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Love Actually

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Wikipedia article




{{Infobox film

| name = Love Actually

| image = Love Actually movie.jpg

| caption = Theatrical release poster

| director = Richard Curtis

| producer =

| writer = Richard Curtis

| starring =

| music = Craig Armstrong

| editing = Nick Moore

| cinematography = Michael Coulter

| studio =

| distributor = Universal Pictures (Worldwide)
Mars Distribution (France)

| released =

| runtime = 136 minutes

| country =

| language = English

| budget = $4045 million

| gross = $246.8 million

}}

'Love Actually' is a 2003 Christmas-themed romantic comedy-drama film written and directed by Richard Curtis. It features an ensemble cast, composed predominantly of British actors, many of whom had worked with Curtis in previous film and television projects. Mostly filmed on location in London, the screenplay delves into different aspects of love as shown through ten separate stories involving a wide variety of individuals, many of whom are shown to be interlinked as the tales progress. The story begins five weeks before Christmas and is played out in a weekly countdown until the holiday, followed by an epilogue that takes place one month later.

An international co-production between the United Kingdom, the United States and France, the film was released in the United States on 14 November 2003 and a week later in the United Kingdom, to generally mixed reviews. 'Love Actually' was a box-office success, grossing $246 million worldwide on a budget of $4045 million. It received a nomination for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture Musical or Comedy. Frequently shown during the Christmas season, the film has proved more popular with audiences than critics, and it has been discussed as being arguably a modern-day Christmas staple.

A made-for-television short film sequel, 'Red Nose Day Actually', aired in two different versions on BBC One and NBC in 2017.

Plot



A voiceover (Hugh Grant) opens the film, commenting that whenever he gets gloomy about the state of the world he thinks of the arrivals gate at Heathrow Airport, about the pure uncomplicated love of friends and families welcoming their loved ones. He also points out that the messages from the 9/11 victims were messages of love and not hate. The story then switches between the interconnecting 'love stories' of many people:

Billy Mack and Joe

With his long-time manager Joe (Gregor Fisher), rock and roll legend Billy Mack (Bill Nighy) records a Christmas version of the Troggs' 1967 song "Love Is All Around", titling it "Christmas Is All Around". Although believing the record is terrible, Mack promotes the release in the hope it will become the Christmas number one single, which it does. He foregoes a victory party hosted by Elton John to celebrate Christmas with Joe, getting drunk and watching porn.

Juliet, Peter and Mark

Juliet (Keira Knightley) and Peter's (Chiwetel Ejiofor) wedding is videotaped by the best man, Mark (Andrew Lincoln), where a surprise band plays the Beatles' "All You Need Is Love" as they walk out of the church. Although the couple believe Mark dislikes Juliet, he is actually in love with her. When he evades her requests to see the video he shot at the wedding, she shows up at his flat. Juliet insists she wants them to be friends, but when she views the wedding video Mark recorded, she sees many extreme close-ups of herself and few of Peter's face. She realises Mark's true feelings towards her. After an uncomfortable silence, Mark blurts out that he acts cold out of "self-preservation".

On Christmas Eve, Juliet answers the doorbell to find Mark carrying a boombox playing a Christmas carol and large cue cards. While Peter is inside watching television, Mark tells a message of his love to Juliet through the cue cards. As he walks away down the street, Juliet runs after him, gives him a quick kiss and returns inside.

Jamie and Aurlia

Writer Jamie (Colin Firth) is pushed by his girlfriend (Sienna Guillory) to attend Juliet and Peter's wedding alone, as she is ill. He returns before the reception to check on her, discovering she is having sex with his brother. Crushed, Jamie withdraws to his French cottage, where he meets Portuguese housekeeper Aurlia (Lcia Moniz), who does not speak English. Despite not sharing a common language, they share a mutual attraction.

Jamie returns to England, realises he is in love with Aurlia and begins learning Portuguese. He returns to France to find her and ends up walking through town with her father and sister, gathering additional people as they walk to her waitressing job. In basic, and often grammatically incorrect Portuguese, he declares his love for her and proposes. She says yes in broken English, as the crowd erupts in applause.

Harry, Karen and Mia

Harry (Alan Rickman) is the managing director of a design agency. Mia (Heike Makatsch) is his secretary. Harry is happily married to Karen (Emma Thompson), a stay-at-home mother. They have two children, Bernard and Daisy. Mia behaves in an overtly sexual way with him at the office and asks him for a Christmas present. At the company Christmas party held at Mark's gallery, they dance closely.

While Christmas shopping, Harry calls Mia and asks what she wants for Christmas. He is almost caught by his wife purchasing an expensive necklace with a gold heart pendant from the jewellery department when the salesman Rufus (Rowan Atkinson) takes an inordinate amount of time to wrap it. Later, Karen finds the necklace in Harry's coat pocket and assumes it is for her. Opening a similarly shaped box on Christmas Eve, she is heartbroken to find it is a Joni Mitchell CD and realises he bought the necklace for someone else. She confronts Harry and asks what he would do if he were her. She feels he has made a mockery of their marriage and of her.

David and Natalie

David (Hugh Grant), who is Karen's brother, is also the recently elected Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. Natalie (Martine McCutcheon) is a new junior member of the household staff at 10 Downing Street. During a meeting with the U.S. President (Billy Bob Thornton), they come across Natalie and the president makes some inappropriate comments to David about her. Later, David walks in on Natalie serving tea and biscuits to the President, and it appears that something untoward is happening. Natalie seems embarrassed, and the president has a sly grin on his face. At the following joint press conference, David is uncharacteristically assertive while taking a stand against the President's intimidation techniques.

Feeling uncomfortable around Natalie, David has her moved to another position. However, he is spurred to action on Christmas Eve when he finds a Christmas card from her in his red box, declaring that she is his and only his. He finds her after a door-to-door search of her street. Her entire family is on their way to a multi-school Christmas play and he offers to drive them so he can talk to her. As Natalie sneaks him in to the school, he runs into his heartbroken sister, Karen, who believes he is there for his niece and nephew. As David and Natalie try to keep from being seen and watch from backstage, they finally kiss. Everyone sees them kissing as the curtain rises.

Daniel, Sam, Joanna and Carol

Daniel (Liam Neeson), Karen's close friend, mourns the recent death of his wife, Joanna, as he tries to care for his stepson Sam (Thomas Sangster). Sam has fallen for an American classmate, also named Joanna (Olivia Olson), and after talking with his stepfather, decides to learn the drums to accompany her in the big finale for their school's Christmas pageant at Karen and Harry's children's school. Sam feels he has missed his chance to impress her, but Daniel convinces him to try to tell Joanna how he feels at the airport before she returns to the US. Sam slips through airport security and catches up with her. She acknowledges him by name and kisses him on the cheek. Meanwhile, Daniel meets Carol (Claudia Schiffer), the mother of Sam's schoolmate, and there is a mutual spark.

Sarah, Karl and Michael

Sarah (Laura Linney) first appears at Juliet and Peter's wedding, sitting next to her friend Jamie. An American working at Harry's graphic design company, she is in love with the creative director, Karl (Rodrigo Santoro). Prompted by Harry, they finally connect at the Christmas party and Karl drives her home. Michael, her mentally ill brother, telephones from a psychiatric hospital, aborting their tryst. On Christmas Eve they are both working late. Karl tries to find words but just wishes her a merry Christmas and leaves. In tears, Sarah calls Michael and visits him to give him a Christmas gift.

Colin, Tony and the American girls

Unsuccessfully attempting to woo various English women, including Mia and Nancy (Julia Davis), Juliet and Peter's wedding caterer, Colin Frissell (Kris Marshall) informs his friend Tony (Abdul Salis) that he plans to go to America, convinced that his Britishness will be an asset. Landing in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Colin meets Stacey (Ivana Milievi), Jeannie (January Jones) and Carol-Anne (Elisha Cuthbert), three stunningly attractive women who instantly fall for his Estuary English accent, inviting him to stay at their home, where they are joined by their room-mate Harriet (Shannon Elizabeth).

John and Judy

John (Martin Freeman) and Judy (Joanna Page) are professional body doubles for films. They meet doing the sex scenes for a film for which Tony is a production assistant. John tells Judy that "It's lovely to find someone [he] can actually chat to." While they are perfectly comfortable being naked and simulating sex on-set, they are shy and tentative off-set. They carefully pursue a relationship, attending the Christmas pageant (involving David and Natalie, Harry and Karen's children, Daniel and Sam, etc.) at the local school with John's brother.

Rufus

Rufus (Rowan Atkinson) is the jewellery salesman whose meticulous gift-wrapping nearly results in Karen seeing Harry buying a necklace for Mia. In another scene, his distraction of airport staff enables Sam to sneak past them to talk to Joanna. (In the director and cast commentary, it is revealed that Rufus was originally supposed to be a Christmas angel, but this was dropped from the final script.)

Epilogue

One month later, all of the characters are seen at Heathrow Airport. Billy's Christmas single has spurred a comeback. Juliet, Peter and Mark meet Jamie and his bride, Aurlia. Karen and the kids greet Harry, but Karen's stifled reaction suggests they are struggling to move past his indiscretion. Sam greets Joanna, who has returned from America, and Daniel is joined by his new girlfriend Carol and her son. Newlyweds John and Judy, heading off to their honeymoon, run into Tony, who is awaiting Colin's return from America. Colin returns with Harriet and her sister Carla (Denise Richards), who meets Tony for the first time but greets him with a hug and a kiss on the lips. Natalie welcomes David back from his flight in view of the press, showing their relationship is now public. These scenes dissolve into footage of actual arrivals at Heathrow, as the screen is divided into an increasing number of smaller segments which form the shape of a heart.

Story association



All the stories are linked in some way; while Billy Mack and his manager may not connect with any of the other characters physically, Billy appears frequently on characters' radios and TVs, his music video twice providing an important plot device for Sam's pursuit of Joanna, and they also cross paths with the other characters in the closing Heathrow scene. John and Judy work with Tony, who is best friends with Colin, who works for a catering company that services the office where Sarah, Karl, Mia and Harry work. Mia is friends with Mark, who runs the art gallery where the Christmas office party takes place. Mia also lives next door to Natalie. Mark is in love with Juliet and friends with Peter. The couple are friends with Jamie and Sarah. Harry is married to Karen, who is friends with Daniel and her brother is David, who works with Natalie. Harry and Karen's children (and thus David's niece and nephew), Natalie's siblings (and thus Mia's neighbours) and Carol's son are all schoolmates of Sam and Joanna. An additional plot that was dropped in editing concerned the children's headmistress (Anne Reid) and her dying lesbian partner (Frances de la Tour).

Cast



* Alan Rickman as Harry

* Emma Thompson as Karen

* Hugh Grant as David, the Prime Minister

* Keira Knightley as Juliet

* Colin Firth as Jamie

* Sienna Guillory as Jamie's girlfriend

* Lcia Moniz as Aurlia

* Liam Neeson as Daniel

* Thomas Sangster as Sam

* Bill Nighy as Billy Mack

* Gregor Fisher as Joe

* Martine McCutcheon as Natalie

* Chiwetel Ejiofor as Peter

* Andrew Lincoln as Mark

* Laura Linney as Sarah

* Rodrigo Santoro as Karl

* Michael Fitzgerald as Michael

* Kris Marshall as Colin

* Abdul Salis as Tony

* Heike Makatsch as Mia

* Martin Freeman as John

* Joanna Page as Judy

* Olivia Olson as Joanna

* Billy Bob Thornton as the U.S. President

* Rowan Atkinson as Rufus

* Claudia Schiffer as Carol

* Nina Sosanya as Annie

* Ivana Milievi as Stacey

* January Jones as Jeannie

* Elisha Cuthbert as Carol-Anne

* Shannon Elizabeth as Harriet

* Denise Richards as Carla

* Lulu Popplewell as Daisy

* Marcus Brigstocke as Mikey

* Julia Davis as Nancy

* Ruby Turner as Jean

* Adam Godley as Mr Trench

* lisabeth Margoni as Eleonore

*Edward Hardwicke as Sam's Grandfather

*Caroline John as Sam's Grandmother

* Meg Wynn Owen as Mary, PM's secretary

Production



Development



Initially, Curtis started writing with two distinct and separate films in mind, each featuring expanded versions of what would eventually become storylines in 'Love Actually'; those featuring Hugh Grant and Colin Firth. He changed tack, however, having become frustrated with the process. Partly inspired by the films of Robert Altman as well as films such as 'Pulp Fiction', and inspired by Curtis having become "more interested in writing a film about love and what love sort of means" he had the idea of creating an ensemble film. The film initially did not have any sort of Christmas theme, although Curtis's penchant for such films eventually caused him to write it as one.

Curtis's original concept for the film included fourteen different scenarios, but four of them were cut (two having been filmed). The scene in which Colin attempts to chat up the female caterer at the wedding appeared in drafts of the screenplay for 'Four Weddings and a Funeral', but was cut from the final version.'Love Actually' audio commentary The music video for Billy Mack's song, "Christmas Is All Around", is a tribute to Robert Palmer's 1986 video, "Addicted to Love". Curtis has spoken negatively about the editing process for the film, which he labelled in 2014 as a "catastrophe" and "The only nightmare scenario that I've been caught in". The film was rushed in order to be ready for the 2003 Christmas season which he likened to "three-dimensional chess".

Casting

Ant and Dec played themselves in the film with Bill Nighy's character referring to Dec as "Ant or Dec". This refers to the common mistaking of one for the other, owing to their constant joint professional presence as a comedy and presenting duo. The veteran actress Jeanne Moreau is seen briefly, entering a taxi at the Marseille Airport. The soul singer Ruby Turner appears as Joanna Anderson's mother, one of the backing singers at the school Christmas pageant.

Curtis cast his daughter Scarlett in the film; she was given the choice of being an angel or a lobster, and played the part of Lobster number 2 in the nativity play, on the condition that she met Keira Knightley.[https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/keira-knightley-opens-up-about-her-battle-with-ptsd-and-talks-new-film-colette-nbt97gzj6 Keira Knightkey opens up about her battle with PTSD and talks new film Colette]. 'The Times'. . Retrieved 12 August 2019

Helder Costa plays Mr Barros, Aurelia's father. He is a veteran actor in Portuguese cinema.[https://www.imdb.com/name/nm7952826/?ref_=ttfc_fc_cl_t106 IMDB page for Helder Costa]

Locations

Most of the film was made on location in London, including Trafalgar Square, the central court of Somerset House in the Strand, Grosvenor Chapel on South Audley Street near Hyde Park, St Paul's Church, Clapham, the Millennium Bridge, Selfridges department store on Oxford Street, Lambeth Bridge, the Tate Modern in the former Bankside Power Station, Canary Wharf, Marble Arch, the St. Lukes Mews off All Saint's Road in Notting Hill, Chelsea Bridge, the OXO Tower, London City Hall, Poplar Road in Herne Hill, Elliott School in Pullman Gardens, Putney, Heathrow Airport and the Marseille Airport. Scenes set in 10 Downing Street were filmed at Shepperton Studios.

Standing up to the US President

Following Tony Blair's resignation as Prime Minister, pundits and speculators commented on a potential anti-American shift in Gordon Brown's cabinet as a "'Love Actually' moment", referring to the scene in which Hugh Grant's character stands up to the US President. In 2009, during President Barack Obama's first visit to the UK, Chris Matthews referred to the president in 'Love Actually' as an example of George W. Bush and other former presidents' bullying of European allies. Commenting on this, Mediaite's Jon Bershad described the U.S. president character as a "sleazy Bill Clinton/George W. Bush hybrid". In the scene in question, the swaggering president bullies the prime minister and then sexually harasses a member of the household staff. In September 2013, David Cameron made a speech in reply to Russia's comment that Britain was a small insignificant country, which drew comparisons with Hugh Grant's speech during the film.

Soundtrack



US version

The US edition of the soundtrack removed two pieces of score and "Sometimes" by Gabrielle and reordered the tracklist. It also replaced the Girls Aloud cover of "Jump (For My Love)" with the original by The Pointer Sisters, and replaced Maroon 5's "Sweetest Goodbye" with a medley of "Sweetest Goodbye" with "Sunday Morning."

Score

The film's original score was composed, orchestrated and conducted by Craig Armstrong. It was commercially unreleased until 19 November 2021, when it was released digitally by Universal Pictures' Back Lot Music, and on CD by La-La Land Records.

Certifications



The soundtrack album reached number one on the UK Albums Chart, and by Christmas 2018 it had spent 348 weeks on the Chart. It reached the top forty on the US 'Billboard' 200 in 2004 and ranked second on the Top Soundtracks chart. It achieved platinum record status in Australia.

Use in film

The UK and US versions of the actual film contain two instances of alternative music. In the UK cut, the montage leading up to and continuing through the first part of the office party is set to the song "Too Lost in You", by the British group Sugababes. In the US version of the film, this song is replaced with "The Trouble with Love Is", performed by the American singer Kelly Clarkson. Subsequently, in the UK version's end credit roll, the second song is a cover of "Jump (For My Love)" performed by Girls Aloud; in the US version, this song is replaced with "Too Lost in You".

Several songs were heard in the film but did not appear on either soundtrack:

* "Bye Bye Baby (Baby Goodbye)" performed by Bay City Rollers

* "Puppy Love" performed by S Club Juniors

* "All I Want for Christmas Is You" performed by Tessa Niles

* "River" performed by Joni Mitchell

* "Rose" from the 'Titanic' score, written by James Horner

* "Like I Love You" performed by Justin Timberlake

* "All Alone on Christmas" performed by Darlene Love

* "Smooth" by Santana featuring Rob Thomas

* "Silent Night" performed by Pre Teens

* "Good King Wenceslas" performed by Hugh Grant (as David) and Andrew Tinkler (as Gavin)

* "Catch a Falling Star" performed by child cast

Reception



Box office

The Working Title Films production, with a budget of $4045 million, was released by Universal Pictures. It grossed $62.7 million in the United Kingdom, $14 million in Australia and $59.5 million in the US and Canada. It took a worldwide total of $246.2 million.

Critical response

The review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes reported that 64% of 224 critics gave the film a positive review, with an average rating of 6.4/10. The site's critics consensus states: "A sugary tale overstuffed with too many stories. Still, the cast charms." On Metacritic, the film holds a weighted average score of 55 out of 100, based on 41 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews". Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B+" on an A+ to F scale.

Todd McCarthy of 'Variety' called it "a roundly entertaining romantic comedy," a "doggedly cheery confection," and "a package that feels as luxuriously appointed and expertly tooled as a Rolls-Royce" and predicted "its cheeky wit, impossibly attractive cast, and sure-handed professionalism ... along with its all-encompassing romanticism should make this a highly popular early holiday attraction for adults on both sides of the pond". Michael Atkinson of 'The Village Voice' called it "love British style, handicapped slightly by corny circumstance and populated by colorful neurotics". Roger Ebert of the 'Chicago Sun-Times' gave the film out of four stars, describing it as "a belly-flop into the sea of romantic comedy ... The movie's only flaw is also a virtue: It's jammed with characters, stories, warmth and laughs, until at times Curtis seems to be working from a checklist of obligatory movie love situations and doesn't want to leave anything out ... It feels a little like a gourmet meal that turns into a hot-dog eating contest." Susan Wloszczyna of 'USA Today' wrote "Curtis' multi-tiered cake of comedy, slathered in eye-candy icing and set mostly in London at Christmas, serves sundry slices of lovesad, sweet and sillyin all of their messy, often surprising, glory."

Owen Gleiberman of 'Entertainment Weekly' rated it B and called it "a toasty, star-packed ensemble comedy ... [that's] going to make a lot of holiday romantics feel very, very good; watching it; I felt cozy and charmed myself." Nev Pierce of the BBC awarded it four of a possible five stars and called it a "vibrant romantic comedy ... Warm, bittersweet and hilarious, this is lovely, actually. Prepare to be smitten." Carla Meyer of the 'San Francisco Chronicle' opined "[it] abandons any pretext of sophistication for gloppy sentimentality, sugary pop songs and bawdy humor an approach that works about half the time ... most of the story lines maintain interest because of the fine cast and general goodwill of the picture."

In his review in 'The New York Times', journalist A. O. Scott called it "a romantic comedy swollen to the length of an Oscar-trawling epic nearly two and a quarter hours of cheekiness, diffidence and high-tone smirking" and added, "it is more like a record label's greatest-hits compilation or a 'very special' sitcom clip-reel show than an actual movie. ... the film's governing idea of love is both shallow and dishonest, and its sweet, chipper demeanor masks a sour cynicism about human emotions that is all the more sleazy for remaining unacknowledged. It has the calloused, leering soul of an early-60s rat-pack comedy, but without the suave, seductive bravado. ... It is disturbing to see [Emma] Thompson's range and subtlety so shamelessly trashed, and to see Laura Linney's intelligence similarly abused as a lonely, frustrated do-gooder. The fate of their characters suggests that women who are not young, pert secretaries or household workers have no real hope of sexual fulfillment and can find only a compromised, damaged form of love."

In 'Rolling Stone', Peter Travers rated it two stars out of a possible four, saying "there are laughs laced with feeling here, but the deft screenwriter Richard Curtis dilutes the impact by tossing in more and more stories. As a director ... Curtis can't seem to rein in his writer. ... He ladles sugar over the eager-to-please Love Actually to make it go down easy, forgetting that sometimes it just makes you gag." Christopher Orr of 'The Atlantic' was negative toward the work and described it as the least romantic movie of all time, considering its ultimate message to be "It's probably best if you give up on love altogether and get on with the rest of your life."

Although critics' response to 'Love Actually' was mixed, the film is popular among audiences and has been discussed as an arguable modern-day Christmas classic.

Accolades



Other adaptations



The screenplay by Richard Curtis was published by Michael Joseph Ltd. in the United Kingdom and by St. Martin's Griffin in the US.

'Red Nose Day Actually'



In 2017, Richard Curtis wrote a script for Red Nose Day which reunited a dozen characters and picked up their storylines fourteen years later. Filming began in February 2017, and the short film was broadcast on BBC One on 24 March 2017.

See also



* List of Christmas films

* 'Love Is All' (Dutch: 'Alles is Liefde'), 2007 Dutch romantic comedy film inspired by 'Love Actually'

* 'Salute To Love' (Hindi: 'Salaam-e-Ishq'), 2007 Indian film based on 'Love Actually'

* 'He's Just Not That Into You', 2009 American romantic comedy film with multiple protagonists and stories similar to 'Love Actually'.

* 'New Year Trees' (Russian: 'Yolki'), also known as 'Six Degrees of Celebration', 2010 comedy film that launched a successful movie franchise spanning six sequels

* 'Letters to Santa' (Polish: 'Listy do M.'), 2011 Polish film inspired by 'Love Actually'

* "Glee, Actually", 2012 holiday episode from the fourth season of the American musical television series 'Glee'

* 'It All Began When I Met You', 2013 Japanese film inspired by 'Love Actually'

* List of fictional prime ministers of the United Kingdom

References




Buy Love Actually now from Amazon

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