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Joni Mitchell's performance of her hit, "Both Sides Now," has spurred interest in the 2003 movie "Love Actually," which used the song in a tearjerker scene with co-star Emma Thompson.
Keira Knightley, who starred in the romantic 2003 Christmas film "Love Actually," is revealing why she told the movie's director an iconic scene was "creepy." ...
Actress Keira Knightley revealed that the controversial “Love Actually” cue card scene which sparked debate amongst rom-com fans and her fellow cast and crew was a “creepy and sweet” moment.
Keira Knightley revealed that Love Actually director Richard Curtis made her re-shoot her iconic cue card scene with costar Andrew Lincoln in the 2003 movie to make it less "creepy." ...
Also, I knew I was 17. It only seems like a few years ago that everybody else realized I was 17." Andrew Lincoln and Keira Knightley in "Love Actually," 2003.
Andrew Lincoln and Keira Knightley in Love Actually (2003). (Universal/Courtesy Everett Collection) “I mean, there was a creep factor at the time, right? Also, I knew I was 17,” she noted.
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 ...
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.
Love Actually director Richard Curtis has some thoughts on the notorious “stalker scene” in his 2003 Christmastime rom-com. In an interview with The Independent (per the New York Post), Curtis ...
Keira Knightley admitted in a new interview with the Los Angeles Times that she told “Love Actually” director Richard Curtis while filming the infamous cue card scene with Andrew Lincoln that ...
Andrew Lincoln and Keira Knightley in Love Actually (2003). (Universal/Courtesy Everett Collection) “I mean, there was a creep factor at the time, right? Also, I knew I was 17,” she noted.