Consider the iconic use of Bill Nighy in a performance that deliberately satirises the film's theme, setting up both its humorous credentials and one of its most endearing explorations of the power of love - devotion to what others view as a lost cause. The film's ending where ordinary people meet and greet at an airport,extending the film's happy ending to one achingly possible for its own audience, seems inspired by a passage in Ian McEwan's 'Enduring Love'.In McEwan's vision of this scenario the process becomes dehumanised by repetition, in Curtis' film it sets the seal on his avowedly determined 9/11 response - that human connections,based on love and trust, forever define our hopes and dreams,representing the best we have to offer.
The movie has reference points for discussion that must play endlessly in universities and workplaces where some take Andrew Lincoln as a hero and others as a destructive nuisance.As time goes by I see its status increasing as 'A Great Escape' or 'Italian Job', a movie that will somehow define its sense of time and place more and more.The way 'Love Actually' nails Blair's greatest mistake and returns to its audience,his audience, a primeminster who fights for integrity rather than posterity, will forever be associated with a sense of momentary wish fulfillment that will always make viewers wistful.
Its ambition,scope and clever political undertow makes this movie both deeply hopeful and a classic - looking out of the car window as it rains hoping for something better type of experience - that always earns this viewers imaginative engagement.
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