What We Did on
Our Holiday
Dir: Andy Hamilton, Guy Jenkin
2014
**
Andy Hamilton and Guy Jenkin are great writers and on paper, What
We Did on Our Holiday is a wonderful story. The two writers aren't great
directors though and this is one of the worst examples of film editing I have
seen for a very long time. However, story wins over editing. Unfortunately, the
acting ruins pretty much everything else that is good about it. The best bits
of the film by a country mile are scenes that feature the three kids on their
own, their interaction with each other and their screen Grandfather, played by
Billy Connolly. Andy Hamilton and Guy Jenkin had great success on
British TV with a sitcom called Outnumbered about three imaginative and at
times, mischievous kids and their parents. What We Did on Our Holiday could easily be the film version of this TV
show, albeit with totally different actors which is a shame as we've seen it
before and the actors in the TV sitcom are much better performers. Basically,
it's a sweet little film with some great ad-libbed performances by the
kids that is almost completely ruined by the awful performances by David
Tennant, Rosamund Pike and Ben Miller. Tennant has done Shakespeare, as
has Pike who gave one of the best performances in recent years in the same year
as this film (Gone
Girl). Miller is a great comedic actor and Billy Connolly can
generally do no wrong but none of these talented adults could raise their
performances above pitiful/way below average. The crux of the story is
shoehorned between some real dire cinema, which is an absolute crime as the
whole point of the story, the big event as it were, is something unique and
truly wonderful. The golden part of the scene, which last only about 15
minutes, is something profoundly wonderful but I'm afraid Hamilton
and Jenkin squandered it with cheap gags and terrible plot twists. The best
jokes in the film aren't written and come straight from the kids and they
deserve all credit. They put the adults to shame but then it's hard to
tell who to blame, poor performances by talented actors or poor direction by
talented writers. It's a huge wasted opportunity, when it could have been a
brilliant comedy indie, possibly the best the UK has seen for a couple of
decades. Incredibly frustrating stuff, I almost want Hollywood to remake it and
you know it's bad when that seems like a good idea. Worth watching for those 15
golden minutes, just try to ignore the rest.
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