It’s one of the most popular Christmas movies, but the protagonist has only seen it once in his life.

The Christmas holidays are right around the corner, and at this time of year most fans are gearing up to binge-watch some of the most legendary Christmas movies. Vacation, Nightmare before Christmas, Grinch, Alone at home, dwarf, Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone…The list is enormous, and includes feature films to suit all tastes. But if there’s one movie that everyone is talking about even 20 years after its release, this is it Love indeed.

this Romantic comedy The film, directed by Richard Curtis, tells the story of several couples who cross paths in London, shortly before the Christmas holidays: couples reunited, marriages in crisis, friendships that turn into something more… The film had it all and had a star cast. Hugh Grant, Liam Neeson, Colin Firth, Emma Thompson, Sienna Guillory, and Alan Rickman were among the actors and actresses who starred in the 2003 film.


He was among them too Keira Knightley (Anna Karenina, Pride and Prejudice), who plays Juliet, a young woman who has just gotten married and is in a very private love triangle with her husband’s friend. In 2003, when the film was released in theaters, Knightley was barely 18 years old. This was the first and last moment in her life (she is already 40 years old) that the British actress saw Love indeed.

This is what he admitted on the program Scott Mills Breakfast Show From BBC. “I just saw Love indeed Once. I saw it at the first screening and never saw it again.. I think I’m 18 years old. “More than 20 years ago,” the actress said. During the interview, Knightley also explained that she never got to see the third part of the film. Pirates of the CaribbeanThe saga he shared with Johnny Depp and Orlando Bloom.

To see or not to see your work in theaters

The actress who participated in films such as Start again, State secrets also Unravel the puzzleHe explained during his speech on the radio program: The status of legendary romantic comedies is nothing personal. Quite the opposite. Knightley admitted that, generally and frequently, he doesn’t usually watch audio-visual projects in which he puts his voice and body in front of the camera.

“It’s strange because my relationship with the work is clearly different from my relationship with the people who watch it,” he began to explain. “The great thing about those films is that they become people’s favorites and they watch them over and over again.” “Either I haven’t seen them, or I’ve only seen them once, because It’s not a particularly pleasant experience to see your face. behind. “It’s very strange.”

The translator went so far as to assert that this refusal to revive her productions prompted her to do so Forget the many projects you participated in. “Actually, I forgot about them, and now it’s very funny when people come up to me and talk to me about movies that they know well and in which I’m undoubtedly present,” he shared in early November.