We've come to expect the pious, the warm and the sentimental from the recent run of films aimed at the Christian moviegoer. But that has typically made for pretty bland cinema.
"Noelle" is the first movie in this genre to add wit to the recipe. It's clever, well-acted and almost-but-not-quite edgy.
This holiday film is set in a dying Catholic parish on Cape Cod and asks hard questions about abstinence, abortion, misuse of church funds and alcohol abuse. It has Catholic priests behaving badly.
No, not that badly.
And it dares to be funny.
Writer/director/star David Wall has dusted off that old "true meaning of the Christmas story" chestnut and pasted it on a holiday story of a crisis of faith within a Catholic Church "hit man" who shows up in fading parishes and gives the local and the parishioners the bad news: They're shutting you down.
This time, Father Keene (Wall) has shown up at a Cape Cod church run by his old seminary pal, Father Simeon Joyce (Sean Patrick Brennan). The congregation is dying out or simply drifting away, and Simeon is hitting the bottle.
The priests argue, and in a moment of charity, Father Keene suggests that they jazz up the Christmas creche. Make the Nativity scene on the front lawn a live-action one this year.