B172-DES116
DVD Review of Love
Actually
Copyright © by
Dan Schneider, 11/6/04
The good thing about DVDs is that, aside from superior audiovisual
quality, the extras that come with them can be engaging, more often than
worthless. Usually, the best extras on a DVD are the film commentary tracks, and
the making of featurettes. The worst are generally outtakes (there’s
a reason most never made their films) and self-serving interviews. Sometimes
all the extras blow, as when a director or star uses the commentary track as a
vehicle for self-fellatio, and other times all the extras rock with insight.
Such is the case with the DVD of the film Love Actually, whose extras are
spare, but the few it has are good.
The commentary with director Richard Curtis, and stars Hugh Grant and
Bill Nighy, is a delightful ‘conversation’ on the various elements of the
film. There’s enough background material on the actors and song choices to
interest hard-edged cinephiles, while the breezy conversational tone does not
allow for too much sententious puffery- something that directors such as James
Cameron & Ridley Scott are notorious for. The deleted scenes are actually
interesting, for they do lend some insights to the characters in this large
ensemble film. Most deleted scenes are just poorly written or superfluous
because they ape other, better scenes that were retained. There’s a music
video of the film’s title song, The Trouble With Love Is, by American
Idol winner Kelly Clarkson. It’s an abysmally trite & overproduced tune-
and the worst in a film that makes some excellent soundtrack choices. Which
leads me to the last and best DVD feature- director Curtis’s takes on some of
his song choices. His explanations of why he chose certain songs are actually
entertaining & insightful in terms of the context they were deployed in the
film.
Love
Actually is a delightful romantic comedy set in London whose only flaw is
that it may be not quite the right length. With a large ensemble it should have
been a bit longer to flesh out all the characters, or trimmed by removing the
weakest 1 or 2 tales. This is director Curtis’s first film, although he penned
3 other romantic comedy hits in the last decade: Four
Weddings And A Funeral, Notting Hill,
and Bridget Jones’s Diary.
Let me briefly summarize the main characters’ travails. There’s a wasted
old singer named Billy Mack (Bill Nighy) and his manager Joe (Gregor Fisher).
Billy’s trying to revive his career with a cheesily bad Christmas single.
There’s the British Prime Minister (Hugh Grant), and a maid at 10 Downing
Street that he falls in love with, Natalie (Martine McCutcheon). The PM’s
sister is Karen (Emma Thompson), whose husband Harry (Alan Rickman) is a
magazine editor being relentlessly pursued by his horny young secretary Mia
(Heike Makatsch). Karen also has a recently widowered friend named Daniel (Liam
Neeson), whose stepson Sam (Thomas Sangster) is experiencing his first pangs of
puppy love for a great young singer named Joanna (Olivia Olsen, a black girl,
in a rare nod to the reality of human sexuality). Harry’s office also has
other romantic contretemps- an American named Sarah (Laura Linney) who
unrequitedly has loved a co-worker named Karl
(Rodrigo Santoro) for years. Then there’s a writer named Jamie (Colin
Firth), whose left his wife after catching her screwing his brother. He also
falls in love with a maid, Aurelia, he’s hired to clean his house. She is played
by Lucia Moniz, & does not speak a
word of English, yet they communicate wordlessly- moreso than many of the other
couples. Then there is Juliet (Keira Knightley- imagine a sexier,
perfected version of Wynona Ryder) who is loved by two best friends Peter (Chiwetel
Ejiofor) her husband (a black man, in a rare nod to the reality of mixed
marriages) and Mark (Andrew Lincoln)- whom she thinks hates her, but really
has loved her from afar, a young man named Colin (Kris Marshall), who fantasizes
about American women, and heads off for the U.S., and John and Judy (Martin
Freeman and Joanna Page) who are naked stand-ins for film actors.
The film,
however, does a remarkable job of balancing the characters because it focuses on
just those moments of true human depth, then as that moment lingers in the
memory it is forcefully submerged to work in a subliminal way on the viewer’s
memories of love, as the next well-written snippet of a tale plays on. Yet, not
all the pieces are about sexual love, which is what makes this film a bit of a
uniquity in the genre.
The washed up
singer Billy decides to spurn an invitation to a Christmas party thrown by Elton
John after his single reaches #1 & he has to pay off a bet by singing naked
on television. Why? Because he wants to show his appreciation & love
to his put-upon manager. They spend the evening boozing and watching tv. The
story of the father Daniel and the stepson is a little rushed in places but
there is a delightful scene that takes place in Heathrow airport- where Daniel
scampily incites Sam to pursue his young heartthrob in a grand Romantic gesture.
What is so good about this scene is that it plays off of & subverts the
stale cliché of lovers dashing to meet each other in an airport by having it be
2 10 year olds that do so, especially at an adult’s behest. There is also love
unfulfilled, as Sarah’s and Karl’s Christmas tryst is interrupted by a call
from her mentally ill brother. She chooses to tend to him rather than her
would-be lover. Harry comes close to diddling Mia, but relents, yet Karen’s
finding out he even thought about it leads to problems- Emma Thompson’s acting
during Karen’s breakdown, then her steeled confrontation with Harry is a
moment of truly touching drama in the film, highlighted by the musical selection
of Joni Mitchell’s Both Sides Now, and the fact that their situation is
unresolved by film’s end, show how effectively written and directed the film
is, especially contrasted with Colin’s light-hearted foursome with Milwaukee
superbabes. As for the acting, Thompson and Rickman are not alone in excellence-
Hugh Grant is, along with Brendan Fraser, 1 of the 2 best comic actors going. He
is so good at what he has done in his film career that it’s easy to take him
for granted, as just playing ‘Hugh’- but in this film there are some
genuine moments of tenderness he conveys in his feelings for the maid.
That humor
and drama, neatly wrapped and unresolved endings, can co-exist in this film’s
world shows that Curtis is not a mere sentimentalist in the Frank Capra vein.
His work has more intellectual and emotional honesty, as we also do not get all
the details of each tale for Curtis realizes that his audience is smart enough
to fill in the blanks. He just gives us enough to allow a viewer to draw upon
their own universal experiences with love’s sundry forms- such as the
Juliet-Peter-Mark triangle. There is a scene where Mark comes to Juliet’s
house as she & Peter are watching tv that shows just how smartly written the
film is. When Juliet answers the door Mark tells her to pretend it’s Christmas
carolers. He then professes his undying love for her through cue cards. As he
leaves in the snowy night Juliet rushes out and kisses him- but it is a kiss of
non-sexual love, as she heads back to her husband and Mark resolves to grow up.
This feint away from cliché is one of many felt through the whole film. Even
the most nakedly clichéd scene of the film, where Jamie follows Aurelia to
Portugal, then leads the town down to utter a public proposal to her, is
leavened by both the absurdity of what many of the Portuguese think he’s going
to do to her and the fact that the connection the 2 characters have built up
between their mangled mislanguaged assumptions has been borne out between the
body language of the actors.
The start and
end of the film takes place at Heathrow, where a montage of people being greeted
by their loved ones is lent poignancy by the opening narration of Hugh Grant
stating that all the known messages left by the people who died on the 9/11
airplanes were messages of love and not hate, and the closing song of the Beach
Boys’ God Only Knows. Also effective is the use of cameos in the film,
most notably as dream babes such as Claudia Schiffer, Denise Richards, and
Shannon Elizabeth make brief appearances in the airport as love interests for
some of the diverse characters, who we see now have known each other in casual
ways, each with different takes on love.
Is Love
Actually a film that will challenge you the way 2001: A Space Odyssey
does? No. But it is a film whose well-written and acted characters and charm
will stick in your mind long after their counterparts from lesser, schmaltzier
films in its genre have faded.
[An expurgated version of this article originally appeared on the 10/04 Hackwriters website.]
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