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Love Actually review

Posted : 2 months, 3 weeks ago on 18 February 2024 02:39

(MU) Mucha miel inunda cada historia pero alternan tan bien, con tan buen ritmo,que pegan. La de Bill Nighy como viejo rockero calentón en un single navideño, vale por todas las demás. La del primer ministro Hugh Grant es la peor


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Love Actually review

Posted : 2 years, 1 month ago on 28 March 2022 01:44

Some parts of the movie are very sentimental, but Love Actually is a well-directed and well-acted film. The script is intelligent and funny, and while the story is a little confusing, as there are so many characters, I highly recommend this. The direction by Richard Curtis is very good and well paced. I think the film's main strengths are the acting and the well-developed characters. The standout is Bill Nighy, in an unlikely but actually hilarious role. Though Emma Thompson and Alan Rickman are very good as well, in one of the more interesting stories. There is also Laura Linney and Liam Neeson, two talented actors, if you see the two of them in Kinsey you'll know what I mean. Keira Knightly, Hugh Grant and Kris Marshall also delight. In conclusion, look out for this film. I was annoyed a bit by Rowan Atkinson, but I really like this. 9/10 Bethany Cox


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An average movie

Posted : 8 years, 6 months ago on 21 October 2015 11:21

I already saw this movie (In fact, I’m pretty sure I saw it in the movie theater when it was released) but my wife was quite eager to check it out again. First of all, I have to confess that I have always had a weak spot for romantic-comedies. Unfortunately, there are in fact not so many great romantic-comedies out there and most of them are actually terribly underwhelming. Anyway, in this genre, this movie is pretty much a classic so you might assume that I really loved the damned thing. On top of that, it was written and directed by Richard Curtis, the guy who wrote ‘Four Weddings and a Funeral’ which is easily one of the very best movies in this genre, at least, in my opinion. Well, eventually, even though I thought it was not bad, I can’t say I really loved the damned thing though. I mean, sure, there was an impressive cast involved, maybe the biggest one I have ever seen in a romantic-comedy (Bill Nighy, Colin Firth, Sienna Guillory, Liam Neeson, Emma Thompson, Martin Freeman, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Andrew Lincoln, Keira Knightley, Hugh Grant, Laura Linney, Thomas Brodie-Sangster, Alan Rickman, Rodrigo Santoro, Billy Bob Thornton, Rowan Atkinson, January Jones, Elisha Cuthbert, Claudia Schiffer, Shannon Elizabeth, Denise Richards). However, even though the various stories involved were usually quite cute, I don't think that any of them was really amazing. That’s also the problem with having so many characters and so many sub-plots, as a result, you never spend enough time with one single story to really care about it. At least, not all these little stories did end up with a sappy happy-ending which was refreshing but they were still alll rather half-baked. Anyway, to conclude, even though I think it is actually rather overrated, I have to admit that it is still a decent watch though and it is definitely worth a look, especially if you like the genre. 



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I was not disappointed, I was surprised actually

Posted : 10 years, 5 months ago on 19 November 2013 05:42

'Love Actually' is just a really entertaining movie, hilarious, clever and charming

'Love Actually' features a very large collection of (mostly) English actors (Hugh Grant, Liam Neeson, Colin Firth, Laura Linney, Emma Thompson, Alan Rickman, Keira Knightley, Martine McCutcheon, Bill Nighy, Lucia Moniz, Joanna Page, Martin Freeman, Rodrigo Stanorto, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Andrew Lincoln, Kris Marshall, Abdul Salis, Heike Makatsch, Billy Bob Thornton, Thomas Sangster, Rowan Atkinson), how could they afford most of them? There were five producers! If there were one producer, he or she would be made of money!

The connections of the stories are very clever and interesting; although Billy Mack and Joe don't connect to anyone, the rest of the connections actually work!

Emma Thompson and Bill Nighy give the best performances in 'Love Actually' and the best scene is Hugh Grant's dancing scene, there is also a very good scene where Karen realizes Harry loves someone else and puts herself together

But the epilogue is just so smart at the end and one of the best scenes in the movie, 'Love Actually' is one of those comedies where everything good occurs at the end

To conclude, it is my favorite Richard Curtis movie and a must-see for any comedy lover


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Another treasured Christmas film.

Posted : 14 years, 3 months ago on 24 January 2010 08:16

I had high expectations for Love Actually because of it having a large ensemble cast that has a lot of talented British actors and actresses. When I saw Love Actually, I absolutely loved it!! I thought this film was absolutely hilarious with such brilliant jokes and funny moments within the film. It is a film that has many different stories that combine together perfectly to bring a beautiful, heartwarming and almost tearjerking conclusion. There are a lot of romantic comedies that I have seen in the past that have either really annoyed me due to its soppy romance that are packed with sex scenes and graphic nudity that hardly have any drama in it at all but this one amongst a few others aren't like that. I love romantic comedies that obviously have romance and comedy in it but drama too just like this one has. This isn't just watching a romantic comedy, it's like in a dream where you would see different people's lives effected and what the beauty of them are and seeing a beautiful ending like you're in some sort of fantasy world. It was like watching a soap opera on TV as well because of the storylines in the film.


Every single actor did an absolutely fantastic job in this film with moving and funny performances but I have to say that I think the funniest performance was Hugh Grant as the British Prime Minister and the most emotional was Liam Neeson as Daniel. There are 10 storylines within Love Actually. They are: Billy Mack and Joe (Bill Nighy and Gregor Fisher), Juliet, Peter and Mark (Keira Knightley, Chiwetel Ejiofor and Andrew Lincoln), Jamie and Aurélia (Colin Firth and Lúcia Moniz), Harry, Karen and Mia (Alan Rickman, Emma Thompson and Heike Makatsch), David and Natalie (Hugh Grant and Martine McCutcheon), Daniel, Sam and Joanna (Liam Neeson, Thomas Sangster and Olivia Olsen), Sarah and Karl (Laura Linney and Rodrigo Santoro), Colin, Tony and the Wisconsin girls (Kris Marshall, Adbul Salis, Ivana Milicevic, January Jones, Elisha Cuthbert, Shannon Elizabeth and Denise Richards), John and Judy (Martin Freeman and Joanna Page) and Rufus (Rowan Atkinson). My favourite storyline is David and Natalie because it is very powerful, emotional and funny that becomes very peaceful. What I love the most about this film is that all of these actors join together to send a very important message: Christmas is spent and is about being with loved ones as well as the birth of Jesus Christ.


The directing was absolutely perfect!! I could very easily notice the determination and hard work that was put into this film not only with the acting and writing but also of what the backgrounds sceneries were like. Richard Curtis is a good director who shouldn't be underestimated. He has produced, written and directed other romantic comedies like Four Weddings And A Funeral, Notting Hill and Bridget Jones's Diary. The writing was absolutely fantastic! This film was written in a perfect way due to the genres that it is part of.


Love Actually is one of the most beautiful films that I have ever watched in my life! It is filled with pure pleasure that brings delight to your heart. I have seen quite a lot of romantic-comedies but I have to say that Love Actually is the best romantic comedy ever made; simple as. It is my third favourite Christmas film ever after Its A Wonderful Life and Home Alone. Also, it is one of the greatest films of 2003 and has one of the greatest ensemble casts of all time too.


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A Robert Altman film on Prozac and Viagra...

Posted : 14 years, 4 months ago on 27 December 2009 06:24

"If you look for it, I've got a sneaking suspicion... love actually is all around."


As implied by the title, Richard Curtis' Love Actually is a film about love. In an age characterised by cynicism, terrorism and tragedy, this is an unashamedly upbeat romantic comedy - it proclaims that even in the direst of circumstances, love is all around, and, if we're unable to see it, it's because we're not looking. This sentiment, which constitutes the film's core, may seem overly cloying and mushy, but writer-director Curtis is so earnest in upholding the notion that it comes across as genuinely touching. Like most comedies featuring such a sizable ensemble cast, Love Actually is a bit bloated and overstuffed. Nonetheless, this is an endearing odyssey into the most essential human emotion, and it's destined to leave you warm and fuzzy inside. Containing a cast of more than twenty main characters who feature in separate yet intertwining stories, Love Actually could be described as a Robert Altman film on Prozac and Viagra.


Playing out as a string of short vignettes, the movie concerns a group of semi-linked Londoners during the lead-up to Christmas. These stories are about love in all of its multiple forms and guises: love between siblings, love between parents and children, love between spouses, puppy love, platonic love, unrequited love, and sexual/romantic love. There are characters falling in love and characters falling out of love. Some characters are with the right people, and some are with the wrong people. Some are looking to have an affair while others are in a period of mourning. In terms of characters, there's the new Prime Minister (Hugh Grant) who cannot express his feelings for his new personal assistant, as well as a photographer in love with his best friend's new wife, a pair of naked movie stand-ins who grow closer while assuming coital positions, and a burnt-out rock star named Billy Mack (Bill Nighy) who has released a new single. Yet, the content is not limited to these aforementioned stories - there's much, much more within.


The film's core message - that love is everywhere but not as newsworthy as hate or destruction - is manifested in the picture's bookend which takes place at the airport and shows the arrival gate full of anonymous smiles, hugs and kisses. After all, what's more symbolic than the inherent rom-com cliché of the airport? Love Actually marks the directorial debut of Richard Curtis, who's no stranger to success. He was responsible for such TV shows as Blackadder, Mr. Bean and The Vicar of Dibley. His big-screen writing credits include Four Weddings and a Funeral, Notting Hill and Bridget Jones's Diary. As viewers of Curtis' prior works should be aware of, the filmmaker ably tempers romanticism with comedy. Love Actually therefore provides a welcome amount of comedic scenarios - there's a hilarious scene in which Rowan Atkinson plays a department store attendant, and the ubiquitous presence of Billy Mack; the outspoken, addled and often offensive rock star who proves to be his publicist's worst nightmare due to the fact that he never hesitates to proclaim that his new single is commercial shit. Love Actually is frequently pleasant and often downright hilarious.


The problem with Love Actually is that there's just too much here, and all the tales are therefore reduced to mere stocking stuffers with barely sketched characters and situations. The stories are easy to follow, but it's difficult to genuinely care about the various protagonists; each of which were allotted approximately 8 minutes of screen-time (apparently more than 60 minutes of footage was cut to get the movie down to acceptable release length). Curtis could have crafted a stronger package by excising a few plotlines, or simply using the concept for a television series instead. Furthermore, some of the stories are resolved in a true-to-life manner, while others are fantasy. The key offender in this department is a tale concerning a libidinous chum who's convinced he'll score tonnes of women in America due to his "cute British accent". The concept itself is amusing because it's built around a core of truth, but when the cliché turns out to be true beyond his wildest dreams, Curtis appears to have wandered off into a bizarre realm of British male fantasy. The fantastical elements could be accepted as part of the film's overall optimism, but one gets the sense that Curtis keeps changing the rules, with half the picture acknowledging the untidiness of real life and the other half operating more along the lines of wish fulfilment.


For all intents and purposes, Love Actually probably shouldn't work - it has too many characters and too many stories. Despite this, it does work, and it works smashingly; dissecting love, lust and loss with startling precision while scoring a healthy mix of laughs and tears at every turn. While there's an overabundance of characters, every one of them is worth spending time with - they are all people who feel real, flawed and engaging, and I'd be perfectly willing to sit through another two hours of them fumbling their way through the messy misery of falling in love, staying in love, or loving people in their lives that they ultimately cannot be with. When the end credits roll, it's impossible not to smile or feel heart-warmed. It'd take a cranky, Scrooge-like person to not fall for this film's persuasive charm. Plus, if the biggest complaint about a motion picture is that there's not enough of it, that's surely indicative of a very enjoyable film.


Easily the biggest pleasure afforded by Love Actually is the cast, which is packed with a bunch of fine British actors. Hugh Grant, Liam Neeson, Colin Firth, Laura Linney, Emma Thompson, Alan Rickman, Keira Knightley, Kris Marshall, Martin Freeman, Bill Nighy and the aforementioned Rowan Atkinson are present here, just to name a few. Billy Bob Thornton even makes a cameo appearance as the President of the United States. To wax enthusiastically about the cast would take days, but suffice it to say this is an amazing ensemble, and there's not a dud performance in sight. Every member of the cast managed to shape dynamic, distinct characters, and this helps keep story confusion to a minimum. Extra credit is due for Neeson who's boundlessly likable, and for a very agreeable Hugh Grant as the Prime Minister. However, all of the stars are trumped by Billy Nighy, who's an absolute show-stealer as Billy Mack. Nighy is a hoot, and he committed to the role 100%.


As a Christmas love story, Love Actually is romantic and jubilant enough to become a yuletide mainstay for adults. The London setting was beautifully photographed by Michael Coulter, and the soundtrack is pitch-perfect, with great Christmas tunes and some fantastic orchestral work. Despite running at over two hours, the pace was kept fast by Curtis who refused to waste a moment of screen-time. Luckily, this helps viewers to overlook the fluffy, sugar-coated nature of the material. Yes, the film is clichéd, but it's smart, funny, entertaining and poignant; sidestepping the usual genre pitfalls to weave a thoroughly enjoyable exploration of the human heart. This is a delightful way to spend a couple of hours, and it's terrific to witness so many of Britain's best actors sharing screen space.

7.9/10



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