Once upon a long time ago, when there were relatively few of them, I used to review a Hallmark or Lifetime holiday movie or two, but in 2024, when the channels have added 44 new films between them, it’s become pointless. Anyway, you can practically write them in your own mind. Except as a form of hypnotic relaxation, even watching seems beside the point.
Once in a while, however, something stands out; my interest, personal as much as professional, is piqued. And so we come to Hallmark’s rare Jewish-themed “Hanukkah on the Rocks,” a pleasant, frictionless story from screenwriter Julie Sherman Wolfe (author also of this year’s Hallmark movie “Holiday Touchdown: A Chiefs Love Story”) premiering this week, and, sure, this is because I am Jewish myself (of the atheistic variety, but no less Jewish for that) and interested to see what this machine makes of my people.
We are in Chicago, which is to say, Canada. Tory (Stacey Farber, from “Virgin River” ) is a corporate lawyer who loses her job in a merger, a job she has already decided she hates, even though she’d hoped to make partner; up to that point, she’s been the model of the Hallmark workaholic working woman, running out on breakfast with her grandmother, Bubby (Marina Stephenson Kerr), the minute her phone pings.
Jay (Daren Kagasoff) is a radiologist, back in the Windy City from Florida, sent by his parents to convince his grandfather, Sam (Marc Summers), to join them in the Sunshine State — because he’s, you know, older, and once fell down. (Sam is otherwise the picture of vigorous health.) Jay and Tory meet cute over a box of Hanukkah candles — she dispatched to buy them by her grandmother, he by his grandfather — a supposedly superior brand of which there is only one box left in all Chicago.