The Hamilton Spectator

To make Netflix’s The Princess Switch, just combine these six movie clichés

- SONIA RAO

Made-for-TV Christmas movies are lawless territory. There is no plot that can’t be reused, no trope that can’t be recycled. If cinematic homogeneit­y is frowned upon, then these movies are rebels with a Claus.

“The Princess Switch,” which premièred Friday on Netflix, doesn’t care if you’ve seen it all before — and that’s probably for the best. The streaming service has wisely chosen to lean into the delightful cheesiness of traditiona­l holiday fare, as seen with last year’s smash hit “A Christmas Prince.” It recognizes that we deserve to forget about our troubles and watch Vanessa Hudgens play a pair of lookalikes — Stacy De Novo, a pastry chef from Chicago, and Lady Margaret, a European duchess — who temporaril­y switch lives and find love.

Much like seven-layer bars that Stacy might make, “The Princess Switch” combines 6 beloved ingredient­s — movie tropes, in this case — to produce an absolute treat. Here’s a closer look at each one.

1. The fictional country ending in -ia

Screenwrit­ers seem to agree that names ending in -ia evoke power and regality: Genovia from “The Princess Diaries,” Aldovia from “A Christmas Prince” and, now, Belgravia, the fictional setting of “The Princess Switch,” which was actually filmed in Romania. It is ruled by a family that includes Prince Edward (Sam Palladio), heir to the throne and fiancé to Margaret, the duchess of somewhere called Montenaro.

2. The ol’ switcheroo

After a few scenes in fake Chicago filled with painfully explanator­y dialogue — “And that is why Kevin Richards is the best sous chef in the business,” Stacy declares in reference to her platonic pal (Nick Sagar) of 12 years — we finally arrive in Belgravia. Stacy has been invited to compete in a reputable baking competitio­n and she runs into Margaret while prepping for it. They do a double take and quickly accept that they must have some distant relative in common.

Margaret wants to experience life as a regular person in Belgravia before she marries Edward, whom she barely knows, so she convinces Stacy to switch places with her. That way, Margaret can hang out and sightsee with Kevin and his daughter, Olivia (Alexa Adeosun), before the competitio­n. This is apparently a good idea because Margaret keeps a low profile, so the general public has no idea what she looks like. That said, it is never explained why she needs to pretend to be Stacy, or why Stacy doesn’t tell Kevin about it.

3. The woman who doesn’t know how to let loose

You don’t get to be the owner of Stacy’s Sweets and Treats, Chicago’s most beloved pretend bakery, by being fun or relaxed. Kevin repeatedly tells Stacy to chill out and try things she has never done before, but she responds by exclaiming, “You know I’m not good at spontaneou­s!” This is how most Katherine Heigl romcom characters would also respond. Edward helps her evolve into someone who plays Twister at toy stores.

Margaret, on the other hand, is bubbly and uninhibite­d. She plans the switcheroo. She cries at the end of “A Christmas Prince,” which, yes, she and Kevin watch in this movie. She is convenient­ly everything he is looking for in a partner.

4. The woman who introduces an old-fashioned family to her modern ways

Stacy winds up being the compassion­ate American — a role also taken on by Mia Thermopoli­s (Anne Hathaway) in the Princess Diaries movies — when she suggests to Edward and his family that they get to know the people who run and benefit from the charities they financiall­y support.

5. The baking competitio­n

“The Princess Switch” is a holiday movie, so it only makes sense that it involves a baking element. The Hallmark Channel has produced a ton of this kind in the last few years alone: 2014’s “The Christmas Secret,” in which a divorcée lands a new job at a bakery; “A Cookie Cutter Christmas,” released that same year, about rival schoolteac­hers who compete in a holiday baking contest; 2016’s “Christmas Cookies,” in which a corporate woman is sent to shut down a cookie company’s factory; 2017’s “The Sweetest Christmas,” which involves a gingerbrea­d-house baking contest; and more.

6. The secret handshake

Stacy and Olivia share an elaborate handshake, which is also how Olivia discovers that the woman she’s talking to might not be Stacy after all — that and, you know, the fact that the profession­al pastry chef suddenly forgets how to toast bread. Secret handshakes are an easy way for people from different generation­s to bond, which we learned back in 1998 from Annie (Lindsay Lohan) and Martin (Simon Kunz) in “The Parent Trap.”

 ?? NETFLIX ?? Vanessa Hudgens plays a pair of look-alikes — Stacy De Novo, a pastry chef from Chicago, and Lady Margaret, a European duchess — who temporaril­y switch lives and find love in “The Princess Switch.”
NETFLIX Vanessa Hudgens plays a pair of look-alikes — Stacy De Novo, a pastry chef from Chicago, and Lady Margaret, a European duchess — who temporaril­y switch lives and find love in “The Princess Switch.”

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