Let’s lay it all on the table from the start: it’s been too long since we’ve had a Christmas movie worthy of recommendation, let alone one that can genuinely warm the heart without relying on overused clichés. Most of us keep revisiting Home Alone, Elf, or even Die Hard when we need that cozy, blanket-worthy holiday feeling. But finally, we have something fresh to add to the mix—Alexander Payne’s The Holdovers.
Payne’s reunion with Paul Giamatti, following their brilliant collaboration in Sideways, already set expectations high. And it delivers. The Holdovers isn’t just a Christmas movie—it’s a deeply human film that earns its place in holiday cinema and brings back a sense of storytelling that connects, comforts, and, most importantly, resonates.
Set in a snow-covered New England prep school in the 1970s, the story brings together three seemingly incompatible characters who end up spending Christmas break together. Paul Hunham (Paul Giamatti) is a Ill-tempered teacher with little patience for anyone, much less himself. Assigned to oversee a group of students unable to go home for the holidays, he clashes most with Angus (Dominic Sessa), a quick-witted but troubled 15-year-old navigating rejection and belonging. Rounding out this unlikely trio is Mary (Da’Vine Joy Randolph), the school cook quietly grieving her own devastating loss.
What unfolds is a story that avoids grand gestures and sweeping resolutions. Instead, it’s about the quiet, often prickly ways people slowly come to understand each other when forced into close quarters.
From its very first frame, The Holdovers transports you. The grainy cinematography and perfectly retro opening credits signal that this film isn’t just set in the 1970s—it feels like it was made in that decade. Every detail, from the costumes to the décor, feels specific and essential.
Payne’s strength lies in his deliberate pacing. The characters evolve naturally—there are no sudden epiphanies, no big, dramatic shifts, just the real and tender moments that accumulate over time.
Paul’s dull suits mirror his uptight demeanor, while Angus’s messy uniform underscores his rebilion. Even Mary’s understated, practical wardrobe reflects her quiet resilience. These visual choices extend to the dialogue and gestures, which are authentic to the time and place.
Paul Giamatti’s performance is everything you’d expect and more. He inhabits Paul Hunham with a sharp wit and biting sarcasm that somehow doesn’t alienate you. Instead, you find yourself rooting for him as his layers of regret and vulnerability come to light.
Dominic Sessa, making his debut, is a revelation. His Angus is both maddening and deeply sympathetic—a portrayal that captures the messy contradictions of adolescence.
Then there’s Da’Vine Joy Randolph as Mary, who delivers a performance of remarkable restraint and depth. She anchors the emotional heart of the film with her portrayal of a woman carrying the weight of grief with quiet dignity.
Together, these three actors create a dynamic that is raw, funny, and profoundly moving.
Payne’s genius lies in his ability to seamlessly blend tones. The humor here is sharp, arising naturally from the characters and their situations. But just as quickly, the film can pivot to moments of quiet melancholy without ever feeling jarring.
At its core, The Holdovers is about growth—not the dramatic, life-altering kind, but the small, steady kind that comes from being forced to look inward. The relationships between Paul, Angus, and Mary evolve not through grand acts but through the accumulation of shared experiences, humor, and even conflict.
This understated approach draws comparisons to Dead Poets Society in its exploration of student-teacher dynamics. But unlike Dead Poets, The Holdovers rejects grandiosity, opting instead for a grounded, intimate portrayal of its characters’ journeys.
For years, the Christmas movie genre has been a sea of formulaic sentimentality, and yet we’ve kept turning to the same classics because they deliver what we crave: warmth, humor, and a sense of belonging. Payne understands this—and with The Holdovers, he gives us all of that but in a way that feels fresh, authentic, and necessary.
This isn’t a sugar-coated holiday flick. Instead, it’s the kind of feel-good movie we’ve forgotten how to make. It walks into the room, shrugs off the modern cynicism dominating cinema today, and unapologetically restores a belief in the transformative power of human connection. It’s a rare gem in today’s cinematic landscape and a much-needed reminder of the kind of storytelling that makes us fall in love with movies in the first place.
Rating: ★★★★★★★★★☆ (9/10)