27 things that have been compared to “Love Actually,” the Anne Hathaway of movies


In the 13 years since its release, Love Actually has been called both “the greatest modern Christmas movie” and “a terrible dumpster fire.” To have strong opinions about this 2003 classic is inevitable; to profess neutrality unacceptable.
Along with round-the-clock Christmas music and ever-sillier New Year’s glasses, Love Actually hot takes are a consistent harbinger of another year completed, and in this regard at least, 2016 did not disappoint. The movie inspired a Saturday Night Live skit, got us into the holiday spirit, and made us question one of its pivotal scenes. We ranked its plotlines, praised its soundtrack, and made our boyfriends watch it for the first time. We learned things we never knew, plus secrets we might not have known, and awful things we might have overlooked. We even broke it down into charts.
So powerful is Love Actually’s cultural influence that the movie has inspired its own vocabulary of analogies: films, television shows, and even foodstuffs that bring to mind the controversial Christmas flick. In no particular order, here is a list of Love Actually likenesses:
2012: the “Love Actually of disaster movies”
Office Christmas Party: the “Love Actually of dude-centric workplace comedies”
High Maintenance: the “Love Actually of Brooklyn hipster comedy”
“Drynuary”: the “Love Actually of lifestyle choices”
The series finale of Downton Abbey: the “Love Actually of series finales”
The music video for “Locked Away” by R. City featuring Adam Levine: the “Love Actually of music videos”
Eat, Pray, Love: the “Love Actually of travel books”
Can’t Hardly Wait: the “Love Actually of teen films”
Iron Man 2: the “Love Actually of action flicks”
Cloud Atlas: the “Love Actually of spiritual cinema”
Who Framed Roger Rabbit?: the “Love Actually of animated movies”
Watership Down: the “Love Actually of children’s movies”
Crash: the “Love Actually of films about discrimination”
Collateral Beauty: the “Love Actually of terminal illness films”
Contagion: the “Love Actually of disease thrillers”
A 2014 commercial for UK department store John Lewis: the “Love Actually of Christmas adverts”
A Midsummer Night’s Dream: the “Love Actually of Shakespeare comedies”
White Christmas: the “Love Actually of the 1950s”
The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies: the “Love Actually of fantasy movies”
Big Miracle: the “Love Actually of the whale genre”
George Frideric Handel’s 1741 oratorio, Messiah: the “Love Actually of ye olden days”
A viral video of a man giving his wife a car for Christmas: the “Love Actually of the Snapchat generation”
Pound-for-pound lists: the “Love Actually of the boxing world”
“I Love You, Shauna,” a 2014 website created by a man to win back his ex: the “Love Actually of internet apologia”
The grilled goat’s cheese salad at the Blue Kangaroo restaurant in London: the “Love Actually of salads”
Some members of the Philadelphia Eagles’ 2016 offense: the “Love Actually of NFL wide receivers”
Delhi Dhaba, an Indian restaurant in Arlington, Virginia: the “Love Actually of Indian buffets in the greater DC area”