Holidate 2020 - 104 Min Commedia Вђў Romance | EXCLUSIVE |

Unlike the polished, G-rated warmth of a Hallmark movie, Holidate leans into R-rated banter and messy human moments.

At its core, Holidate is about the fear of vulnerability. Sloane and Jackson use their "arrangement" as armor. If they aren’t "really" dating, they can’t be rejected. The film’s emotional climax isn’t just about them falling in love; it’s about them being brave enough to admit they want something real in a world that rewards being detached. Holidate 2020 - 104 min Commedia • Romance

Roberts and Bracey have a sharp, combative energy that feels grounded in real-world frustration rather than fairytale whimsy. Unlike the polished, G-rated warmth of a Hallmark

The story follows Sloane and Jackson, two strangers who hate the pressure of holiday dating so much they agree to be each other’s "holidate"—a platonic plus-one for every calendar event of the year. No sex, no commitment, no catching feelings. If they aren’t "really" dating, they can’t be rejected

The "Holidate" Paradox: Why We Crave the Predictable Released in the thick of 2020’s social isolation, Holidate (104 min) arrived as more than just a rom-com; it was a neon-lit escape into a world of crowded parties and low-stakes drama. Starring Emma Roberts and Luke Bracey, the film tackles a universal urban dread: the "Singles Table" during the holidays. The Premise: Outsourcing Intimacy