NATIVITY! (U).

Family/Comedy. Martin Freeman, Marc Wootton, Ashley Jensen, Jason Watkins, Pam Ferris, Alan Carr, Ricky Tomlinson. Director: Debbie Isitt.

Christmas comes early courtesy of British director Debbie Isitt (Nasty Neighbours, Confetti) and her improvised comedy about the preparations for a primary school nativity play.

Shot without a script as a safety net, Nativity! is a feel-absolutely-wonderful treat steeped in festive cheer that delivers tidings of comfort and boundless joy for the entire family.

The central character’s redemption echoes George Bailey in the classic It’s A Wonderful Life and a supporting cast of inexperienced child actors is irresistibly cute and cheeky without ever being precocious.

Martin Freeman essays another beleaguered loser in love, who tells one little white lie that rapidly snowballs into an avalanche of misunderstandings.

He plays the straight man throughout to Marc Wootton’s demented classroom assistant Mr Poppy, a whooping force of nature who is even more hyperactive than the children in his care.

By the time the curtain rises on the nativity play, we’re hopelessly smitten with all of the players and will cheer them on to a standing ovation.

In overcast Coventry, teacher Paul Maddens (Freeman) is a shadow of his former self at St Bernadette’s primary school after girlfriend Jennifer (Jensen) leaves him to pursue her dreams of becoming a Hollywood producer.

His first attempt to stage the nativity draws a vicious one-star review from the local theatre critic (Carr).

“You’re no-one if you’ve not had a bad review off Patrick Burns,” cackles the hack. "That's why we call them Burns’ victims!”

Paul turns his back on the nativity until outgoing headmistress Mrs Bevan (Ferris) forces him to step up to the mark.

With first rehearsals looming, Paul bends the truth in Mr Poppy’s earshot.

“A big Hollywood company are coming here to see our nativity and we’re all going to be famous!" Mr Poppy tells the children excitedly.

Soon, the entire city, including the mayor (Tomlinson), is abuzz with news about the little nativity play with huge ambitions.

Nativity! is a joy and the 105 minutes pass all too quickly in a blur of laughter, song and heartfelt confessions.

The ensemble cast is excellent, ad-libbing some hysterical verbal exchanges, making Isitt’s film a Christmas cracker.