Chicago Sun-Times

HAVE A DOLLY, JOLLY CHRISTMAS

Parton is positively angelic in cozy Netflix musical

- RICHARD ROEPER MOVIE COLUMNIST rroeper@suntimes.com | @RichardERo­eper

Dolly Parton is a national treasure. Who’s with me? Show of hands, please! Ah. That’s what I thought. National. Treasure.

Netflix is churning out Christmas movies in volumes to rival those sheets of cookies your mom used to make that were shaped like trees and covered in red and green sprinkles, with the latest being “Dolly Parton’s Christmas on the Square,” with Dolly Parton not only playing a guardian angel but contributi­ng 14 original songs, each one sweeter and more melodic and, yes, cornier than the one before. This is an unabashedl­y sentimenta­l, family-friendly mashup of “A Christmas Carol” with “It’s a Wonderful Life,” sure to leave you smiling and maybe even a little teary-eyed. From the opening graphics that look like something out of the 1960s through the happily-ever-after ending, “Christmas on the Square” wants nothing more than to make you feel cozy, safe and warm.

Not a bad recipe for these troubled times. In a rousing medley to kick off the story, we meet some of the friendlier friendly faces of the town of Fullervill­e, many of whom have small businesses in the town square. Right there in front of the general store and resale shop, say hello to Treat Williams’ Carl — and while Treat Williams is best known for playing cops and heavies, let’s not forget how great he was in the 1979 musical classic “Hair,” and he sounds wonderful here. Carl’s neighbors in the square include Jenifer Lewis’ Margeline, a feisty spirit who runs Le Beauty Shop, and Pastor Christian Hathaway (Josh Segarra) and his wife, Jenna (Mary Lane Haskell), who have a small shop featuring clothes and toys for infants and toddlers and have been trying to have a baby of their own for some time now.

Everyone has their troubles and regrets, yet they’re all grateful to be living in a town such as Fullervill­e— but that’s about to change, if Christine Baranski’s Regina Fuller has her way. Regina left Fullervill­e as a young woman and never looked back as she made her fortune in the big city, but now that her father (who was essentiall­y the town founder) has passed away and left her the deeds to the town properties, Regina wants to buy up every last business in the square, demolish them and build some sort of soulless megamall. Boooooooo! Hissssssss!

Jeanine Mason sparkles as Regina’s assistant, Felicity, who is in reality an angelin-training a la Clarence Odbody in “It’s a Wonderful Life.” Although everyone can see Felicity, only Regina can see Dolly Parton’s Angel, who, like the ghosts of Christmas past, present and future, has made it her mission to show Regina the errors of her ways and melt her frozen heart. Why, there might even be a chance for Regina to revisit the romance she once shared with Carl, who has carried a torch for her all these years.

“Christmas on the Square” pulls out all the stops, from Christian and Jenna pledging their love for one another even if they never are gifted with a child, to the Tiny Tim-like Violet hospitaliz­ed with a life-threatenin­g injury, to some expertly executed group songand-dance numbers (thanks to the legendary Debbie Allen, who directs and choreograp­hs) to the most welcome spectacle of a glowing, glimmering Dolly Parton watching over the town and its good people.

Ho ho hooray.

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 ?? NETFLIX ?? In “Dolly Parton’s Christmas on the Square,” the musical icon plays an angel watching over a small town.
NETFLIX In “Dolly Parton’s Christmas on the Square,” the musical icon plays an angel watching over a small town.

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