The Best Christmas Pageant Ever Blu-ray + DVD + Digital film poster and movie review

DVD & Blu-ray Reviews

The Best Christmas Pageant Ever Blu-ray + DVD + Digital

Reviewed by:
Luke Bonanno on November 4, 2025

Theatrical Release:
November 8, 2024

The questionable creative choices pile up, but at the foundation is an agreeable message of seeing the good in one another, even those whom society has cast aside.

Running Time98 min

RatingPG

Running Time 98 min

RatingPG

Dallas Jenkins

Ryan Swanson, Platte F. Clark, Darin McDaniel (screenplay); Barbara Robinson (novel)

Judy Greer (Grace Bradley), Pete Holmes (Bob Bradley), Molly Belle Wright (Beth Bradley), Sebastian Billingsley-Rodriguez (Charlie Bradley), Beatrice Schneider (Imogene Herdman), Mason D. Nelligan (Ralph Herdman), Matthew Lamb (Claude Herdman), Ewan Wood (Leroy Herdman), Essek Moore (Ollie Herdman), Kynlee Heiman (Gladys Herdman), Nolan Grantham (Elmer Hopkins), Kirk B.R. Woller (Reverend Hopkins), Vanessa Benavente (First Grade Teacher), Lorelei Olivia Mote (Alice Wendelken), Danielle Hoetmer (Mrs. Wendelken), Lauren Graham (Narrator/Adult Beth)


The Best Christmas Pageant Ever Blu-ray + DVD + Digital (2024)

by Luke Bonanno

If the fact that most Christmas movies dance around or outright ignore the religious aspects of the holiday, perhaps you’ll appreciate The Best Christmas Pageant Ever for going against the grain. This feature adaptation of Barbara Robinson’s 1972 novel of the same name is as churchy and overtly Christian as any mainstream film I’ve encountered for some time. It hails from director Dallas Jenkins, who created “The Chosen”, the crowdfunded, free-to-watch Biblical drama that has repeatedly enjoyed lucrative theatrical release.

Buy The Best Christmas Pageant Ever from Amazon.com:
Blu-ray + DVD + Digital · DVD · Prime Video

Pageant appears vaguely to be set in the early 1970s in a middle American town where the Herdmans, six rarely supervised young siblings, are infamous for their trouble-making ways. These rowdy misfits cuss, shoplift, smoke cigars, bully their peers, and terrorize teachers. Imagine Scut Farkus from A Christmas Story times six. The chaotic evil tornado that is this family ends up swirling straight into the Emmanuel Church’s 75th annual Christmas pageant. The task of directing the pageant, a hallowed, conservative, respectful tradition in this churchgoing town, falls on protagonist family matriarch Grace Bradley (Judy Greer) when its longtime director falls ill.

Good-natured mother Grace Bradley (Judy Greer) has her patience tested when tough Imogene Herdman (Beatrice Schneider) lands the role of Mary in "The Best Christmas Pageant Ever."

The sanctity of the play retelling the story of Christ’s birth in Bethlehem is threatened when eldest Herdman daughter Imogene (Beatrice Schneider) emerges as the only volunteer to play Mary. Imogene’s siblings claim other pivotal roles, prompting nervous children and judgmental adults alike to fear that Emmanuel’s 75th annual pageant will be an all-time low.

Our point of access is Beth (Molly Belle Wright), the good-hearted daughter of Grace, who narrates from adulthood (as Lauren Graham), so you know that at least she will survive this holiday catastrophe-in-the-making.

Entering this film as blindly as I proved to be a somewhat eye-opening experience. I have long been aware of faith-based filmmaking, a conservative Christian counterculture to Hollywood’s secular output that has on occasion produced jaw-dropping box office returns on modest investments. The Wikipedia entry for Sony Pictures subsidiary Affirm Films lets the impressive numbers of that studio’s twenty films, many of them produced/directed/written by Alex Kendrick and his brother Stephen, speak for themselves.

Pageant hails from Kingdom Story Company, a younger Nashville/L.A.-based studio owned by Lionsgate that seems to be employing playbook similar to Affirm’s. This fruitful collaboration began with 2018’s box office sensation I Can Only Imagine and included 2023’s highly profitable Jesus Revolution. Kingdom’s 2024 efforts were not as splashy as those, but the dramas Ordinary Angels and Unsung Hero turned profits on modest budgets. Kingdom did not fare as well on the higher-budgeted, long-delayed Wonder spin-off White Bird, which recently contributed to the ongoing, historic rough patch Lionsgate experienced in 2024.

The Herdmands wield snowballs like the houligans they are in "The Best Christmas Pageant Ever."

The post-COVID marketplace has been difficult to wrap your head around. The most highly anticipated film of last year, Joker: Folie à Deux, wrapped up its brief theatrical run with a domestic gross south of $60 million. The latest collaboration of director Robert Zemeckis and his Forrest Gump/Cast Away leading man Tom Hanks, Here, opened in fourth place with a lowly $5 million first-weekend draw. Two Disney summer sequels, Inside Out 2 and Deadpool & Wolverine, have collectively earned around $3 billion worldwide this year. Everything else has settled for far less, as studios and exhibitors experiment with shorter release windows and quicker streaming premieres, as they compete with Netflix and other deep-pocketed streaming services.

It may strike you as weird to ruminate at length on the business side of show business in a review of The Best Christmas Pageant Ever. The niche faith film market somewhat exists in a bubble, appealing to people who are much more likely to identify as churchgoers than as moviegoers. Budgets and box office numbers are two of the only measures with which we can compare these Christian productions to their secular counterparts on even ground. A movie like Pageant will win no major awards. It won’t draw rave reviews in the press or inspire passionate debate in online cineaste spheres. But it will appear in the box office reports alongside A24’s Heretic and modest mainstream holdovers.

Pageant is a bit difficult to judge critically because it seems more committed to using its story to spread a message than to elevate the craft. The acting is largely subpar, which in a production full of novice child actors is not all that surprising or upsetting. Greer, predictably, is the exception, having more than a quarter-century of experience in mainstream television and film prior to this. Her fine performance does as much as anything to hold this together and keep it from feeling like four episodes of a short-lived, unpolished TV show. The questionable creative choices may pile up, down to some cringy closing text screens, but at the foundation there is an agreeable message of seeing the good in one another, even those whom society has cast aside. If that strikes a chord for you, then the makers of this film ought to have feel they did this story justice.

After grossing a respectable $40 million domestically and hardly anything anywhere else, The Best Christmas Pageant Ever finally made it to Blu-ray and DVD last week, nearly a year after it opened in theaters and just ahead of the start of the so-called holiday season. This review covers Lionsgate’s Blu-ray + DVD + Digital combo pack edition.

BLU-RAY & DVD DISC SPECIFICATIONS:

2.39:1 Widescreen (DVD Anamorphic)
Blu-ray: Dolby Atmos 5.1 (English); DVD: Dolby Digital 5.1 (English)
Both: Dolby Digital 5.1 (Spanish, French), Dolby Surround 2.0 (Descriptive Video Service)
Subtitles: English for Hearing Impaired, Spanish, French
Extras Not Subtitled
Release Date: October 28, 2025
Single-sided, dual-layered disc (BD-50 & DVD-9)
Blue Eco-Friendly Keepcase in Cardboard Slipcover

VIDEO and AUDIO

The Best Christmas Pageant Ever may not be the most aesthetically pleasing of movies with its worn-in, ambiguous nostalgia, but the Blu-ray’s 2.39:1 widescreen presentation is consistent with theatrical exhibition and free of any specific concerns. The Dolby Atmos soundtrack also gets the job done.

BONUS FEATURES, MENUS, PACKAGING and DESIGN

The special features begin with an audio commentary by director Dallas Jenkins and producer Kevin Downes. The two fill the air and bring passion to the track as they detail this long-time-coming adaptation finally coming together with many screen-specific reflections.

Video extras open with “Herding the Kids” (5:34), the first of five making-of featurettes. This one considers production from the perspective of the child actors, with their adult collaborators reflecting on their shared experience.

“Director’s Diary” (7:49) lets Jenkins update you on the film’s progress, a mix of show and tell of probable moderate interest.

“All About the Pageantry: Creating the Look” (6:01) turns our attentions to the production and costume design, with a touch of the commentary rationalizing some cost-cutting and time-saving measures taken.

“Legacy of the Christmas Pageant” (6:39) lets cast and crew recall their own personal experiences in Christmas pageants and other holiday traditions.

“The Least of These” (6:58) focuses on the film’s themes and message, emerging as the most overtly (but still not excessively) Christian of the extras.

A 7-minute long reel of bloopers provides the usual but dependable collection of flubbed lines and general tomfoolery, also giving us looks at some of the adult cast’s improvisations and banter.

Next up, eight short deleted scenes (7:32) are presented without commentary to explain their loss. There’s not much of note in there, although fans of the movie will surely gravitate here.

The extras draw to a close with the film’s original theatrical trailer (2:24), something that once was a standard inclusion and absolutely still should be, but is a pretty rare and always appreciated touch these days. No trailers for other Lionsgate titles are included on either disc.

With its jolly score excerpt and picture book motif, the looped menu montage thoughfully anticipates being left on during other holiday festivities.

An insert supplying your digital copy code accompanies the two plainly-labeled discs in an eco-friendly blue keepcase that gets topped by slipcover.

The Bradley Family of "The Best Christmas Pageant Ever" comes home for Christmas in Lionsgate's 2025 Blu-ray and DVD releases.

CLOSING THOUGHTS

The Best Christmas Pageant Ever narrowly misses the “lump of coal” status I reserve for Christmas movies that I give two stars or fewer to, but also falls short of becoming the timeless family classic it sets out to be. Lionsgate’s Blu-ray combo pack has strong picture and sound and a healthy supply of bonus features. It’s a no-brainer gift idea for those who enjoyed the movie and maybe worth a look for the many who missed it in theaters last year.

Buy The Best Christmas Pageant Ever from Amazon.com:
Blu-ray + DVD + Digital · DVD · Prime Video

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