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Holidays

  • 2016
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 45m
IMDb RATING
5.1/10
12K
YOUR RATING
Holidays (2016)
St. Patrick's Day Teaser Trailer for Holidays
Play trailer0:35
5 Videos
41 Photos
FantasyHorrorMystery

'Holidays' is an anthology feature film that puts a uniquely dark and original spin on some of the most iconic and beloved holidays of all time by challenging our folklore, traditions and as... Read all'Holidays' is an anthology feature film that puts a uniquely dark and original spin on some of the most iconic and beloved holidays of all time by challenging our folklore, traditions and assumptions.'Holidays' is an anthology feature film that puts a uniquely dark and original spin on some of the most iconic and beloved holidays of all time by challenging our folklore, traditions and assumptions.

  • Directors
    • Anthony Scott Burns
    • Kevin Kölsch
    • Nicholas McCarthy
  • Writers
    • Anthony Scott Burns
    • Kevin Kölsch
    • Nicholas McCarthy
  • Stars
    • Madeleine Coghlan
    • Savannah Kennick
    • Rick Peters
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.1/10
    12K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Anthony Scott Burns
      • Kevin Kölsch
      • Nicholas McCarthy
    • Writers
      • Anthony Scott Burns
      • Kevin Kölsch
      • Nicholas McCarthy
    • Stars
      • Madeleine Coghlan
      • Savannah Kennick
      • Rick Peters
    • 98User reviews
    • 103Critic reviews
    • 50Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 nominations total

    Videos5

    Holidays
    Trailer 0:35
    Holidays
    Holidays
    Trailer 0:41
    Holidays
    Holidays
    Trailer 0:41
    Holidays
    Holidays
    Trailer 1:51
    Holidays
    HOLIDAYS - official trailer
    Trailer 1:51
    HOLIDAYS - official trailer
    'Holidays': Father's Day Clip
    Clip 1:07
    'Holidays': Father's Day Clip

    Photos41

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    + 37
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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Madeleine Coghlan
    Madeleine Coghlan
    • Maxine (segment: "Valentine's Day")
    Savannah Kennick
    Savannah Kennick
    • Heidi (segment: "Valentine's Day")
    Rick Peters
    Rick Peters
    • Coach Rockwell (segment: "Valentine's Day")
    Kate Rachesky
    Kate Rachesky
    • Cathy (segment: "Valentine's Day")
    Ayla
    Ayla
    • Swim Team Member (segment: "Valentine's Day")
    Emily Haggins
    • Swim Team Member (segment: "Valentine's Day")
    Sierra Malo
    • Swim Team Member (segment: "Valentine's Day")
    Aimee Sagara
    • Swim Team Member (segment: "Valentine's Day")
    Britain Simons
    Britain Simons
    • Handsome Boy (segment: "Valentine's Day")
    Ruth Bradley
    Ruth Bradley
    • Elizabeth (segment: "Saint Patrick's Day")
    Art Campion
    Art Campion
    • The Man (segment: "Saint Patrick's Day")
    • (as Peter Campion)
    Isolt McCaffrey
    Isolt McCaffrey
    • Grainne (segment: "Saint Patrick's Day")
    Norma Sheahan
    • The Voice (segment: Saint Patrick's Day)
    • (voice)
    Guy Carleton
    • St. Patrick (segment: "Saint Patrick's Day")
    Glen Barry
    Glen Barry
    • TV Presenter (segment: "Saint Patrick's Day")
    Orlaith Shore
    • Sales Assistant (segment: "Saint Patrick's Day")
    Jacqueline Wilson
    • Young Mother (segment: "Saint Patrick's Day")
    Jack Wilson
    • Crying Baby (segment: "Saint Patrick's Day")
    • Directors
      • Anthony Scott Burns
      • Kevin Kölsch
      • Nicholas McCarthy
    • Writers
      • Anthony Scott Burns
      • Kevin Kölsch
      • Nicholas McCarthy
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews98

    5.112.2K
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    Featured reviews

    6JackAteSally

    Happy Holidays :)

    'Holidays' opens up with the Valentine's Day sequence, that gives almost immediate odes to De Palma with it's high school-heartbreak atmosphere. To make a short story shorter, the plot revolves around a misunderstood and exiled young girl would happens to have a crush on the school's swimming coach. After getting word that he may have eyes for her fair-haired nemesis, she retaliates through violence. This one does border on creepy as the feelings between Maxi ("Maxi Pad") and her teacher are somewhat mutual. But life is like a box of chocolate.. or hearts. By the time you see the credits, the tone does seem comfortably familiar. From the director of Starry Eyes. (5/10)

    The next segment surrounds Irish myth & folklore on St.. Patrick's Day. While I do have a clover tattoo and I love the color green, this was not one of my favorites. Plot follows an elementary school teachers who has just received a reserved new student. Ginger-hair, freckled and somewhat adorable, the young girl does not seem to integrate well and quickly upsizes the teacher with rude dismissals and eery glares. We are soon given hint that the teacher longs for a child and eventually becomes pregnant after a night out drinking. The young girl becomes eerily fond of the teacher as if she knows something she doesn't know. They reference Polanski in this one, but it's no demon she's carrying, something a lot more scaly. This one was brought to us by Gary Shore, director of Wicker Man. (5.5/10)

    Easter is never really looked upon with much horror, much like the preceding holiday St. Patty's. However, director Nicholas McCarthy ("At The Devil's Door") manages to hint at a surreal dimension filled with unseen terrors that leaves you thirsting for more. The Easter installment opens up with a young girl being put to bed by her mother. They have a somewhat intense and offbeat dialogue about the iconic Easter Bunny and how no child has ever seen him, or should. The same young girl happens out of her bed that night and stumbles upon something only seen in nightmares. Kudos to the FX team and any behind the visual the bunny, an image that'll stick with you for sure. Peter Cottontail meets Pan's Labyrinth. (8/10)

    Mother's Day...... a lot can and will be said about this one for sure. This sequence put me to sleep and woke me in the same damn sittnig, stressful. The overall downside to a lot of the shorts is they feel just too short. This is not the case here, in this indie desert horror from "Midnight Swim" directer Sarah Adina Smith. The concept is basically a young girl becomes pregnant every single time she has sex. She feels she is medically ailed or cursed. After seeing doctor after doctor, she is referred to a retreat house in the desert somewhere. This place is filled more with woman who are having opposite issues with fertility and she again, feels slighted. Somewhere in this drawn out entry, I dozed off and came to in time for an OUTRAGEOUS finale. It woke me up, revitalized me enough to rewind and rewatch. All I can say is geeeeeeeeeeez. And what was that in the sky? A devil? An angel? (6/10)

    Like in real life, Mother's Day is followed by Father's Day; without a doubt the most gripping entry in the production. They must have strategically placed it after the previous snooze fest, besides that ending of course, to regain viewers attention. I immediately appreciated the dark, deep tone of the setting. We are introduced to a young woman who comes home to a package at her doorstep. She opens it to find an old cassette tape player with a double sided tape inside, headphones included. She decided to play the tape, of course, and is jarringly met by the voice of her late father. The tape contains not only her the voice of her dead father, but it is looped with her's a young girl as they took a trip somewhere one day. She is quickly overwhelmed, rejects the tapes, regains herself and continues. Basically, her father disappeared years and years ago without a word or trace. She never got an explanation as to why. Until now. She continues to play the tape is led into an eerily-orchestrated scavenger hunt to find the truth about her father's disappearance and perhaps be reunited. This a truly beautiful built piece and again, is only hurt by the fact that so much can and needs to be said. The ending, IMO, does not live up to the build-up but I accept it for what it in this short and it does not take away from it's genius. Shoutout to Anthony Scott Burns, Happy Father's Day. (9.5/10)

    Halloween - omitting review due to word count (4/10)

    I had to go look up what this segment was about again, which sounds bad, but once I did I was pleased to remember. I liked this very odd and campy thriller about a man who goes to extreme lengths obtains a Christmas gift for his "dear wife". We all know how the latest gadgets get people in a frenzy, well the product in mentioned is called the "UVU".. and "UVU shows you, YOU". It does indeed, Our characters are forced to look at themselves and the ones closets to them in an entirely new lights and brings a whole new meaning to it 'what lies beneath'. Also, great cameo from Seth Green. Nice to see that guy. (7/10)

    New Year's Eve was thoroughly enjoyable IMO and very unexpected. I'm not even gonna talk too much about it because it's best the end things off with a bang. Just know that two loners wind up on a date New Year's Eve and it's a countdown you will not forget. (8/10)

    Overall, I'd give this anthology around a 6.5/10.
    4Rickting

    A laughably weak horror anthology

    Horror anthologies are always a risky business. With multiple writers and directors, there's bound to be an inconsistency in quality throughout. At least with this, given that the shorts, all based on a different holiday, are consistently bad, there is a consistent level of quality throughout.

    Valentine: (2.5/5) A blatant Carrie rip-off with some dangling plot threads and a lack of explanation, but at least it gets the black comedy angle of the anthology right and has a clever ending.

    St Patrick's Day: (1/5) A laughably stupid dud in every sense. What were they thinking?

    Easter: (1.5/5) One good jump scare aside, this is tedious, tasteless and toothless.

    Mother's Day: (1/5) A terrible body horror short where pretty much nothing happens. Oh, and then just when something is happening, it ends.

    Father's Day: (3.5/5) A cleverly constructed and told short story which is arguably the best of the bunch in many ways, but it's still too open-ended and vague to satisfy.

    Halloween: (3.5/5) An effective, squirm-inducing dark comedy that is both amusing and uncomfortable, although it is complete nonsense.

    Christmas: (2.5/5) They had a great idea here... which they did absolutely nothing with and once again it ends just as it's starting to get interesting.

    New Year's Eve: (2.5/5) More formulaic stuff which is mildly entertaining but just too predictable.

    These films aren't scary, but they're not meant to be. They're meant to be dark, uncomfortable comedies. Sadly, the stories are weak and just lack any true meaning or point. I learnt something important in Film Studies: when you make a short film, the story should start when the film ends in a way. That's a good thing to remember if you're making a short film and that is basically what all these shorts do. But... don't forget to get the audience interested and actually give them enough information to leave them satisfied! Evidently, these writers and directors forgot that.

    4/10
    6WillowUndergroundStudios

    Wtf is up with the Easter Bunny?

    Just one thing to say, that Easter Bunny is scary as hell. An Easter Bunny mixed with the Son of God has literally been taking out of the text and and I just think, holy. Pun intended.

    I loved him because of how disturbing he was. The guy who portrayed him did a very nice job and the look of his character made it very memorable. Let's just say once you see him, you can't unsee him. It becomes burned into your retnas so that even if you wanted to look away, it wouldn't matter.

    A very enjoyable nightmare.
    5michael-3204

    Shows promise, if not much else

    Horror anthology loosely organized around holidays, where each short is thematically related to a different holiday. The usual problem with these sorts of anthologies is wildly uneven quality, but in this case the quality is fairly consistent and reasonably strong. One of the many oddities of "Holidays" is that the worst short is the one by the most famous director included here, Kevin Smith. It seems like he wasn't even trying with his Halloween short and its disappointing that they gave the most on-topic holiday for a horror movie to someone who seems so disinterested.

    Another oddity is that the first five shorts all have female protagonists, with only one being written and directed by a woman. It is almost immediately apparent which that is, not because it is appreciably better or worse than the others, but because of its attitudes toward its female characters, and the way it handles nudity (something that is mostly absent in the rest of the shorts). The fact that several films in a row all feature not especially strongly drawn or unique protagonists, some of whom are almost interchangeable, is a problem. The shorts are organized chronologically through the calendar year, starting with Valentine's Day and ending on New Year's Eve, but I think it might have been better to reorder them so that a sense of repetition didn't start to set in before there was some variation. The final short is actually the best, in terms of telling a compelling story with the most interesting characters we meet in the whole series. It is largely a two-hander and ends on a satisfyingly twisty note. And that brings up a third oddity -- all except the final short, and Smith's, have intriguing ideas, set-ups and situations that the various writers and directors seem unable to resolve in a very satisfying way. Some of them just end, some try for a conclusion that is perhaps meant to be ambiguous or disturbing, but they fail to stick the landing. Its strange to watch a bunch of short films in a row that share the same strengths and the same weakness.

    I'd say most of the writers and directors represented here show promise, even if most of them don't quite deliver as fully as I'd have liked, and I look forward to more from any of these filmmakers. I don't know that I'll be returning to this collection of shorts anytime soon.
    3ArtTheClown

    What the fu@k??

    I didn't expect much from this movie, but even my low expectations weren't met. The only 2 semi-entertaining chapters (Easter and Father's Day) had very unsatisfying endings. The rest of the chapters were GARBAGE.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Seth Green and Clare Grant play a married couple and are also married to each other in real life.
    • Quotes

      Father: I'm so happy that you came. Daddy loves you so much, Carol. I'm so proud of you. If you have come and you have found me, then you are here. You're finally here in this room of your own free will. Oh, Carol, that means that you and I can be together again... Together.

    • Connections
      Referenced in Minty Comedic Arts: 10 Things You Didn't Know About Cat's Eye (2018)
    • Soundtracks
      Gone Back Home Today
      Written by Henry Stone

      Courtesy of Henry Stone Music USA, Inc.

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    FAQ

    • How long is Holidays?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 15, 2016 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Kì Nghỉ Kinh Hoàng
    • Filming locations
      • Dublin, Ireland(on location: segment "St. Patrick's Day")
    • Production companies
      • ArtCastle
      • Destroy All Entertainment
      • Destroy All Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross worldwide
      • $55,621
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 45 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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