|
|
The Movie Mystic | by Stephen
Simon
Love, Actually
(135 minutes, rated R for sexuality, nudity, language)
"The" Holidays. Family. Close friends. The end of one year and the beginning
of a new one. A time when one's heart may be at its most vulnerable -- either fully
open to the warmth of all the love that the season can imply, or, perhaps, fully
susceptible to the loneliness that can seem almost unbearable in the longing for
family, a significant other, health, or peace of mind.
Traditionally, Hollywood has embraced this Season with films that touch the beauty
within the soul of humanity, the best known and most enduring example being perhaps
It's A Wonderful Life, which always plays innumerable times during this season (and
in which I get lost each and every time I happen to flip to it when it's on -- I'm
always hooked!!).
Now, with little fanfare, a new film has arisen which may, in years to come, take
its place as a classic Holiday film -- Love, Actually is, "actually," that
wonderful, and it couldn't arrive at a more propitious moment. Unfortunately, cynicism
and the darker side of life have so permeated the corridors of Hollywood that the
so-called "critic's" darlings of this season so far have mostly been films
like Mystic River, The Missing and 21 Grams, all of which "celebrate" the
darker side of humanity. Love, Actually is the antidote to all that darkness and
it is a pleasure to be able to luxuriate in its dizzying and intoxicating recipe
for joy, laughter, pathos and life (and I also have high hopes for other films coming
up like Big Fish, Something's Gotta Give, and Mona Lisa Smiles -- but...we'll see).
Love, Actually begins with a sequence at Heathrow Airport in London where the joyful
greetings of families and loved ones is observed with a wonderful voiceover that
puts the film itself in early perspective. Even with all the anger and hate that
is blared at us in our every day world, writer/director Richard Curtis (Four Weddings
and a Funeral, Notting Hill, Bridget Jones Diary) poignantly observes that, "even
after the planes hit the Twin Towers," the messages from people who were on
those planes were not those of hate or revenge but rather that "love is, actually,
all round us."
The film itself is a compendium of nine mostly-interlocking stories that illuminate
the myriad faces of love:
• A newlywed couple and a best man who seems to be in love with one of the newlyweds
himself -- but which one?
• A man who finds his girlfriend in a tryst with his brother travels to France and
finds a new love -- even though he speaks only English and she only Portuguese.
• An aging rock star (a hilarious Academy Award-worthy performance by Bill Nighy)
attempts a comeback with a lame Christmas song and a beleaguered manager.
• An oversexed and wildly exuberant young man decides that he must go to America
to find sex -- because the woman there will be seduced by his accent!
• The new Prime Minister of England (Hugh Grant -- who else?) meets someone on his
staff on his first day on the job and becomes enchanted with her.
• A widower struggles to help himself and his stepson cope with their new situation
in life -- and also help the boy through his first encounter with love for a schoolmate.
• A woman is hopelessly in love with a co-worker but torn because of her devotion
to her mentally ill brother.
• A couple meets while they are working as stand-ins on a sexually themed film and
must simulate certain very intimate acts for the camera and lighting crew of a film
while actually trying to meet each other as human beings.
• A middle-aged couple faces the careless flirtation of the husband with a zealous
employee while the wife (luminously and poignantly portrayed by the inestimable Emma
Thompson, returning to movies from way too long an absence) struggles to maintain
her dignity (she succeeds!)
On the surface, these many storylines may seem unwieldy but they most assuredly are
not. In fact, they blend together almost seamlessly into an engrossing, hilarious,
often poignant and very human dramatic comedy. As you might have guessed from the
storylines, the film very definitely is R-rated, for tasteful and often hilarious
sexuality. I saw it with 3 of my 4 daughters, all of whom -- including my youngest
at age 17 -- absolutely loved it.
There have been so few films this year that you walk out of feeling happy and proud
to simply be a human being (Whale Rider being at the top of my own list) that Love,
Actually comes along in this particular season as a welcome and refreshing reminder
of the beauty of our humanity...that, above all the strife and challenges that confront
us, we have this unique and endless capacity to consciously immerse ourselves in
the experience of love -- for one another, and for ourselves. I believe that you
will walk out of the theater smiling. And I wish you and your friends a most happy
New Year.
MovieMystic Chakra Rating for Love, Actually
Chakra 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Rating 4 4 3 4 4 3 5
(For an explanation of The Chakra Rating System, please visit www.Movingmediamessages.com)
Stephen Simon has produced such films as Somewhere in Time and What Dreams May
Come and has just produced and directed Indigo (www.Indigothemovie.com). His book
The Force is With You: Mystical Movie Messages That Inspire Our Lives, published
by Walsh Books/Hampton Roads, is now available. Stephen leads seminars, telecourses,
and inspirational Mystical Movie events around the world. For more information, please
visit www.Movingmediamessages.com. Stephen welcomes your comments by e-mail at Stephen
@Movingmediamessagees.com
Copyright © 2004 Stephen Simon |
|
|
|
Jan 2004
|
|
 |
|
|