• Jyoti Sharma Bawa
    Jyoti Sharma Bawa
    Hindustan Times

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    Holiday makes for a satisfying watch and will keep the audience coming. A summer hit is on its way!

  • Rachit Gupta
    Rachit Gupta
    Filmfare

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    Like most Indian masala movies, Holiday tastes best with a generous few pinches of salt. Akshay Kumar’s face looks too old to be a young army captain. But the way he jumps over cars and navigates down building faces is a feat even the fittest 20-year-olds can only dream of. He is the soul of this film. He makes it fun. He gives you your money’s worth. End of the day, that’s all that matters.

  • The conflict, which should’ve effectively made a great thriller, is reduced to a poorly executed school play, where robbers and cops run around aimlessly without a clue on what they are fighting for.

  • Ultimately, Murugadoss makes you wonder if you should be making a movie simply because you’re allowed to make a movie.

  • Komal Nahta
    Komal Nahta
    Komal Nahta's Blog

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    Holiday is an excellent entertainer and will bring in huge crowds to the cinemas. It will keep the audience and the exhibitors very happy. As for the distributors, they will remain happy but less than the others because of the very high prices they have paid for the distribution rights. Incidentally, the film deserves tax-exemption.

  • A.R. Murugadoss’ entertainer displays greater fidelity to its source than did his Ghajini reboot, down to the bloated running length of 170 minutes. The situations are the same, the dialogue is translated verbatim and the heroine hasn’t yet grown a brain, but the Hindi version misses out on the charisma of its leading man. Holiday’s Akshay Kumar is a poor match for Tamil superstar Vijay, who has built a career out of supplanting average acting skills with practised insouciance.

  • A trashy remake of a preposterous Tamil film…