Well, initially I must admit that I didn't really expect much from the 2010 movie "Growing the Big One", given the movie's synopsis, the fact that it was a Hallmark movie and because it had Shannen Doherty in the lead. But still, despite it having the ultimate recipe for being sappy, I ended up sitting down to watch it.
And while the movie definitely was a predictable romantic movie, then it actually turned out to be entertaining. So you can't just judge a book (or movie) by its cover. I have to admit that I actually enjoyed the movie for what it turned out to be. Sure, this was as predictable as sappy as these Hallmark movies tend to be, but it was still a watchable movie nonetheless.
"Growing the Big One" actually had a nice cast ensemble, and Shannen Doherty was quite good in the role in this movie. So hats off to her. And I also think that Kavan Smith was quite nicely cast for the role. This movie was primarily an all unknown cast for me, so that was definitely something I enjoyed.
You know what you get when you sit down to watch director Mark Griffiths's 2010 movie, for better or worse.
My rating of "Growing the Big One" is a six out of ten stars. Don't let the movie's presentation fool you, like it did me, because it was actually an adequately enjoyable movie.
Plot summary
Seattle radio talk-show host Emma Silver inherits grandpa Walt's pumpkin farm in Valleyville. She didn't plan to respect his last will, which was to run the farm, but loses her job and is forced to accept hosting a new 'green' program. In order to keep it, she must pay off a $75,000 mortgage. To that end, she hopes to win the pumpkin-growing contest using grandpa's winning seed line and cultivation log. Neighbor Seth Cullen, the town's handyman (and actually a Stanford engineering graduate),has a hard time convincing her they need to team up.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
Director
Top cast
Tech specs
720p.WEB 1080p.WEBMovie Reviews
What a surprise...
"If a truckload of manure won't do it, I don't know what will."
Radio talk-show host Emma Silver (Shannen Doherty) inherits a pumpkin farm from her late grandfather. She doesn't plan to keep the farm but the new manager of her radio station comes up with the idea of Emma hosting a gardening show from the farm, as well as enter Emma into the town's pumpkin-growing contest. She knows nothing about gardening or pumpkins, however, so she is forced to rely on her new neighbor (Kavan Smith) for help. If you guessed these two will have a "will they/won't they" thing going on, welcome to Hallmark.
Predictable and sometimes cheesy made-for-TV movie. The cast is very likable. I enjoyed Shannen a lot in this. Kavan Smith is good also and has nice chemistry with Shannen, despite his rather unfortunate haircut. The rest of the cast is made up of "whozzat" actors, most of whom I'm not familiar with but I'll assume are Canadian. The most lasting impression left by any of them is that of April Telek -- hubba hubba! It's a slight but fun movie that left a grin on my face, which is all you can ask for with something from Hallmark. Oh and if you think that they went the whole movie without once using the title as a double entendre, think again.
Reborn in the Pumpkin Patch
Shannen Doherty's grandfather has died and left her the farm..... with a big mortgage that is about to come due. She is also undergoing great stress at work, where she has just been reassigned from a talk radio show on urban living to gardening, and her goal for the movie is to grow the world record pumpkin using her grandfather's seeds and win enough money to pay off that mortgage.
This pleasantly mild Hallmark channel romantic comedy is a very decently executed woman's movie, and the performances are certainly competent -- although I am a bit tired of the seemingly uniform direction of urban women as rather brittle and the writing does not permit any overwhelmingly interesting performance. Still, the scenery is pretty, the story while predictable, is nice, the jokes match the venue and the result is a very pleasant time-waster.