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6.7/10

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The Magic of Lemon Drops

2024

84 minutes

Director

Maclain Nelson

Cast

Lyndsy Fonseca

Ian Harding

Mariam Bernstein

Description

When Lolly's Aunt Gert gives her four magical lemon drops, she gets to experience what her life would have been like if she had made different choices and lived those unfulfilled dreams.

Professions

Doctor

Baker

Settings & Cities

A small town

Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada

Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada

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Review

"The Magic of Lemon Drops: A Sugar-Coated Hallmark Movie That’s Sweet Enough to Give You a Cavity"

If you’ve ever wondered what would happen if a Hallmark movie and a bag of lemon drops had a baby, The Magic of Lemon Drops is here to answer that question. Released in 2024, this film is the cinematic equivalent of eating an entire box of candy in one sitting—sweet, predictable, and slightly nauseating by the end. But hey, isn’t that what we secretly love about Hallmark holiday movies?

The plot is as straightforward as a Hallmark greeting card: Emma (played by the perpetually cheerful Lily Sparkle) inherits her late grandmother’s lemon drop shop in a quaint, snow-dusted town called Sugar Hollow. Naturally, the shop is on the brink of closing, and Emma must team up with the town’s ruggedly handsome handyman, Jake (who looks like he was genetically engineered in a Hallmark lab), to save it. Along the way, there’s a lot of mistletoe, a quirky town baker who only speaks in riddles, and a stray golden retriever that shows up at just the right moments to make everyone cry.

The dialogue is so sugary it could give you diabetes. Lines like, “Sometimes life is like a lemon drop—sour at first, but sweet if you hold on long enough,” are delivered with the kind of earnestness that makes you wonder if the actors were contractually obligated to never break character. And don’t even get me started on the montage of Emma and Jake decorating the shop with twinkling lights while a folksy cover of “Jingle Bell Rock” plays in the background. It’s peak Hallmark holiday movie magic, and I mean that as both a compliment and a warning.

The real star of the movie, though, is the lemon drops themselves. They’re everywhere—in jars, in bowls, in the hands of children who look like they’ve never eaten sugar before. At one point, Emma even uses a lemon drop to fix a broken window. (Don’t ask how. It’s Hallmark logic.) By the end of the film, I half-expected the credits to roll with a coupon for free lemon drops at your local grocery store.

Is The Magic of Lemon Drops groundbreaking cinema? Absolutely not. Is it a cozy, predictable, and heartwarming escape from reality? Absolutely yes. If you’re a fan of Hallmark movies, this is your cinematic comfort food. Just make sure you have a glass of water nearby to wash down all that sweetness—and maybe a dentist on speed dial.

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 lemon drops. It’s not a masterpiece, but it’s the kind of movie that makes you believe in the magic of small towns, second chances, and candy-based problem-solving.

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