... very European. I would love for them to do Central and South America. But if their take on Texas is any indication...
Anyway, this one takes place in Finland. My mom's parents were from Finland, which has always left me with something of a relationship with the country as happens when one's grandma is serving pickled herring with lunch and your grandpa sounds like the Swedish Chef when he talks (as my friends would tell me). As an adult I had opportunity to visit Helsinki for work, and... I loved it. Finland is rad. More tall people with long torsos who also look awkward in unexpected conversations! My people!
But aside from my grandparents passing down a deep need for coffee, which I guess is cultural and congenital, most of what I know about Finland is from my visit and what I've seen online.*
This movie is about a young woman born in the US to a Finnish father and American mother. The father had been a champion dog-sled racer, but had lost his last big race to a bit of a bully, retired from the sport and gone to live in the US. Now, his daughter has taken up the sport, and is in Finland to take part in the race, and, inevitably, win it, beating her dad's rival.
But, it's also a romantic comedy, sort of, and a movie teaching you a bit about Finnish Christmas traditions and the weird things Finns do as a culture. Like "Pantsdrunk", which is a publicly acknowledged habit of drinking by yourself in your underwear. (Keep in mind, Finland is also one of the happiest and best educated countries on Earth).
Along the way, our racer finds family, love and saunas. And there's a nice little twist at the end that humanizes our villain in an astounding way. I was impressed.
The cast is made up of locals and a few American or Canadian actors. Our lead is Kim Matula (of Texas), and her pal is played by Nichole Sakura, and I knew from The Treasure of Foggy Mountain. And they're, like, actually funny. I don't know what happened here, but it's like they were allowed to tell jokes or make stuff up. And that is *not* the Hallmark way.
I'm not saying it's a yuk-fest, but I actually lol'd, which does not happen.
They also, by virtue of a 3-day dog sled race, have an element of adventure which these movies simply do not usually have - except for Rikert's other movie this year, I guess. And they have a lot of sled dogs, extras, etc... This movie cost someone some money. Maybe the nation of Finland. Who can say?
My one thing was seeing - hey, if they'd had the budget, this could have had more dog racing. I like dogs and races.
*my mom was a late addition to their family, arriving when my Grandpas was 48 or 49, and my grandmother about 38. Pair this with me showing up in 1975, and my grandparents were both elderly and had Americanized pretty well in the near 50 years they'd already been here and were far more representative of the citizens of Michigan's Upper Peninsula in the 20th Century than anything to do with modern Finland.
Also, Sakura is a smoke-show