Genre:
Comedy/Romance
Director: Nancy Myers
Starring: Kate Winslet, Cameron Diaz, Jack
Black, Jude Law, Edward Burns, Rufus Sewell
RunTime: 2 hrs 18 mins
Released By: UIP
Rating: PG
Release
Date: 14 December 2006
Synopsis
:
A
hilarious comedy of life-swapping proportions, about two girls
with disastrous love-lives who have reached the end of their
respective tethers. Amanda Woods is an overstressed and overworked
American Film Marketing Creative (Cameron Diaz), who finds
out her boyfriend has cheated on her. In desperate need of
a break, she befriends Iris, an English journalist (Kate Winslet)
with similar man trouble, via an online home exchange scheme,
and they decide to swap houses in rural England & high
flying California. While on their respective breaks, Amanda
hits it off with Iris’s brother Graham (Jude Law), while
Iris strikes up a friendship with Miles (jack Black), a film
score composer.
Movie
Review:
In trying to recreate the
seasonal success of the culture-crossing “Love Actually”,
one of Hollywood’s most sought-after female filmmakers,
Nancy Meyers extends her romantic comedy repertoire by writing
and directing “The Holiday”. And as with all of
Meyers’ films, cutesiness and happy endings are firmly
distinguishable on the horizon. While longer than most epic
romances in its 2-hour-plus runtime, it relies on contrivances
and cloying dialogue wrapped in a sleek holiday fairytale
to sell us 2 rather non-epic love stories that take place
half way across the world from each other.
At its core, “The Holiday” tries
its hardest to craft a sense of nostalgic, golden-age-of-Hollywood
sort of romance that either seems too tongue-in-cheek to be
clever or just too tongue-tied to work. Brazenly quoting and
referencing films such as “The Lady Eve”, “Casablanca”,
it desperately attempts to add a touch of class to the rest
of its proceedings that inevitably includes the most predictable
and painfully derivative scenes in modern romantic comedies.
Once again Kate Winslet finds her natural
exuberance and beauty being relegated to a plain-jane role
in order to be placed understatedly alongside the American
“bombshell” in Cameron Diaz, just one of its many
character parallelisms keenly planned to differentiate these
women. Winslet is Iris, an underappreciated reporter for a
daily in London and Diaz epitomises the modern successful
woman running a successful business cutting trailers for big-budget
Hollywood movies. Different facets of their lives consume
both ladies, Iris to her cheating ex-boyfriend and Amanda
to her job. As both decide a holiday might do them both good
in the absence of men, they swap cottage for mansion and Surrey
for Hollywood.
Overly emphasising the implausibly simple
adult relationships these ladies come to know, they each meet
new men on their vacation “away from men”. Amanda
meets Graham, yet another Jude Law performance where he mistakes
smarmy for charming while Iris meets Miles, an uncomfortably
understated Jack Black reveling in the film’s rare moments
of Tenacious Dism. A giddy and lively Diaz makes the early
part of the script work, when comedy is on its agenda. As
it slides slowly through the motions of melodrama, Winslet
comes to the fore only to underpin the awkward casting of
Jack Black when they lack chemistry in key scenes. It does
have an ace under its sleeves with its most consistent character
in the 90 year-old Arthur Abbott (Eli Wallach), an aging screenwriting
legend who befriends Iris while delivering the best lines
that cuts through the crap of self-pity and the film’s
own cinematic conceit.
There’s
also a misplaced sense of goodwill in the film when it urges
us to celebrate with its apparently strong females in their
moment of triumph, but really what self-respect can we afford
them when they base their self-worth on their success with
men? Despite its abhorrently long runtime and all its flaws,
“The Holiday” is still probably the year’s
prettiest and emotionally grounded romantic comedy with Nancy
Meyers’ experience with the genre keeping it steady.
Movie Rating:
(Easily
digestible and formulaic, it’s one to wind down with
after a hard day’s worth of Christmas shopping)
Review
by Justin Deimen
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