• Latest
  • Trending
She’s Making a List Review

She’s Making a List Review: Algorithmic Judgment and the Human Heart

Benito Skinner

Benito Skinner Will Play Two Characters in Overcompensating Season 2 and Promises “Something Sinister”

3 minutes ago
Kristen Wiig

“Unreleasable” or Just Unfinished? The Battle Over Jonah Hill’s Shelved Comedy

6 minutes ago
Elle

Elle Cast Pays Tribute to Van Der Beek Ahead of His Final Onscreen Role

8 minutes ago
Christopher Nolan

Nolan Told Coogler It “Wasn’t Crazy” to Shoot Sinners in IMAX — Then It Made History

11 minutes ago
Scarborn Review

Scarborn Review: Revolution by Candlelight

Ultras Review

Ultras Review: Inside the Beautiful Game’s Wildest Choir

Beastro Review

Beastro Review: Cooking Up a Clever Deckbuilder

It Takes a Village Review

It Takes a Village Review: Polish Comfort Comedy Gets Lost in the Fields

Sugar Beach Review

Sugar Beach Review: Grief Comes in with the Tide

Blood Lines Review

Blood Lines Review: A Tender Métis Drama With a Plot Problem

Chris & Martina: The Final Set Review

Chris & Martina: The Final Set Review: Old Rivals Watch the Tape

Thank You For Your Application Review

Thank You For Your Application Review: Corporate Hell Has a Red Folder

  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Gazettely Review Guidelines
Sunday, June 28, 2026
GAZETTELY
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    Benito Skinner

    Benito Skinner Will Play Two Characters in Overcompensating Season 2 and Promises “Something Sinister”

    Kristen Wiig

    “Unreleasable” or Just Unfinished? The Battle Over Jonah Hill’s Shelved Comedy

    Elle

    Elle Cast Pays Tribute to Van Der Beek Ahead of His Final Onscreen Role

    Christopher Nolan

    Nolan Told Coogler It “Wasn’t Crazy” to Shoot Sinners in IMAX — Then It Made History

    Lee Cronin’s The Mummy

    Horror Fans Get a Fourth of July Treat as ‘Lee Cronin’s The Mummy’ Hits HBO Max

    Novak Djokovic

    Jason Hehir’s Djokovic Documentary ‘The Wolf in Winter’ Gets August 20 Premiere Date on Prime Video

    The Bear Rob Reiner

    ‘The Bear’ Series Finale Honors Rob Reiner With a Three-Word “Princess Bride” Tribute

    Harvey Weinstein

    California Court Upholds Weinstein’s Rape Conviction but Orders New Sentence, a Day After N.Y. Charge Is Dropped

    Larry And The Pursuit Of Unhappiness

    Larry David and Barack Obama Crash American History in HBO’s Wildly Unlikely Sketch Comedy Premiere

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Scarborn Review

    Scarborn Review: Revolution by Candlelight

    Ultras Review

    Ultras Review: Inside the Beautiful Game’s Wildest Choir

    It Takes a Village Review

    It Takes a Village Review: Polish Comfort Comedy Gets Lost in the Fields

    Sugar Beach Review

    Sugar Beach Review: Grief Comes in with the Tide

    Blood Lines Review

    Blood Lines Review: A Tender Métis Drama With a Plot Problem

    Chris & Martina: The Final Set Review

    Chris & Martina: The Final Set Review: Old Rivals Watch the Tape

    Blaise Review

    Blaise Review: The Sauvage Family Misplaces Its Nerve

    I Kissed a Girl Season 2 Review

    I Kissed a Girl Season 2 Review: The BBC Cancels a Spark

    Agent Kim Reactivated Review

    Agent Kim Reactivated Review: So Ji-sub Makes Restraint Dangerous

  • Game Reviews
    Beastro Review

    Beastro Review: Cooking Up a Clever Deckbuilder

    Thank You For Your Application Review

    Thank You For Your Application Review: Corporate Hell Has a Red Folder

    Dead or Alive 6: Last Round Review

    Dead or Alive 6: Last Round Review: Team Ninja’s Final Pass Feels Half-Ready

    Star Fox Review

    Star Fox Review: The Arwing Still Knows the Route

    Direction Quad Review

    Direction Quad Review: Diagonal Movement Meets Arcade Friction

    R-Type Tactics I • II Cosmos Review

    R-Type Tactics I • II Cosmos Review: Wave Cannons Become Chess Problems

    Deer & Boy Review

    Deer & Boy Review: Small Systems, Big Feeling

    Dark Scrolls Review

    Dark Scrolls Review: Retro Chaos With Slippery Boots

    Craftlings Review

    Craftlings Review: Tiny Workers Build a Smarter Puzzle Machine

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    Benito Skinner

    Benito Skinner Will Play Two Characters in Overcompensating Season 2 and Promises “Something Sinister”

    Kristen Wiig

    “Unreleasable” or Just Unfinished? The Battle Over Jonah Hill’s Shelved Comedy

    Elle

    Elle Cast Pays Tribute to Van Der Beek Ahead of His Final Onscreen Role

    Christopher Nolan

    Nolan Told Coogler It “Wasn’t Crazy” to Shoot Sinners in IMAX — Then It Made History

    Lee Cronin’s The Mummy

    Horror Fans Get a Fourth of July Treat as ‘Lee Cronin’s The Mummy’ Hits HBO Max

    Novak Djokovic

    Jason Hehir’s Djokovic Documentary ‘The Wolf in Winter’ Gets August 20 Premiere Date on Prime Video

    The Bear Rob Reiner

    ‘The Bear’ Series Finale Honors Rob Reiner With a Three-Word “Princess Bride” Tribute

    Harvey Weinstein

    California Court Upholds Weinstein’s Rape Conviction but Orders New Sentence, a Day After N.Y. Charge Is Dropped

    Larry And The Pursuit Of Unhappiness

    Larry David and Barack Obama Crash American History in HBO’s Wildly Unlikely Sketch Comedy Premiere

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Scarborn Review

    Scarborn Review: Revolution by Candlelight

    Ultras Review

    Ultras Review: Inside the Beautiful Game’s Wildest Choir

    It Takes a Village Review

    It Takes a Village Review: Polish Comfort Comedy Gets Lost in the Fields

    Sugar Beach Review

    Sugar Beach Review: Grief Comes in with the Tide

    Blood Lines Review

    Blood Lines Review: A Tender Métis Drama With a Plot Problem

    Chris & Martina: The Final Set Review

    Chris & Martina: The Final Set Review: Old Rivals Watch the Tape

    Blaise Review

    Blaise Review: The Sauvage Family Misplaces Its Nerve

    I Kissed a Girl Season 2 Review

    I Kissed a Girl Season 2 Review: The BBC Cancels a Spark

    Agent Kim Reactivated Review

    Agent Kim Reactivated Review: So Ji-sub Makes Restraint Dangerous

  • Game Reviews
    Beastro Review

    Beastro Review: Cooking Up a Clever Deckbuilder

    Thank You For Your Application Review

    Thank You For Your Application Review: Corporate Hell Has a Red Folder

    Dead or Alive 6: Last Round Review

    Dead or Alive 6: Last Round Review: Team Ninja’s Final Pass Feels Half-Ready

    Star Fox Review

    Star Fox Review: The Arwing Still Knows the Route

    Direction Quad Review

    Direction Quad Review: Diagonal Movement Meets Arcade Friction

    R-Type Tactics I • II Cosmos Review

    R-Type Tactics I • II Cosmos Review: Wave Cannons Become Chess Problems

    Deer & Boy Review

    Deer & Boy Review: Small Systems, Big Feeling

    Dark Scrolls Review

    Dark Scrolls Review: Retro Chaos With Slippery Boots

    Craftlings Review

    Craftlings Review: Tiny Workers Build a Smarter Puzzle Machine

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
GAZETTELY
No Result
View All Result
She’s Making a List Review

Single on the 25th Review: Finding Self-Acceptance Beneath the Mistletoe

Log Away Review: Serenity Undermined by Technical Flaws

Home Entertainment Movies

She’s Making a List Review: Algorithmic Judgment and the Human Heart

Scott Clark by Scott Clark
7 months ago
in Entertainment, Movies, Reviews
Reading Time: 7 mins read
A A
0
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on PinterestShare on WhatsAppShare on TelegramSummarize with ChatGPTSummarize with Perplexity

The holiday film calendar often leans on repetition: cozy small towns, reliable meet-cutes, and a Santa mythology that rarely changes. She’s Making a List treats that mythology as a system that can be redesigned. The film takes the sacred Naughty or Nice List and imagines it as a process that has been outsourced. Santa Claus, overwhelmed by the size of the modern world, turns the job over to a human consulting company, the Naughty or Nice Group, which uses an “airtight formula” and unemotional criteria to decide who gets presents and who gets coal.

Within that premise sits Isabel Haynes (Lacey Chabert), an inspector whose ambition lines up neatly with the company’s rigid rule book. She is presented as a model employee, intent on securing a key promotion through precise adherence to procedure. Her latest assignment focuses on 11-year-old Charlie Duncan, a file marked by grief and complicated behavior.

Isabel’s tidy system begins to shift when she meets Jason (Andrew Walker), Charlie’s kind, widowed father. Their connection pulls her attention away from pure compliance and toward the people affected by her decisions. The romance, and Isabel’s growing attachment to this family, forces her to reconsider what her work is supposed to do and whom it truly serves.

The Corporate Structure of Christmas Judgment

The Naughty or Nice Group functions as the film’s central narrative mechanism. The script treats the company as a fully realized institution and commits to the internal logic of its world-building. Given the film’s opening claim about the scope of the global population, the outsourcing of the List becomes the governing idea.

Santa is said to have hired a dedicated consulting firm to manage the process, and the story frames this group as a powerful third-party player in the holiday ecosystem. Specific details, such as headquarters in Delaware, references to “modern technology and algorithms,” and a visible corporate footprint, lend the fantasy an oddly concrete texture. This organization operates in plain sight and exists for a single purpose: to evaluate virtue.

Inside the N&N Group, everything runs on a thick, rigid rule book that lays out exact criteria for inspectors. That procedural structure supplies the central tension, since the company’s philosophy treats human value as something that can be scored and categorized. The supporting characters embody different responses to that philosophy, and the film uses them to give the workplace a distinct shape.

Also Read

  • Best Christmas Movies
    30 Best Christmas Movies to Watch This Holiday Season
  • best 2025 games
    Gazettely's 30 Best Video Games of 2025
  • Best 2025 Movies
    Gazettely's 30 Best Movies of 2025
  • Isabel Review
    Isabel Review: A Slow Pour Through the Streets of Brazil
  • Two Graves Review
    Two Graves Review: A Spanish Thriller That Hits Hard
  • Fatman Review
    Fatman Review: Mel Gibson's World-Weary Santa and…

Rudolph (Steve Bacic), the CEO, comes across as a harsh, misogynistic “boss from hell” and functions as the story’s primary antagonist. He consistently chooses data over emotion and spends much of his screen time delivering long expository speeches about the company’s origins to anyone nearby.

These frequent “info dumps” may feel clunky as storytelling, yet they quickly convey the firm’s history and self-importance. Rudolph favors Giuseppe (Alessandro Miro), Isabel’s charismatic, theatrical rival for the promotion. Giuseppe works as a “reader” who leans on instinct instead of strict formula, and his scenes inject broad comedy into the otherwise corporate environment.

Heidi (Louriza Tronco), Isabel’s loyal and kind assistant, offers emotional support and often serves as a voice of caution, gently signaling when the rules might conflict with basic decency. Fred (Brahm Taylor), the fastidious record keeper, sticks to procedure with comic intensity, then reveals a soft spot when gingerbread is involved. These figures help the office feel fully inhabited and keep the high-concept premise anchored.

Formally, the film starts with a heavy dose of fourth-wall breaking. Isabel speaks directly to the audience, walking through regulations and job mechanics. This device can feel abrupt, yet it quickly loads in the necessary exposition about how the N&N Group functions. Over time, that technique recedes. As Isabel’s romance and moral conflict gain ground, the direct addresses to camera taper off, leaving more room for character interaction to carry the story. The production design supports this shift: sets and visual motifs work hard to make the corporate Christmas environment feel consistent and operational, so the audience can accept the company as a real piece of this universe.

Performances and Chemistry

The film leans heavily on its leads to bridge the gap between its corporate fantasy and its emotional stakes. Lacey Chabert plays Isabel with the familiar warmth audiences expect from her, layered over a character whose rule-bound nature initially keeps others at a distance. Her performance charts Isabel’s gradual change with clarity. Isabel’s work requires elaborate field observation, and the film has fun with that requirement.

She’s Making a List Review

She slips into multiple disguises, posing as a parking officer, a window washer, and other everyday workers so she can watch targets unnoticed. These sequences supply light physical comedy. A particularly playful moment arrives when she tries to hide behind little more than a pair of eyeglasses, a direct nod to the classic Superman identity gag. The script sometimes underplays the weight of Isabel’s internal shift from strict professional to empathetic romantic lead, yet Chabert’s consistent presence keeps the character appealing and emotionally legible as she adjusts her priorities.

Andrew Walker’s performance as Jason Duncan, the kind-hearted widower, supports that arc. Jason’s perspective needs to persuade the audience that Isabel’s career focus deserves to bend, and Walker accomplishes this by embodying a philosophy rooted in empathy and potential. Jason’s backstory identifies him as a former mean-spirited food critic who now works with restaurants to improve.

That history mirrors the film’s central idea: a move away from punishing judgment toward constructive engagement. Walker plays him with easy charm and a grounded energy that suits a loving, overwhelmed single father. One of his strongest scenes arrives when he describes the pain of Charlie receiving coal the previous Christmas, a moment that exposes the cruelty baked into the company’s rigid system. The emotional credibility of his relationship with Charlie gives the family dynamic weight.

The pairing of Chabert and Walker carries obvious familiarity and the film leans into that comfort. Their interactions feel relaxed and confident, which steadies the romantic arc amid the more heightened corporate elements. The love story develops at a steady pace, shaped by Isabel’s internal conflict as her carefully maintained rules collide directly with the feelings that grow through her time with Jason and Charlie.

Cadence Compton’s portrayal of Charlie Duncan sharpens the film’s interest in empathy. Charlie, an 11-year-old amateur magician, initially presents as a troublemaker. Her actions signal mischief or outright naughtiness: she performs a money-disappearing trick that looks like theft, and she breaks into a house.

The script gradually reframes those behaviors by linking them to recent grief and to quiet acts of care, including extended efforts to help a visually impaired neighbor. Compton plays Charlie with a blend of pain and alertness that allows the audience to see both her hurt and her intent. There is a subtle, almost knowing quality to her performance that suggests Charlie has some awareness of Isabel’s inspection. That hint of understanding adds complexity to their exchanges. Charlie becomes the clearest expression of the film’s core argument that surface behavior cannot stand as the final word on a child’s character.

Central Theme and Narrative Structure

She’s Making a List builds its story around a direct critique of absolute judgment. The film argues that human behavior, especially under the strain of emotional loss, resists simple labels like naughty or nice. It promotes a model of evaluation that looks for full context rather than single moments. Isabel’s professional evolution follows this idea. She begins as a faithful executor of the “holiday algorithm” and slowly learns to see the gaps between the algorithm’s categories and the messy reality of Charlie’s life. Jason’s insistence on seeing possibilities instead of fixed verdicts shapes her growing awareness and acts as the guiding influence on her change.

She’s Making a List Review

Structurally, the film attempts to stage this theme through a run of increasingly complex cases. Early examples, such as a broken tail light and a bleach-spraying incident, are meant to demonstrate that behavior can mislead. The outcomes in these smaller stories often feel loosely built, leading to resolutions that can seem confusing or unearned, which dilutes the moral point. The narrative becomes clearer once the film concentrates exclusively on Charlie. Her storyline supplies precise incidents, from the magic show “theft” to the break-in, that later reveal themselves as acts shaped by kindness and trauma.

That reveal structure pushes Isabel, and by extension the audience, to reconsider how easily one might misread intent based on appearance alone. At the same time, the script introduces an uneasy complication: Isabel begins bending and ignoring company rules in Charlie’s favor because of her relationship with Jason. This choice raises questions about a justice system that can tilt toward those who earn personal sympathy.

The plot reaches its high point when Rudolph unveils his plan for a new phase of the company. He proposes eliminating human inspectors entirely and installing a fully computerized algorithm to handle every judgment. This shift removes any path for empathy or context within the system and places the core conflict in sharp relief.

Faced with that future, Isabel resigns and takes direct action. She travels with Jason and Charlie to petition Santa Claus (Dax Belanger) himself. Her appeal convinces Santa that an inflexible algorithm cannot capture children’s motivations with any fairness, and the film resolves on a moral win for human judgment and emotional understanding.

From a pacing standpoint, the film carries a noticeable load of exposition in its early sections. The “extended info dumps” about the N&N Group’s rules and history slow momentum at first but establish the lore that supports the rest of the story. Once that groundwork is in place, the narrative feels warmer and more engaging, with the focus shifting toward the relationships and the ethical questions raised by the List.

The film mixes its corporate Santa conceit with a familiar romantic structure and a portrait of a child working through loss. That combination gives the story a layered feel, marrying fantasy mechanics with emotional stakes that sit firmly in recognizable human experience.

She’s Making a List is a Hallmark Channel original movie that premiered on December 6, 2025, as part of the network’s annual Countdown to Christmas event. The romantic comedy features a high-concept twist on the Santa mythos, following a top inspector for the Naughty or Nice Group, who unexpectedly falls for the single father of the child she is evaluating. The film stars Hallmark favorites Lacey Chabert and Andrew Walker, marking their first Christmas movie collaboration. Viewers can watch the movie on the Hallmark Channel, and it is available to stream on Hallmark+.

Full Credits

  • Title: She’s Making a List

  • Distributor: Hallmark Channel, Hallmark Media

  • Release date: December 6, 2025

  • Rating: TV-G

  • Running time: 1 hour 24 minutes

  • Director: Stacey N. Harding

  • Writers: Joey DePaolo

  • Producers and Executive Producers: Executive Producers: Lacey Chabert, Veronica Brown; Producer: Charles Cooper

  • Cast: Lacey Chabert, Andrew Walker, Cadence Compton, Steve Bacic, Louriza Tronco, Alessandro Miro, Dax Belanger, B.J. Harrison, Brahm Taylor

The Review

She’s Making a List

7 Score

The film is an ambitious, high-concept attempt to reframe the traditional holiday romance within a corporate fantasy world. While the script struggles with pacing and the initial complexity of its lore, the magnetic chemistry of Lacey Chabert and Andrew Walker, coupled with the strong performance of Cadence Compton, anchors the story. The narrative ultimately succeeds in delivering a warm, meaningful argument against algorithmic judgment, prioritizing empathy and human connection over rigid rules.

PROS

  • High-Concept Premise offers a unique, updated twist on the Santa myth.
  • Strong Lead Chemistry between Chabert and Walker grounds the fantastical elements.
  • Thematic Depth argues effectively for empathy over absolute judgment.
  • Cadence Compton's Performance adds authentic emotional complexity to Charlie.
  • Effective use of disguises and visual comedy in Isabel's investigation.

CONS

  • Pacing Issues in the first act due to necessary world-building ("info dumps").
  • Weak Execution of early minor cases, muddling the intended moral lesson.
  • Structural Flaw in the logic of Isabel disregarding rules due to personal bias.
  • Antagonist (Rudolph) is written as a cartoonish "boss from hell" figure.
  • The narrative device of breaking the fourth wall can be jarring initially.

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0

Tags: Alessandro MiroAndrew WalkerCadence ComptonComedyDax BelangerDramaFamilyFeaturedHallmark MediaLacey ChabertLouriza TroncoRomanceShe’s Making A ListStacey N. HardingSteve BacicTop PickTV movie
Previous Post

Single on the 25th Review: Finding Self-Acceptance Beneath the Mistletoe

Next Post

Log Away Review: Serenity Undermined by Technical Flaws

Try AI Movie Recommender

Gazettely AI Movie Recommender

This Week's Top Reads

  • Is This Seat Taken? Review

    Is This Seat Taken? Review: A Satisfying Mental Workout

    1124 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Citizen Vigilante Review: Uwe Boll Mistakes Vengeance for Justice

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Trust Review: Squandered Potential and an Incoherent Plot

    6 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Rogue Trooper Review: Duncan Jones Finds Pulp Life on Nu Earth

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The Polygamist Review: Betrayal Burns Bright in Netflix’s 22-Episode Drama

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Harry Wild Season 5 Review: Jane Seymour Gets a New Pathologist and a New Pulse

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The Love Heist Review: A Hallmark Caper Dressed for the Gala

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Must Read Articles

40 Dates and 40 Nights Review
Movies

40 Dates and 40 Nights Review: A Rom-Com Bet With Modest Returns

21 hours ago
Little Brother Review
Movies

Little Brother Review: The Chaos Is Funnier Than the Heart

22 hours ago
Jackass Best and Last Review
Movies

Jackass: Best and Last Review: Knoxville’s Last Hit Hurts Differently

1 day ago
A Woman of Substance Review
TV Shows

A Woman of Substance Review: Emma Harte Builds an Empire from a Bruise

1 day ago
Life, Larry, and the Pursuit of Unhappiness Review
TV Shows

Life, Larry, and the Pursuit of Unhappiness Review: Larry David Haunts the American Experiment

2 days ago
Loading poll ...
Coming Soon
Which of Alfred Hitchcock's 1960s thrillers is your all-time favorite?

Gazettely is your go-to destination for all things gaming, movies, and TV. With fresh reviews, trending articles, and editor picks, we help you stay informed and entertained.

© 2021-2026 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

What’s Inside

  • Movie & TV Reviews
  • Game Reviews
  • Featured Articles
  • Latest News
  • Editorial Picks

Quick Links

  • Home
  • About US
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Review Guidelines

Follow Us

Facebook X-twitter Youtube Instagram
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movies
  • Entertainment News
  • Movie and TV Reviews
  • TV Shows
  • Game News
  • Game Reviews
  • Contact Us

© 2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely