Love Comes Softly (Telefilm)
Picture: C+
Sound: C+ Extras: D Film: C-
Michael Landon Jr. takes on his father’s legacy of family
entertainment by directing Love Comes Softly (2002), yet another family
entertainment about the early days of settling families in the United States as
agriculture became important. Though it
is a family-friendly work, it is also a very predictable one and soon turns the
characters into cartoons. Whether
Janette Oke’s book is as simplistic, time did not permit before this review was
posted, but this is not up to Landon Sr.’s best work and is not very memorable.
The Claridges (Oliver Macready and Katherine Heigl) are
the family in question, traveling to find a better place to have a new way of
life that will be richer than the one they are trying to leave behind. When Aaron Claridge has to go away
unexpectedly, widower Clark Davis (Dale Midkiff) becomes a surrogate “man
around” until he and Marty Claridge (Heigl) start to develop a bond of their
own. It is melodramatic and we know
what follows, especially in a faith-based production aimed at families. It is safe…
too safe. On that level, you now
know what you are getting.
The anamorphically enhanced 1.78 X 1 image is lacking some
detail, but is not awful, though that is still a problem with such a recent
production. The same goes for the Dolby
Digital 2.0 Stereo, which the box claims to have Pro Logic surrounds, but what
is there is weak and the Pro Logic mode makes the dialogue sound worse. This was not that low budget, so what
gives? Except for a trailer for Hangman’s
Curse, there are no extras either.
I guess that’s safe too.
- Nicholas Sheffo