Current:Home > Markets20 years later, 'Love Actually' director admits handwritten sign scene is 'a bit weird' -RiskWatch
20 years later, 'Love Actually' director admits handwritten sign scene is 'a bit weird'
View
Date:2025-04-14 05:38:27
The British romantic comedy "Love Actually" was released in 2003, a film which many may now consider to be a classic around the holidays.
The movie, directed by Richard Curtis, features the separate, and eventually intertwining stories of a star-studded and mostly-British cast finding love of all kinds around Christmas, including Hugh Grant, Liam Neeson, Keira Knightley and Emma Thompson, among others.
Over the years, however, one scene has become a subject of repeated online discourse. It's near the end of the film, where Mark (played by Andrew Lincoln) silently confesses his love to Juliet (played by Keira Knightley) outside of her home using handwritten signs and telling her "to me, you are perfect," even though she is married to his best friend, who remains inside and oblivious.
'Love Actually':Where to watch, streaming info, TV times and cast
'Love Actually' director: 'We didn't think it was a stalker scene'
In a November interview with The Independent, Curtis said he agrees with the sentiment that the scene is a bit strange.
"He actually turns up, to his best friend’s house, to say to his best friend’s wife, on the off chance that she answers the door, 'I love you,'" Curtis told The Independent. "I think it’s a bit weird."
Curtis added that at the time the film was made, "we didn't think it was a stalker scene. But if it’s interesting or funny for different reasons [now] then, you know, God bless our progressive world."
Has 'Love Actually' aged well? Some disagree
Beyond the sign scene, not everyone looks back fondly on the other moments in "Love Actually."
The movie does (barely) pass the Bechdel Test, a test for movies where two named women in a movie who talk to each other have to have a conversation about something other than a man. One of the only scenes that passes the test is when Karen (played by Emma Thompson) has a conversation with her daughter, Daisy, about her role in the school's nativity play, where she is cast as "first lobster."
The movie has a number of references to women's weight, especially concerning the character Natalie (played by Martine McCutcheon). Natalie works for the Prime Minister (played by Hugh Grant), and tells him her boyfriend dumped her because she was getting fat. There's also a scene where the Prime Minister refers to her as the "chubby girl," and her own father later calls her "Plumpy."
Curtis, in the interview with The Independent, noted that his daughter Scarlett held him to account on some of the more controversial aspects of "Love Actually" and some of his older movies at the Cheltenham Literature Festival in October, especially the ways those movies "in particular treated women and people of color."
Has the entertainment industry changed since 2003's 'Love Actually?'
Although some of the themes and jokes made in "Love Actually" may not differ much from other movies released in 2003, perhaps its yearly scrutiny comes with its association as a holiday movie. In the 20 years since, the entertainment industry has tried to move more toward equality both behind and in front of the camera, although some say it has not moved far enough.
A 2023 report from the USC Annenberg Inclusion Initiative examined 69,858 speaking characters and 1,600 top films from 2007 to 2022. The report found that the percentage of females in leading and co-leading roles reached a 16-year high of 44% in 2022. But there was no meaningful change in the percentage of female-speaking characters: 34.6%, only slightly higher than 2021's mark of 33.1%. Only 15% of 2022’s top 100 movies featured a cast that was gender-balanced, and just one nonbinary character was featured in that crop of projects.
And the annual UCLA Hollywood Diversity Report released in March found ethnic and gender diversity in 2022 movie releases reverted back to 2019 or 2018 levels in a number of metrics, both in front of and behind the camera.
“The fear is that diversity is something is temporary or could be easily cut at any point in either theatrical or streaming,” said Christina Ramón, director of the Entertainment and Media Research Initiative at UCLA, which produced the report.
“What will be interesting to see is what happens in 2023 if it continues to have this bifurcation," Ramón previously said.
Contributing: Associated Press; Brian Truitt, USA TODAY.
veryGood! (5925)
Related
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Amazon will start testing drones that will drop prescriptions on your doorstep, literally
- A security problem has taken down computer systems for almost all Kansas courts
- Belgian officials raise terror alert level after 2 Swedes fatally shot in Brussels
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Despite Biden administration 'junk' fee crackdown, ATM fees are higher than ever
- Former AP videojournalist Yaniv Zohar killed in Hamas attack at home with his family
- Gwyneth Paltrow Reveals Plans to Quit Hollywood After Selling Goop
- Who are the most valuable sports franchises? Forbes releases new list of top 50 teams
- Major solar panel plant opens in US amid backdrop of industry worries about low-priced Asian imports
Ranking
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- Dozens of WWII shipwrecks from Operation Dynamo identified in Dunkirk channel: It's quite an emotional feeling
- Deadly attack in Belgium ignites fierce debate on failures of deportation policy
- Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov arrives in North Korea, Russian state media say
- NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
- Florida parents face charges after 3-year-old son with autism found in pond dies
- Towboat owner pleads guilty to pollution charge in oil spill along West Virginia-Kentucky border
- Car thefts are on the rise. Why are thieves rarely caught?
Recommendation
2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
Inbox cluttered with spam? Here's how to (safely) unsubscribe from emails
Love Is Blind Villain Uche Answers All Your Burning Questions After Missing Reunion
Can New York’s mayor speak Mandarin? No, but with AI he’s making robocalls in different languages
Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
Why the tunnels under Gaza pose a problem for Israel
Wolfgang Van Halen marries Andraia Allsop in ceremony that honors his late father Eddie Van Halen
Maryland medical waste incinerator to pay $1.75M fine for exposing public to biohazardous material