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I'm Not Ashamed to Admit I Loved the New Jonas Brothers Christmas Movie

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No one in my household grew up on the Jonas Brothers. The only brothers in a band that my husband and I came up with were Liam and Noel Gallagher, and my kids, who are 12 and 7, missed the window when Nick, Kevin and Joe Jonas were teen heartthrobs with a hit TV show. And yet, I am here to tell you that every person in my household loved the new Jonas Brothers movie, A Very Jonas Christmas Movie (out now on Disney Plus), despite none of us necessarily being the target audience.

A Very Jonas Christmas Movie is probably the most generic title anyone could have given this film so it doesn't really give you a clue about what you're in for when you watch it. In the very first scene, Will Ferrell shows up playing a heightened version of himself and forcing his family to attend a Jonas Brothers concert in London because he is a massive superfan. "If my kids fell off a boat and you fell off a boat, I'd save you over my children!" Ferrell yells at the band while they perform in concert later in the film.

That scene sets the tone for what's to come: A well-crafted, sharp road trip comedy that mines a lot of jokes from how uncool the Jonas Brothers are now that they are tired "old" dads in their 30s, with the trio making most of the jokes at their own expense. I used to not relate to the Jonas Brothers, but I, too, am a tired parent who uses self-deprecation as a survival tool. Perhaps I have more in common with these former teen stars than I thought? It makes me forgive them for going with such a drab title.

The film begins at the final concert of the Jonas Brothers world tour, just a few days before Christmas. When the show ends, Nick, Joe and Kevin Jonas all plan to take their private jet from London to New York to see their families. However, the brothers have not been getting along, so when Joe has a chance encounter with Santa Claus (played by Jesse Tyler Ferguson) at a bar, Santa realizes the Jonases need some time together to reconnect. So Santa does what you expect Santa to do, and puts a friendly curse on them. Its first effect causes their airplane to explode before they can board it, forcing them to work together to find a way home. (This is not the only airplane in the film that will turn into a fireball, just so you know.)

What follows is a series of mishaps and a cavalcade of celebrity cameos, including K.J. Apa as a pilot, Andrea Martin as a cab driver who doesn't really know how to drive, and Kenny G as himself (which I won't spoil for you), as the Jonas Brothers desperately try to get home, with Santa's curse sabotaging them across every city in Europe.

Andrew Barth Feldman and Nick Jonas in A Very Jonas Christmas Movie. Disney/John Medland

As a cynic (remember how I grew up with Oasis? Cynicism is my generation's default setting), I wasn't trying to be impressed with the lengthy list of cameos. Plenty of movies have tons of cameos, and they're trash. But every celebrity in A Very Jonas Christmas Movie understands the assignment here: Go big or go home.

While Will Ferrell memorably kicks off the movie, one of the funniest moments is when Nick Jonas runs into a (fictional) nemesis named Ethan, a child star whom Nick performed with in the Home Alone Broadway musical (also fictional, but I wish it were real). Actual Broadway actor Andrew Barth Feldman plays Ethan, and while he may not be the biggest celebrity name in the movie, his performance with Nick, where they sing a fake song from Home Alone is funny on so many levels. Chloe Bennet, who starred in Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. and is a former teen pop star herself, has a starring role in the film, too. She not only showcases impressive singing skills in a duet with Joe, but she also forces the film to acknowledge that Joe's love life has been tabloid fodder for years, and it's addressed in a clever way that acknowledges it in a fictional setting. (It turns out, I'm not too old to know every last detail about Joe Jonas's divorce from Game of Thrones star, Sophie Turner.)

Not surprisingly, the film's strength is the Jonases themselves. They perform several new, original, festive music numbers that are all incredibly catchy (and perform a live version of their single, Sucker, over the closing credits), and their impressive comedic abilities are on display in every scene. Kevin is often the butt of jokes for being the least charismatic performer of the trio (a piece of "human cardboard" is how Nick puts it), but he owns that and turns it into some great comedy, while Joe's romantic storyline allows him to show off the side of him that his brothers call "the lovable tramp." The realistic sibling pet peeves and cheap shots between them feel genuine, but also like acknowledgements that they totally know what's being said about their public personas, and now they're in on the joke.

When you review movies, most of the time you're asked to sign an embargo that doesn't let you reveal details or plot spoilers, and the embargo for A Very Jonas Christmas Movie was fairly strict. Reviewers were asked not to share publicly that they even received advance screeners. It's rare I want to humblebrag about cool stuff I watch and do for work on social media (gotta keep it profesh) but the fact that I wasn't allowed to discuss watching the movie over the past couple weeks was hard because I literally wanted to tell as many people as possible to watch this movie when it comes out, it's just so much fun. As much as I've tried to avoid the Jonases for the past 20 years because I assumed they weren't my thing, well, joke's on me, cause I've been missing out. It turns out, these guys are talented!

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