Call & Times

This ‘Prince’ is a frog

‘Christmas Prince’ is a royal flop

- The Washington Post By EMILY YAHR

In mid-November, Netflix gifted the world "A Christmas Prince," a feel-good and also truly bonkers original holiday movie that would have been right at home on Lifetime or Hallmark this time of year. The movie quickly caught on with Netflix viewers, and probably would have gotten lost in every other schmaltzy offering if not for this tweet sent out on Sunday night:

"To the 53 people who've watched A Christmas Prince every day for the past 18 days: Who hurt you?" — Netflix US

The response was massive (retweeted about 110,000 times so far) and alternated between amused and scornful: Wow, Netflix, way to shame your own viewers for watching a movie that you commission­ed and featured and promoted on your streaming service. Also, it's a creepy reminder that this company has access to loads of personal data about all of your viewing habits, and probably has drawn some other intriguing conclusion­s. And it might tweet about them.

Anyway, the "creepy tweet" kerfuffle has been in the news this week, so for those of you who are confused about this thing called "A Christmas Prince" that sparked such a controvers­y, here's everything you need to know about the movie. (Spoilers abound.)

The plot

"A Christmas Prince," written by Karen Schaler and Nathan Atkins and directed by Alex Zamm, joins a list of movies in which a royal and a verymuch-non-royal have a meet-cute; one of them intensely dislikes the other; and then they almost immediatel­y wind up married.

It also joins a pantheon of films in which a female journalist falls in love with the man she's writing about, so if that's your trigger, steer clear. The film centers around Amber, an underappre­ciated 20-something copy editor in New York City who works at a magazine called "Now Beat." Amber strives to be a serious journalist, but she can't get any good story assignment­s — until the Now Beat editor wants to send someone to the little-known European country of Aldovia. The dashing young Prince Richard (the editor refers to him as "His Royal Hotness"), who has a reputation as an internatio­nal playboy, is about to be named king. But the kingdom is about to hold a press conference where he might abdicate the throne, and appar- ently chaos would ensue.

None of the other Now Beat writers are around — it is the week before Christmas — and Amber has a pulse, so she's told to pack her bags. When she arrives in Aldovia, Richard ditches the press conference and a palace official sends the journalist­s away. Panicked about returning to New York without a story, Amber starts snooping around, only to be mistaken by a butler for Richard's younger sister's American tutor. She just rolls with it, and all of a sudden, she's going by the name Martha and living in the castle with the potential scoop of a lifetime as she goes undercover to see why this prince doesn't want to be king.

Of course, she winds up bonding with the whole family and it becomes so much more than just a juicy assignment for work.

The plot holes

Oh, there are so many: Would a royal family just assume a woman wandering around the property is a tutor and not ask any other questions? Could Amber be any more obvious as she snaps multiple photos on her smartphone during a cocktail party? And seriously, "Now Beat" magazine?! As with any madefor-TV movie, you just need to go with it.

The low-budget nature is part of its charm

The movie was filmed at the Peles Castle in Romania, which is quite beautiful, but as Entertainm­ent Weekly puts it, "The Aldovian castle is about as nice as a midlevel ski resort or the Bavarian pavilion at Epcot, and the whole court has a business-casual vibe."

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 ?? Netflix ?? Prince Richard (Ben Lamb) and undercover journalist Amber Moore (Rose McIver) in Netflix's "A Christmas Prince."
Netflix Prince Richard (Ben Lamb) and undercover journalist Amber Moore (Rose McIver) in Netflix's "A Christmas Prince."

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