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Holiday [DVD]
 
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Holiday [DVD]

 Universal, suitable for all   DVD
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (20 customer reviews)
Price: £5.47 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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Frequently Bought Together

Holiday [DVD] + The Awful Truth [DVD] (1937) [2003] + The Talk of the Town [DVD] [2003]
Price For All Three: £16.46

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Product details

  • Format: PAL
  • Language English, German, Italian, Spanish
  • Subtitles: Arabic, Dutch, English, French, German, Hindi, Italian, Polish, Spanish, Turkish
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Aspect Ratio: 4:3 - 1.33:1
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Classification: U
  • Studio: UCA
  • DVD Release Date: 6 Mar 2006
  • Run Time: 92 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (20 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B000EBOZWE
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 7,304 in Film & TV (See Top 100 in Film & TV)


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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
14 of 14 people found the following review helpful
Cary Grants best 5 Feb 2008
Format:DVD
This film is far from perfect but it is the best Grant, Hepburn colaboration of there careeers. It beats sylvia Saint, Philadelphia story and even in my opinion, Bringing up baby. It doesn't have the same production values nor even the plot as those films but it simply works as the perfect romantic comedy. It's also the only film i can think of where Grant displays his expertise as an acrobat and it's the only film where i actually sympathised with Katherine Hepburns character (i usually find her quite irritating)

The story is very simple. Boy meets girl. Boy meets family of girl. Girls sister falls for Grant. Girl turns out to be wrong for him. Sister turns out to be right for him. Simplistic but believable and rewarding.

It's warm, genuine and entertaining....prabably my favourite Grant film
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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful
Format:DVD
Like all the best comedy, the full effect of 'Holiday' arises out of the fact that it juxtoposes humour with real and unpaletable truths. Grant and Hepburn as Johnny and Linda - he the idealistic poor-boy-come-good and she the unmaterialistic black sheep of a wealthy family - battle against a fickle world concerned with material wealth and living out the WASP dream.

Edward Everett Horton as Linda's traditionalist father Mr Seaton and Doris Nolan as Linda's conventional sister Julia - initially Johnny's fiancee - provide the obstacles in the path of the the pair's voyage of self discovery. Brutally broken by the phony world he lives in but eager to aid Johnny and Linda's escape is Linda's dipsomaniac brother Ned (Lew Ayers), proving that theory that many a profound truth was spoken by a drunk. Rounding off a great ensemble cast are Johnny's friends Nick and Susan, who provide a Greek chorus for the battleground of idealism vs convention.

'Holiday' provides a cutting satire of the wealth culture that is as pertinent today as it was sixty years ago and the poignancy of Linda and Ned's oppression offset by her fiesty optimism provides more than enough emotional drive to power the film. Then of course there's the comedy: fast-cracking one-liners, great physical gags, a marvellous array of facial expressions and several acrobatic and musical feats provide something for all tastes, held together by an intelligent script. Hepburn as usual shines with enthusiam and sly wit, Grant is at his most animated, bemused and naive, and Lew Ayers puts in a wonderful performance.

How anyone can say that 'old' films are no longer appealing or relevant to a modern audience is baffling in the face of an offering like 'Holiday.' Upon first viewing it immediately became one of my top 3 films of all time. Having seen it however it becomes obvious why Hepburn was at the time branded 'box-office poison' - no society is tolerant of such a sharp and witty critique of its values as the film provides. Time may have made us more appreciative of 'Holiday's' greatness, but don't fool yourself that this critique doesn't apply to you to!

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40 of 42 people found the following review helpful
By Lawrance M. Bernabo HALL OF FAME TOP 1000 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:DVD
Katharine Hepburn made three films in a row with Cary Grant when she brought her career back after being branded "Box Office Poison." The pair had first made "Sylvia Scarlett" together in 1936, the infamous film where Hepburn's character pretended to be a boy. In 1938 they made the classic screwball comedy "Bringing Up Baby" with director Howard Hawks and in 1940 Hepburn returned to stardom and Jimmy Stewart won an Oscar for "The Philadelphia Story." The latter had been a play specifically written for Hepburn by Philip Barry. In between these two classic films, Hepburn and Grant did "Holiday," another film based on a Barry play. Hepburn had been the understudy for Hope Williams in the original 1928 Broadway production and it was the way she picked up a glass in her screen test of a scene from the play that inspired director George Cukor to cast the young actress in her debut film "A Bill of Divorcement." Now, five years later, he would direct her in the second movie version.

The story begins with us meeting Johnny Case (Grant), an engaging young man with some interesting ideas about life. At Lake Placid he met Julia Seton (Doris Nolan), fell in love, and proposed to her. Coming to New York City to meet her family, he arrives at a mansion and is shocked to learn that his beloved is one of THE Setons. Julia's father (Henry Kolker) is not sure what to think of his daughter's intended, but Julia's rather unconventional sister, Linda (Hepburn) thinks Johnny is wonderful. The problem is that Johnny's big plan is to make his fortune when he is young and then retire (i.e., go on a "holiday"), returning to work again when he gets older, which is heresy to old man Seton. He and Julia will try to teach Johnny the error of his ways, while Linda offers her support. Helping to balance the odds for Johnny are his friends, Nick (Edward Everett Horton) and Susan Potter (Jean Dixon), the chief members of his fan club. Linda tries to keep Johnny and Julia together, but it seems she is the only one in the Seton household who appreciates Johnny on his own terms.

"Holiday" had been filmed in 1930 by Edward H. Griffith with Ann Harding as Linda, Mary Astor as Julia, and Robert Ames as Johnny. Edward Everett Horton played Nick Potter in that version as well, although his wife was played by Hedda Hopper. The screenplay for the 1938 version was done by Donald Ogden Stewart and Sidney Buchman, and it was primarily Stewart who punched up the script version of Barry's revolt against the stuffed-shirts of the world with smart and literate dialogue (Stewart had played the Nick Potter role on Broadway). The result was that the production ended up with some nice ensemble work. Hepburn was under contract to RKO at the time, but bought herself out of her contract to do this film with Cukor at Columbia. Her performance was arguably the most simple and straightforward of any she had done in films up to that point, with all of the pretense and mannerisms stripped away, and the scene where she compares her angular face, with those famous cheekbones, to that of a toy giraffe, is one of the most endearing shots in her film career. Granted, "Holiday" is not going to end up on the AFI's list of Top 100 Films like "Bringing Up Baby" and "The Philadelphia Story," but it is still an enjoyable, solid little filme in which the two stars actually get to do some acrobatics.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Holiday - Katherine Hepburn & Cary Grant
Holiday - 1938. An absolute joy from start to finish. An must for everyone who loves those comeddies from that golden era.
Published 3 months ago by DaveyBoy
very slight
Thought I'd give this a try after enjoying 'Bringing up Baby' but this is very dissapointing in comparison, to me anyway. Read more
Published 4 months ago by midnightrider
unfortunately . disappointment
Wonderful film, rapid delivery - BUT the last 25% of the film was obviously damaged.
Could not be shown, first time this has happened with an order from Amazon.
Published 6 months ago by ulla tarras
A Brilliant film
"Holiday" is showing its age in that it is very doubtful if such a philosophical talky and litreate film oculd be made nowadays. Read more
Published 17 months ago by Noeleen Grindle
Grant, Hepburn, Cukor and fine supporting cast, what more do you want?
This is a curiously neglected film that did not even achieve the dignity of a DVD release in North America until the end of 2006. Read more
Published 21 months ago by L. E. Cantrell
What a double act
Another I hadn't seen but once again these two are a remarkable double act. They bounce off each other like electric currents. It will be watched quite a few times rest assured
Published 23 months ago by Mr. T. HARWOOD
A classic light comedy
The combination of Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant directed by George Cukor makes this a classic movie... Read more
Published on 31 Mar 2010 by Andrew Porter
Marvelously relevant for today
This is a marvelous film with two of Hollywood's greatest, Cary Grant and Katherine Hepburn. It''s also a classic, Depression-era film in its focus on dysfunctional lives of the... Read more
Published on 7 Mar 2009 by Michael W. Perry
Marvelously relevant for today
This is a marvelous film with two of Hollywood's greatest, Cary Grant and Katherine Hepburn. It''s also a classic, Depression-era film in its focus on dysfunctional lives of the... Read more
Published on 7 Mar 2009 by Michael W. Perry
1930s commedy at its best
This is one of the best teamings of grant and hepburn. I won't tell you what is going to happen but the build up to the inevitable is brillaintly acted and paced. Read more
Published on 12 May 2008 by Andrew J. Potts
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