Christmas on Cobbler Street
A grumpy shoemaker and a lonely child find each other
Christmas on Cobbler Street is a beautiful and touching Christmas film that avoids manipulation. It earned its emotional moments through honest storytelling rather than manufactured sentiment. I recommend it to anyone looking for a family film that respects both children and adults.
- Director
- Mikal Hovland
- Genre
- Family
- Runtime
- 95 min
- Country
- NO
- Min. Age
- NR
- Year
- 2023
- Type
- Movie
Main Cast
Harry's Movie Review
Christmas on Cobbler Street works because it does not strain for your tears. A nine-year-old girl named Stine arrives alone on Cobbler Street seeking shelter with Shoemaker Andersen, a man who has built walls around himself. The premise is simple, almost fragile, and the film trusts that simplicity completely. It does not need grand gestures or swelling music to make you care about these two people.
Kåre Conradi carries the film as Andersen with a performance that relies on absence as much as presence. He does not deliver speeches about loneliness. Instead, you watch him notice Stine in small ways, how his resistance cracks without melodrama. Kaya Ekerholt McCurley as Stine avoids the trap of playing a child character as precious or wise beyond her years. She is just a kid trying to find her place, and that plainness makes her real.
Director Mikal Hovland moves through the story at a measured pace that matches the film's quiet temperament. At 95 minutes, there is no bloat, though some viewers looking for more plot momentum might wish for slightly faster development in the middle section. The Christmas setting feels incidental rather than central, which actually strengthens the film. This is about two people finding each other, and the season is just where it happens.
What stays with me is how the film ends without resolving everything into a neat package. These characters have found something real in each other, but the world does not suddenly become simple. That kind of restraint is rare in family films. It respects the audience enough to leave some things unsaid.
Key Facts
- Director
- Mikal Hovland
- Genre
- Family
- Year
- 2023
- Runtime
- 95 min
- Country
- NO
- Content Rating
- NR (NR)
- Harry's Rating
- 8 / 10
- Main Cast
- Kåre Conradi, Kaya Ekerholt McCurley, Håkon Seip, Kristoffer Olsen, Jan Sælid, Mathias Luppichini, Martin Lepperød
Watch Movie Teaser
Trivia & Fun Facts
- The film is a Norwegian production, bringing a Scandinavian perspective to the family Christmas film genre
- Director Mikal Hovland kept the performance style naturalistic, encouraging both adult and child actors to play scenes without exaggeration
- The title references the actual street where the story takes place, making Cobbler Street itself almost a character in the film
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes, especially if you want a Christmas film that avoids cheap sentiment. It is touching without being manipulative, and it trusts its audience to understand quiet moments.
A young girl named Stine arrives alone on Cobbler Street just before Christmas and seeks shelter with Shoemaker Andersen, a grumpy old man who wants to be left alone. Their unexpected connection changes both of their lives.
The film stars Kåre Conradi as Shoemaker Andersen and Kaya Ekerholt McCurley as Stine, alongside Håkon Seip, Kristoffer Olsen, Jan Sælid, Mathias Luppichini, and Martin Lepperød.
No, it is an original fictional story created for the screen by director Mikal Hovland.
The film is available on various streaming platforms and through digital rental services. Check your local streaming services for current availability.
The film has a runtime of 1 hour and 35 minutes.
Harry's Final Thoughts
Harry's Closing Curtain
Christmas on Cobbler Street is a film that knows what it is and does not pretend to be anything else. It is a quiet story about connection, told without manipulation or false drama. If you appreciate family films that respect your intelligence and do not resort to cheap tricks, this one deserves your time. Recommended.
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