Chris's weekly look at music in movies gets festive for Love Actually!
Love Actually is so loaded with musical sequences you could almost call it a quasi-musical. That said, it is light on holiday music even though it is set at Christmas time. However, you can easily forgive Love Actually if you want it to be loaded on melodic holiday cheer because it uses the Christmas song of the past few decades: Mariah Carey’s All I Want for Christmas is You”.
Like Spider-Man and multiple lobsters’ participation in this Christmas pageant, Love Actually throws everything it can into its insane mix but is nevertheless a delight because of the reliable charms of genre hallmarks. “All I Want for Christmas is You” is about as indispensable as they come and a guaranteed bop. How many times have you already heard it this holiday season and how many more times will you hear it again before it’s over? Despite its ubiquity, the answer to both questions is “probably not enough”.
That the film continues to soar above the impossibly joyful heights of the song is to Love Actually’s credit. But the song, in all its unabashed youthfulness, is what sets this particular love story towards its “only pre-9/11 plausible” airport dash. The indefatigable heart of the song is what convinces us that, sure, Sam’s behavior is worth it if it’s in the name of young love and Christmas. The powers of Mariah convince us to do and support the wildest things.
But Love Actually also anticipates that many tire of holiday music quickly, and without losing that levity. Elsewhere, there is the adult contemporary crooning of Kelly Clarkson, The Beach Boys, and the Pointer Sisters. The musical commodification of romance and the season is part of its humor in the story of Bill Nighy as Billy Mack, turning his trash anthem love song into a quick seasonal cash grab. Look, some Christmas music is junk we love all the same and I’m not not saying that “Christmas is All Around” is on my holiday playlists.
As discussed with Meet Me In St. Louis, the season isn’t all merry festivity for some. In the film’s signature scene Emma Thompson silently takes the film to the next level, frozen in tears over her husband’s infidelity. Instead of the jewelry she spied, he has gifted her with her favorite, Joni Mitchell. It’s a personal gift yet comparatively trivial against the betrayal, the feeling of being seen but not chosen reflected in its small package. Thompson carries those complicated layers on her face while Mitchell sings the mourning she feels.
This is a later version of “Both Sides Now”, weightier than the original thanks to time and age. Mitchell’s musing on the elusiveness of understanding and the fleeting nature of love feels more bruised here, and of more experience. The lyrical interplay between memory and introspection are there in the performance without even saying a word, and the years spent with her husband. How might she have sung this song differently years (or even moments) ago?
At a time when we can feel most reflective, even mournful, Joni Mitchell is exactly the kind of music that has nothing to do with the Christmas season, yet captures our vulnerability so precisely that we feel it all the more deeply to time of year. But as with the film, there’s always Mariah and jollier tunes to brighten the spirit, as well.
Previous Soundtracking Favorites:
Magnolia
Atomic Blonde
Lady Bird
Meet Me In St. Louis
The Big Chill
...all installments can be found here!