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IMDbPro

Vacances

Original title: Holiday
  • 1938
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
7.7/10
19K
YOUR RATING
Cary Grant, Katharine Hepburn, and Doris Nolan in Vacances (1938)
Peanuts Deluxe Holiday Collection (Depressed On Christmas: A Charlie Brown Christmas)
Play clip1:22
Watch Peanuts Deluxe Holiday Collection (Depressed On Christmas: A Charlie Brown Christmas)
6 Videos
99+ Photos
Holiday RomanceRomantic ComedyScrewball ComedyComedyRomance

A young man in love with a girl from a rich family finds his unorthodox plan to go on holiday for the early years of his life met with skepticism by everyone except for his fiancée's eccentr... Read allA young man in love with a girl from a rich family finds his unorthodox plan to go on holiday for the early years of his life met with skepticism by everyone except for his fiancée's eccentric sister and long-suffering brother.A young man in love with a girl from a rich family finds his unorthodox plan to go on holiday for the early years of his life met with skepticism by everyone except for his fiancée's eccentric sister and long-suffering brother.

  • Director
    • George Cukor
  • Writers
    • Donald Ogden Stewart
    • Sidney Buchman
    • Philip Barry
  • Stars
    • Katharine Hepburn
    • Cary Grant
    • Doris Nolan
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.7/10
    19K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • George Cukor
    • Writers
      • Donald Ogden Stewart
      • Sidney Buchman
      • Philip Barry
    • Stars
      • Katharine Hepburn
      • Cary Grant
      • Doris Nolan
    • 137User reviews
    • 54Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 5 wins & 1 nomination total

    Videos6

    Peanuts Deluxe Holiday Collection (Depressed On Christmas: A Charlie Brown Christmas)
    Clip 1:22
    Peanuts Deluxe Holiday Collection (Depressed On Christmas: A Charlie Brown Christmas)
    Peanuts Deluxe Holiday Collection (Voice Of Snoopy: A Christmas Miracle)
    Clip 0:44
    Peanuts Deluxe Holiday Collection (Voice Of Snoopy: A Christmas Miracle)
    Peanuts Deluxe Holiday Collection (Voice Of Snoopy: A Christmas Miracle)
    Clip 0:44
    Peanuts Deluxe Holiday Collection (Voice Of Snoopy: A Christmas Miracle)
    Peanuts Deluxe Holiday Collection (Costume: A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving)
    Clip 1:41
    Peanuts Deluxe Holiday Collection (Costume: A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving)
    Peanuts Deluxe Holiday Collection (Letter To Santa: A Charlie Brown Christmas)
    Clip 1:03
    Peanuts Deluxe Holiday Collection (Letter To Santa: A Charlie Brown Christmas)
    Peanuts Deluxe Holiday Collection (Christmas Tree: A Charlie Brown Christmas)
    Clip 1:20
    Peanuts Deluxe Holiday Collection (Christmas Tree: A Charlie Brown Christmas)
    Holiday: Mind Your Manners
    Clip 0:58
    Holiday: Mind Your Manners

    Photos110

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    Top cast58

    Edit
    Katharine Hepburn
    Katharine Hepburn
    • Linda Seton
    Cary Grant
    Cary Grant
    • Johnny Case
    Doris Nolan
    Doris Nolan
    • Julia Seton
    Lew Ayres
    Lew Ayres
    • Ned Seton
    Edward Everett Horton
    Edward Everett Horton
    • Nick Potter
    Henry Kolker
    Henry Kolker
    • Edward Seton
    Binnie Barnes
    Binnie Barnes
    • Laura Cram
    Jean Dixon
    Jean Dixon
    • Susan Potter
    Henry Daniell
    Henry Daniell
    • Seton Cram
    Harry Allen
    • Scotchman
    • (scenes deleted)
    Frank Benson
    • Scotchman
    • (scenes deleted)
    Aileen Carlyle
    • Farm Girl
    • (scenes deleted)
    Edward Cooper
    • Scotchman
    • (scenes deleted)
    Margaret McWade
    Margaret McWade
    • Farmer's Wife
    • (scenes deleted)
    Frank Shannon
    • Farmer
    • (scenes deleted)
    Charles Trowbridge
    Charles Trowbridge
    • Banker
    • (scenes deleted)
    Marion Ballou
    Marion Ballou
    • Portrait of Grandmother Seton
    • (uncredited)
    Brandon Beach
    • Churchgoer
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • George Cukor
    • Writers
      • Donald Ogden Stewart
      • Sidney Buchman
      • Philip Barry
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews137

    7.719.4K
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    Featured reviews

    8SnoopyStyle

    terrific Cary Grant and Katharine Hepburn

    Johnny Case (Cary Grant) is on cloud nine as he tells his friends the Potters that he's marrying Julia Seton (Doris Nolan). Only he doesn't know that she's the daughter in a wealthy family. She wants him incorporated into her money-making family. Her older black sheep sister Linda (Katharine Hepburn) loves his carefree attitude. Her loving mother passed away and her father is a hard man. Her brother Ned was a musician but her father puts him to work in a life that he hates.

    Cary Grant and Katharine Hepburn have superior charisma and terrific chemistry together. That's all the film needs and all that any viewer needs to know. The characters are fast-talking fun with some slapstick thrown in. They learn to follow their dreams and their hearts rather than follow their family obligations. Grant is always a great every man and it's important that he's not a slacker. He is the new self-made man not encumbered by money while Hepburn is the liberated woman.
    8bkoganbing

    So Right for Phillip Barry Roles

    Katharine Hepburn brought three Phillip Barry characters to life on the screen in Without Love, The Philadelphia Story and first and foremost Holiday. Her upper class upbringing in Connecticut made her the perfect actress for his plays about the fabulously wealthy which Depression Era USA just ate up.

    Holiday of necessity had to be updated. It debuted on Broadway in the boom year of 1928 so some lines to acknowledge the Great Depression had to be included. When Henry Daniell says his obscene market profits would be better with the right kind of government, he's taking dead aim at the New Deal, in particularly the newly formed Security Exchange Commission.

    One guy who wants out of the money making rat race is Cary Grant as Johnny Case. He's a poor kid who's worked his way up, probably the same as the founder of the Seton fortune did back in the day. But he's decided there's more to life than just making money. Like Grandpa Vanderhof in You Can't Take It With You or Charles Foster Kane who admittedly inherited his. Henry Kolker as Edward Seton and George Coulouris as Thatcher think exactly alike.

    Case has a vision of his life and wants to share it with his fiancé Doris Nolan. But he's picked the wrong sister, it's younger sister Katharine Hepburn of the Seton girls who's his soul mate.

    As one who's now retired and admittedly not living in the style of the Setons I can empathize with Cary Grant. As long as you have enough to live on and you have interests to occupy yourself and you don't have a family to support, why work? In fact make room for the next generation who might have a family to support.

    In that sense Holiday has a message that applies more for today than it did in 1938. Make what you can, take care of those who depend on you, but get out and enjoy life.

    And enjoy Holiday.
    8blanche-2

    lovely film with a great cast

    Katharine Hepburn and Cary Grant on paper, I suppose, look like an odd pairing, but they were absolutely marvelous together, and "Holiday," directed by George Cukor, is no exception. Hepburn plays the unhappy, bored, but bright Linda in a dysfunctional, upper crust New York family. Her brother, Ned (Lew Ayres) is a miserable drunk, and her father controls the family with an iron hand and the ethic that money is their god. Their mother, who was like Linda, is deeply missed by her. Linda adores her younger sister, Julia, but has idealized her and doesn't see that she has the same upper class values as their father. When Julia brings home her fiancée, Johnny Case (Grant), it is immediately obvious to the audience (and later to the characters) that Johnny fell for the wrong girl.

    "Holiday" is a film filled with heart, poignancy, and some warm humor provided by Johnny's friends, played by Edward Everett Horton and Jean Dixon, who come up against the society crowd at a party. Hepburn gives a beautiful performance as a young woman who wants to break free, and Ayres is heartbreaking as a man who can't. Grant, of course, is in the kind of role he did best in his early career, a young man from the wrong side of the tracks who is an independent spirit. He does some great gymnastics in the film, and he and Hepburn have a wonderful moment where she stands on his shoulders, and they fall into head rolls. Really marvelous stuff. The only problem I have is that the character of Julia, the younger sister, is so uptight and shallow, it's amazing that Johnny fell for her at all. Since they met while she was vacationing in Lake Placid, the audience must assume that out of the family home, she was more fun and playful, but when she comes up against her father, she falls right in with him.

    Hepburn and Grant worked together in "Bringing Up Baby," "The Philadelphia Story," and this film - actually, three films in a row - plus "Sylvia Scarlett." One wishes they had appeared together even more. They had great chemistry.
    Snow Leopard

    Pleasant, Thoughtful, & Witty

    Pleasant, thoughtful, and witty, "Holiday" is an offbeat and very enjoyable romantic comedy. Cary Grant and Katherine Hepburn are excellent in portraying two free-spirited and likable characters, and they are joined by a fine supporting cast, especially Lew Ayres as Hepburn's brother, and Edward Everett Horton and Jean Dixon as an eccentric older couple. The plot is pretty simple, but there's just enough to it to show the different sides of the various characters and to allow each of them the chance to show how he or she approaches life.

    Probably the best part of the movie is the long New Year's Eve party sequence. It has many entertaining touches, and brings together all of the characters and themes nicely. The atmosphere in the 'play room' is creative, and is very appropriate for the scenes there. The cast members all do a very good job of reacting consistently to their surroundings, with some characters more comfortable in formalized settings and others happier when they are less constrained.

    Though it has perhaps been overshadowed by some of the more famous films of its era, "Holiday" is an entertaining classic that most fans of vintage romantic comedies should enjoy.
    8FilmOtaku

    Now THIS is romance

    Now THIS is romance Back in the mid-late 1930's, when Katherine Hepburn, though she had already won an Oscar, was labeled (along with several other actresses) "box office poison", it was Hollywood that suffered. Unfortunately, after the Production Code blasted out full throttle, strong roles for women disappeared because women no longer had a strong voice in cinema, so a lot of the heavier-hitters (Hepburn, Joan Crawford, Miriam Hopkins) ended up foundering in what they were given. In the case of George Cukor's 1938 film "Holiday", she had a couple of friends involved with the picture who insisted that she be used (she had been the understudy of her film counterpart on the stage) which turned out to be an excellent plan since she is one of the many great things about this film.

    Set in New York, "Holiday" stars Carey Grant as Johnny Case, a fledgling businessman who is more concerned about making a career out of something he wants to do, and not what he should do in order to make a lot of money. He has a plan; he has been working hard at a job that he doesn't particularly like to save enough money to take an indeterminate time off to figure out what he wants to do with himself. While he takes a holiday, he meets Julia Seton (Nolan), the two fall in love and go back to New York to tell Julia's father. What Johnny doesn't know is that Julia comes from an extremely wealthy family, and while he is shocked and bemused by this fact, he finds himself taken with the other members of Julia's family; Linda Seton (Hepburn), Julia's free-thinking and dramatic sister, and brother Ned Seton (Ayres) a kind but dour alcoholic. Both siblings are discontented with being under their father's thumb (while he is not a bad person, Edward Seton has strong feelings about how things should be handled) and both take an instant liking to Johnny, particularly Linda who finds herself falling in love with him. As plans for the marriage begin to solidify, it becomes clear that Johnny is being forced to quash his dreams, not only to gain the approval of their father, but because Julia thinks it is the way to go as well.

    Having never even heard of this film, I wasn't sure what to expect out of "Holiday"; I figured it might either be a screwball comedy (based on the Hepburn/Grant collaboration in "Bringing up Baby") or maybe a regular romantic comedy. What I got was actually a romantic dramedy that was not only charming but heartfelt as well. George Cukor's direction (as usual) is wonderful and the chemistry between Hepburn and Grant is simply electric. Hepburn, clearly the star of this production, acts each scene with an emotion and charm that is almost unheard of in the mainstream cinema of the present. While I watched the film, I found myself becoming so endeared to her character that I probably would have been completely devastated if she didn't get some sort of happiness in the end, probably one of the highest compliments that I can give to an actor's performance since I mainly pay attention to the story and the film itself primarily and the characters are important, but seem to be secondary. Grant, who is probably most famous for being debonair and dashing, often played the goofball in his films of the 30's and early 40's, and this was another one of those roles for him. He is such a fresh and passionate character however, (he often finds himself doing various acrobatic stunts with glee) that he quickly proves himself to be more than just the handsome doofus who makes bug eyes at the camera when he's confused. He and Hepburn actually look like they're having a good time together in this film; a wonderful thing to see when it seems that 90% of collaborations look like they are phoned in nowadays. If Doris Nolan isn't unremarkable and bland all the time, she did a really great job in her role as fiancée Julia – at some point you're really wondering what Johnny ever really saw in her and made him declare his bachelorhood over with at the age of 30. Lew Ayres, a name I had heard before, but didn't recognize by face was also very charming as the alcoholic brother. I found his character to be incredibly endearing, especially as the film progressed. A mention also has to be made of the actors who played Johnny's best friends, the Potters. (Edward Everett Horton & Jean Dixon) Anyone would be hard pressed to dislike these two intellectuals with senses of humor that are more arid than the Mojave. Every scene they were in became even more enjoyable.

    What stuck with me is that between the script and the actors, I felt like I was actually watching a real slice of life, kind of like Booth Tarkington without the depression. "Holiday" is a fantastic hidden gem in the classic film catalogue and I would recommend it very highly. Not only is it short in length, but also its engaging story, steady pacing and brilliant actors made me wish it were longer. Watch this wonderful movie if you have any ounce of appreciation for classic film. 8/10 --Shelly

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Edward Everett Horton repeats the role of Nick Potter, which he also played in the previous version of the film, Holiday (1930).
    • Goofs
      When Linda decides to come downstairs to join the New Year's Eve party, her hairstyle changes as she descends the stairs.
    • Quotes

      Linda Seton: You've got no faith in Johnny, have you, Julia? His little dream may fall flat, you think. Well, so it may, what if it should? There'll be another. Oh, I've got all the faith in the world in Johnny. Whatever he does is all right with me. If he wants to dream for a while, he can dream for a while, and if he wants to come back and sell peanuts, oh, how I'll believe in those peanuts!

    • Alternate versions
      There is an Italian edition of this film on DVD, distributed by DNA Srl: "LA DONNA DEL GIORNO (1942) + INCANTESIMO (1938)" (2 Films on a single DVD), re-edited with the contribution of film historian Riccardo Cusin. This version is also available for streaming on some platforms.
    • Connections
      Featured in Hollywood: The Fabulous Era (1962)
    • Soundtracks
      Adeste Fidelis (O Come All Ye Faithful)
      (Uncredited)

      Written by Frederick Oakeley and John Francis Wade

      Played in church on an organ and sung by a choir

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Holiday?Powered by Alexa
    • Is "Holiday" based on a book?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 6, 1944 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Streaming on "YouTube Movies & TV" YouTube Channel
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Vivir para gozar
    • Filming locations
      • Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA(exterior, establishing shots)
    • Production company
      • Columbia Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross worldwide
      • $15,852
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 35 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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