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  • Brilliant acting by all 3 children. Many clever lines that had the audience laugh out loud. Super Scottish scenery and great advert for Wester Ross as a wonderful escape location, Slightly contrived happy ever after resolution but good light hearted family viewing. Great ostriches. And a view of kids grasp of the adult world. Enjoy the violin playing and jig at the end but bring air plugs for Thr practice sessions. Traditional portrayal of Scottish rural police! Imrie is in her element as a small character role; heart warming.

    Good look at family dynamics and relationships. Connolly plays a wonderful loving Grandfather who shows wise approach to difficult members of his family as he comes face to face with his own death.
  • From the great cast and idea, as well as the trailer being as entertaining as it was, What We Did On Our Holiday did look really promising. And it didn't disappoint, one or two tonal shifts jar just a tad and the material for David Tennant and Rosamund Pike wasn't quite as strong as that for the children and Billy Connolly(though it wasn't at all bad either) but it's a lovely film overall that entertains and touches. What We Did On Our Holiday is well-shot, never doing too much or too little, complementing the gorgeous scenery adeptly, while the soundtrack is appropriately understated and the film's sympathetically directed, allowing the story to resonate, the script to sparkle, accommodating the actors and using the idea to its full potential. There is a perfect balance of humour and pathos in the script, the humour especially with the children is often laugh-out-loud funny and the dramatic pathos parts are genuinely poignant. The story always engages and apart from at the end slightly it never feels too predictable, there are a number of surprises and What We Did On Our Holiday has a lot to say about family life and deals with it sympathetically and warmly in a way that allows us to completely identify with the situation and the characters, who all have a great amount of likability. The performances are excellent with the interplay between the actors even stronger, the chemistry between Connolly and the children is just adorable. David Tennant and Rosamund Pike are fine though Connolly and the children make much more of an impact, mainly due to better material. Connolly is very funny and also very moving, not just the character's situation which is enough to break anybody's heart but also it felt like a personal performance with Connolly being as gifted at comedy as he is and his ailing health. The children steal the show, Harriet Turnball is just hilarious and Emilia Jones also plays her role with a lot of charm. All in all, a lovely film that promised a good deal and delivers even more. 8/10 Bethany Cox
  • leatherdykeuk121 January 2015
    I will always think of this as a feature-length 2.4 Children. It made me laugh aloud, it made me shed a tear. There was one tiny subplot that wasn't tied up (Odin) which lost it a point, but well worth seeing. Family friendly, because, honestly, what kid hasn't heard swearing before?

    The kids are fabulous, the adults are insane and the whole mess of a birthday party is hilariously tragic. I will happily look out for more films by this writer/director pair.

    Have a watch of this film. A slight niggle is the unrealistic speed with which they navigated the M25. That just doesn't happen in real life, though the standstill traffic on the M1 was spot on.
  • A tale about a troubled parents (who are getting separated) and their three kids. The family travels to Scotland to celebrate the very ill grandfather's birthday. Before going there, the parents agreed with their kids to keep their separation secret from the grandfather, because they don't want to ruin his birthday party with such news. Then so many unexpected things happen at the celebration day.

    The performance was amazing especially the three kids, and the smart script makes you laugh at so many times despite the tragic story.

    The movie shows beautiful visuals of green Scotland, and the Scottish music was great.

    It is recommended for you if you wanted to watch something light and funny.
  • What makes this movie a hoot? Three adorable children who comprehend the world with their own little brains, see relationships with their own beady innocent eyes, and act on their reckless instincts and innocent unbloomed knowledge. What We Did on Our Holiday is a delightful perspective into the abyss of the broken that skims its aftermath gorgeously.

    David Tennant looks the right kind of perplexed in the comedy trying to figure out his children and marriage whilst Rosamund Pike complements him beautifully with her engaged acting. Ben Miller as Gavin is brilliant as well. Billy Connolly ices the funny storyline with his pizazz and brilliant comic timing.

    The screenplay is witty, subtle and snappy. The good thing about its humour is that the entire film, unlike other comedies, is not build on a slapstick foundation. The theme of the movie sometimes goes really thoughtful from sheer comedy which further furbishes the rhythm. The plot will make you giggle per se without any extra addition to the story.

    If you look at the downsides, sometimes you do hope the drama to be a little bit more grave. It lacks profundity, but considering it a Comedy, this fact can be overlooked.

    A brilliant comedy that is compelled to traverse the 'outstanding category' by the mere cuteness rush of Harriet Turnbull and Bobby Smalldridge. This Andy Hamilton and Guy Jenkin project is a definite go go!
  • I didn't know anything about this movie, but saw it on iTunes. I knew and liked most of the actors. So I rented it. I was sold within the first five minutes. And it didn't fail to get me more involved throughout. There's no big arc, great plot, fantastic action, or slap stick comedy. I mean, it's all there but not in a big, in your face way. And I love that. It's a story that anyone who has a heart, and has been through rough patches with his or her family can relate to. The script contains many really great lines, especially the kids' parts. It's masterful edited and well paced. There are a ton of short shots that create extra texture. Some stunning wide shots of the environment. Lots of use of indirect storytelling inducing your imagination, good acting, and incredible acting by the three kids. I was moved and welled up, laughed a lot, was in awe and progressively more engaged. If you're in the mood for action, big laughs, a thriller or a big drama, don't pick this one. But if you feel mellow and like good storytelling, then sit back, relax and watch this one.
  • For the children in this particular family, telling their fellow school friends what they did on their holiday would be hard, if they weren't so upbeat in every situation they're in. Outnumbered writers Andy Hamilton and Guy Jenkin direct, giving Tennant and Pike's delightful children freedom to spitball their lines. For the most it works, juxtaposing nicely against their parents' bickering. Abi (Pike) and Doug (Tennant) are on the verge of divorcing, trying to keep it secret from the family as they head to Scotland to visit Doug's sick father (Connolly). Obviously it doesn't go their way, as arguments break out. The adults of the family all have their own personal attributes, Doug's brother is a stingy, obsessive-compulsive and his sister in-law suffers with depression. Pike and Tennant bounce off each other like a real relationship. The ones worth the watch are the three children and Billy Connolly, who hold a fine level of satire and seriousness. The middle act dips in form because of its astonishing play-out and the ending dips in to the safest of territories. Other than that What We Did on Our Holiday is hugely enjoyable, even if the subject matter is not.
  • Absolutely loved this film. I laughed, I smiled and I cried.

    The script is quirky and wonderfully imaginative. In an hour and a half 'What we did on our Holiday' manages to dissect family life and reconstruct it to embrace every aspect of the complete gamut of the generations and their interactions. And it does so with both sympathy and hilarity.

    Of all films ever, it's the one that has made me feel best about being human. Flawed is fine in each and every generation, but the beginnings and endings are infinitely easier than the muddle in the middle.

    The acting throughout is exceptional but the child actors deserve a sky-fall of medals. Great stuff!
  • If you liked Outnumbered on TV, you'll probably like this. Trio of kids from dysfunctional London family head to Scotland for grandad's birthday. Not usually my cup of tea, but script and director get it right. The children have a believably offbeat take on reality, talking and doing as they would, and not as adults think they should. Tennant and Pike spark off each other as couple on verge of nervous break-up. Connolly is the perfect reprobate ancient. The host family exhibit a typical kind pomposity that is easy to lampoon. A relaxed pace that builds to a good comedy climax. The film steers clear of the chaos that such films sometimes court. I was pleasantly surprised. Worth watching!
  • We all loved this - me, my friend and my 2 daughters, 13 and 11. It's about a warring couple on the brink of divorce who take their three young children on holiday to Scotland to visit the husband's father, who has terminal cancer, on the occasion of his 75th birthday. It turns into an even more surprising birthday than anyone has imagined. David Tennant, Rosamund Pike, Billie Connolly, Ben Miller and Amelia Bullmore are all wonderful actors playing their parts to perfection and the children were as stunningly natural and funny as the children in the TV series Outnumbered. Andy Hamilton and Guy Jenkin had a great idea and have turned it into a funny and moving film. An extremely poignant scene was beautifully acted and directed and there were a fair few belly laughs as well as tears shed. There was some swearing but nothing worse than they hear routinely at secondary school, so though it was rated 12A I was never uncomfortable I'd taken my 11 year old daughter. Go and see it!
  • Warning: Spoilers
    This movie was very very similar to the 1980's movie Rocket Gibraltar . Including the children spending time with their grandfather and giving him a Viking funeral when he passes away in their presence without the adults knowing.
  • What We Did on Our Holiday is written and directed by Andy Hamilton and Guy Jenkin. It stars Rosamund Pike, David Tennant, Billy Connolly, Ben Miller, Amelia Bullmore, Emilia Jones, Bobby Smalldridge, Harriet Turnbull and Celia Imrie. Music is by Alex Heffes and cinematography by Martin Hawkins.

    "The truth is, every human being on this planet is ridiculous in their own way. So we shouldn't judge, we shouldn't fight, because in the end... in the end, none of it matters. None of the stuff"

    Andy Hamilton and Guy Jenkin spin off from their hugely popular sit-com, Outnumbered, to produce this funny, philosophical and moving picture. Tennant and Pike play parents of three young children, they are pending a divorce, but with Doug's (Tennant) father, Gordie (Connolly), dying of cancer, the family head to Scotland for what will surely be his last birthday party. Hoping to put on a united front so as to not upset Gordie any further, nobody could envisage what was to happen next...

    It's a film that some no doubt find easy to kick, such is the uncomplicated structure used, and the formula of messaging that drives it forward. Yet sometimes uncomplicated is all you need, and in this day and age of mega-buck blockbusters and soulless frat type comedies grasping at sex for laughs, this is a film of refreshing qualities. It's superbly performed by what is a top notch group of adult British actors, who in turn are supplemented by three child actors so natural and engaging it makes you wonder if acting school is really needed?

    It's obviously a piece that will resonate more with those who have been touched/stung by the thematics at work, while the comedy ticking away - with some truly great lines uttered - could seem a bit off kilter for the unprepared, but hopefully more will watch it, laugh and cry and ultimately realise that life really is too short for, well, you get the picture I'm sure. 8/10
  • rainysnows31 October 2014
    Warning: Spoilers
    I loved Billy Connelly in this , he made the film for me .But the parents of the kids ,and the kids themselves are pretty annoying .Overlooking the fact the that kids are all about under ten - going on 80 , and are so mouthy and precocious that you kind of wanted the social worker to break the family up to allow them all to have a rest from all the whining and arguing and constant bickering .It was still hard to believe they slapped a happy ending on it after the mother saying a few scant words that somehow made it all right .

    Great first half that deteriorated into mayhem, unbelievable events and a cheesy ending that was cringe worthy .4 points for Billy and 2 for the lovely Scottish scenery .
  • Read such good reviews but was so let down with this unfunny very improbable story. If this actually happened, Social Services would be swarming around the Highlands like ants and the adults taken into custody pronto. Billy was great, but he always is, unfortunately could not save this Muppet from disaster. I gave it 4 for him.
  • Great movie. First of, it brings twists and turns in the plot, or at least I really did not expect it to go in the direction it did. Therefore, I could say that the movie is "alive", it follows its own path and it does so sublimely. So it went like this - we thought we are watching a comedy, then at some point we were glued to the screen, but someone asked "Is this supposed to be a comedy, really?". Then by the end we had cried and laughed and it all felt nicely and yet powerfully cathartic. A good movie to watch when wondering what is life and living all about. And to remember that children are the future and the hope for healing the soul of humanity, so tired and entangled in its complicated problems nowadays. No spoilers, just watch it. And wait for it...
  • Right, so this film has David Tennant in it. Wait, you need more?

    Alrighty. It is great testament to the rest of the cast that this talented actor in no way stands out and above the others; everyone does a fantastic job. Even the children (I hardly ever enjoy children in films!)

    This film is not beautiful. It is not thrilling. It is not particularly original, has nothing much to say about social issues of the day and does not include a plot that twists and turns with surprises. So, why have I given it a 7? In short, it is amusing (with some full-on funny moments - I'm thinking of the mention of a taser in particular), endearing and entertaining. Characters are interesting and developed, relationships are fully formed and the story explores them well.

    So, a very 'British film'. Strong on character, endearing and not at all spectacular or gratuitous. Fabby!
  • There is something in this film which will keep you happy from inside . Thiugh it does get dragged in between but just ignore that & enjoy the film.
  • "The truth is, every human being on this planet is ridiculous in their own way. So we shouldn't judge, we shouldn't fight, because in the end, none of it matters." - Gordie McLeod

    Overall rating: 2.50 stars Cinematic rating: 3 stars Family value: 2 stars

    Walking into the cinema... We were in the need of a laugh. Most of the films that have been released in the past few months have been dramatic or action. This looks like a bit of family fun.

    Plot Summary Doug (David Tennant) and Abi (Rosamund Pike) and their three children travel to the Scottish Highlands for Doug's father Gordie's (Billy Connolly) 75th birthday party. Beautiful scenery and the prospect of a family reunion should set this film up for a joyous occasion, but this is a film of family dysfunction. In the manner that only family can provide, this dark comedy attempts to find the humour in divorce, cancer and anxiety on the backdrop of the landscape of Scotland.

    Review

    Family drama/comedy is not new to cinema, family dysfunction has provided great comedic material throughout history. Andy Hamilton and Guy Jenkin's place this dysfunctional family in some of the most beautiful scenery of the Scottish Highlands and on the shores of the cold, clear waters of the Atlantic ocean. Unlike the waters of the Atlantic, this film is tepid at best. Tennant and Pike seem miscast, even with their imminent divorce, there is no chemistry between the two lead characters. The only saving grace of their relationship are their offspring. The three children move this film beyond the ordinary to a appealing story. They are given the best lines in the film and they serve as the adhesive that holds the family together. Until the introduction of Gordie (Billy Connelly), they add the comedic timing that lift the clouds of this dark comedy. Gordie provides hope for the film, but he seems to be held back from exploring his role. Allowing Connelly to run on with his style of comedy would have added laughs that could have turned this film into a endearing comedy. Due to the serious themes, it is understandable that this was never meant to be a laugh-out-loud experience, but most of the comedic portions are awkward. The film had its positive moments and does provide some endearing family experiences, but for every positive moment there is a bizarre, negative counter balance that defuses any comedic momentum. Like the unexplained addition of ostriches in the Highlands, this story is left with too many loose ends to make it a satisfactory experience.

    The innocence of the children provide some of the best philosophical and theological components of the film. The dialogue between the children and their grandfather, Gordie, made for room for heartwarming and humorous moments that allow for deeper considerations. The film missed its mark in the realm of comedy, but opens the door to a multitude of deeper discussions. Even with the best roles of the film being played by seniors and children, What We Did On Our Holiday, the language and adult themes of the film do not make this film suitable for children.

    Leaving the cinema... The waters that surround the Scottish Highlands are beautiful, but with their calm and still manner, they look less than exciting. This film had the potential to be a wonderful family comedy, but like the waters of the Highlands, it felt like being left on a boat without any oars, bored with too much time to think.

    Reel Dialogue: What are the bigger questions to consider from this film? 1. What happens after death? (John 11:25, 1 Corinthians 15:51-57) 2. What value does marriage have on our society? (Matthew 19:5; Mark 10:7,8) 3. Are all gods the same? (John 14:6, Acts 4:12)

    Written by Russell Matthews based on a five star rating system @ Russelling Reviews #russellingreviews
  • I was hesitant to go to see this, since the critics panned it (by and large). But absolutely no regrets.

    I have rarely seen a cinema full of people having so much fun. Great one liners, touching moments which still retain some authenticity despite a daft plot, and brilliant child actors.

    The three leads - Billy Connolly, Rosamund Pike and David Tennant - all turn in notable performances, but its the three children who are the most remarkable.

    There are also some nice positive life messages worked in, to take or leave as the viewer wishes.

    Not to be missed.
  • The script is pretty rubbish; it's something that was obviously written by high school students.

    However, the performances are fantastic. Every single actor puts in an amazing effort; and Emilia Jones is a standout, for her age. Worth watching just to appreciate the performers. Not the story, that's awful.
  • It's not easy holding your life together, when your marriage seems to go south. Especially when kids are involved. Kids that do pick up on things and will let you know. Throw "Grandpas" Birthday into the mix and playing house almost becomes impossible. But what could have been a sour look filled with drama, is more like a light comedy, about death, family and life in general.

    To pull this off, you have to have good actors. And you will not be surprised by the performances of the adults in this. You might be surprised by the performance of the kid actors though. They are really good and help carry the movie. Of course not all is light and fun throughout, but the overall experience is what you could expect :o)
  • Pro tip: like "Ondine" - the Irish fairy tale story about seal people - you are going to need to turn on your close captioning to fight your way through the Scottish accents in this family dramedy about a family falling apart. It will be well worth it as the film includes a host of excellent one-liners often delivered by children (Father: "so you have a big rock that protects you from other big rocks?" Daughter: "yes, just like in real life."). The surprisingly aging comedian Billy Connelley plays the dying patriarch whom the family goes to visit on their holiday as the parent cope to create a soft landing for the children from their impending divorce. Hilarity ensues. Much of it that farcical manners comedy where people act in a way that best serves the comedy rather than reflecting the actual way people behave. Given the age of the children, some of the divorce drama (Pike's character screams: "Wallace is the name of the man I'm screwing" in front of them) gets uncomfortable and when played for laughs makes the audience uncomfortable. Still, anything the exquisite Pike stars in can't not be worth viewing. In short, a good little foreign film if you can follow the dialog.
  • What a great film this is, carrying on in the Great British tradition of Local Hero and Whisky Galore. It has been a long time since I heard such laughter in a cinema and everyone came out with smiles. Now it's not some daft children's film, on the surface it looks a simple feel good romp, but it's not, it goes to very interesting places and it really took me by surprise. Set in Scotland it looks superb (I'm a sucker for the Scottish landscape), The child actors are simply stunning (their scenes with their Grandfather are beautiful) the script (apparently improvised at times sparkles with fun and creativity. How I recommend this film to anyone wanting a great trip to the cinema but please don't research it too much, watch out for spoilers and avoid them. Come to the film fresh as I did. Enjoy.
  • Loved this film, it's so cute. The kids are great in it and it really carries the film. The usual message of love and family above all, is present but not in a too pushy way. Well recommended for an 'easy' evening film for the whole family.
  • Short and sweet I found the characters (not the actors) EXTREMELY annoying....The kids are way too precocious what made it almost unbearable to watch. The adult characters straddling stupidity.....I can't recommend
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