Updated
2024-12-10T15:49:17Z
- "Love Actually" came out in 2003, but fans still may not have noticed these details and Easter eggs.
- Jamie's novel pages look mostly blank, and Natalie misspells Christmas in her holiday card.
- After being mentioned twice, Claudia Schiffer makes a cameo at the end of the movie.
"Love Actually" (2003) is a star-studded Christmas movie featuring major actors from Keira Knightley and Hugh Grant to Emma Thompson and Liam Neeson.
However, even superfans of the holiday film may not have caught these "Love Actually" Easter eggs.
Only some members of the prime minister's staff have ID cards.
When the prime minister shows up for his first day of work, some of the people he walks by have ID cards, but others don't.
It appears that anyone visiting him or on his security team has a badge clipped to their top, but the members of his house staff don't.
Harry's office is decorated with things from his family.
Although his morality is called into question throughout the film as he's tempted by his assistant, Mia, in his first scene, Harry is introduced as a family man.
In his office, there's a wall of family photos and pictures that seem to have been drawn by his children.
Sam has a variety of stickers on his bedroom door, along with a chalkboard that he uses during the movie.
Daniel and his stepson Sam grow closer throughout the movie, but at the start of the film, Sam hides away in his room.
His bedroom door is decorated with stickers and a chalkboard, which he uses to tell Daniel to leave him alone. But he writes different messages on it later in the film.
Some of the stickers say "Don't drop anything, you won't find it again" and "If your name's not Sam, you're not getting in."
Most of the pages Jamie's working on appear to be blank.
When Jamie is working on his book outside by the lake, most of the pages that fly away as Aurelia lifts his cup seem to be blank.
There's a handful with words typed on them, but even the piece of paper in his typewriter looks like it's empty at the top.
When the US president visits the prime minister, he inexplicably has Washington-state license plates.
When the president arrives at Downing Street, his car can be seen pulling into the gates.
The black car has American flags on the side of it, but it doesn't have the proper government plates that are on the real president's car, Cadillac One or "The Beast."
The license plates shown on the car in the film aren't even for Washington DC, they're for Washington state.
The dolls that Karen insults are actually Ken dolls.
Karen holds up two dolls that she's gift wrapping for her daughter's classmates and insults both of their looks.
They appear to actually be male Ken dolls restyled and dressed in drag before being packaged in unlabeled boxes.
Sarah's clock changes inconsistently when she's in her room with Karl.
When Sarah and Karl are in Sarah's bedroom, a small clock can be seen on the nightstand to the left of her bed.
When the couple is first in her room, the clock reads five minutes to 12. But later in the scene, the clock goes back in time to about 10 minutes to 12.
One of the few non-Billy Mack items in Joe's home is a "Jaws" poster.
Billy Mack's manager, Joe, has a ton of the singer's memorabilia in his home.
There are Billy Mack posters and pictures all around, including one poster that shows an album cover titled "Moments of Madness."
One of the few posters in Joe's home that doesn't feature his rock-star client is a large "Jaws" one.
Natalie spells Christmas wrong in her holiday card.
Natalie confesses her feelings for the prime minister in a Christmas card.
She writes about being sorry about what happened and ends by saying that she's his.
The letter is a nice romantic gesture, but there's a pretty big spelling error — Christmas is missing its "r."
John and Judy wear the same outfits on their date and the next day at the play.
When John and Judy go on a date the day before the Christmas play, John is wearing a green jacket and dark pants and Judy is wearing a floral skirt with a pink top and pink jacket.
When they show up at the play the next day, the couple is wearing the exact same outfits they had on the night before — perhaps implying that the date went very well.
Claudia Schiffer's name is mentioned as a joke twice before she appears in the movie.
While he's giving the eulogy, Daniel mentions that his late wife jokingly suggested he bring German model Claudia Schiffer as his date to her funeral.
Schiffer's name is brought up again when Sam asks Daniel about his love life.
At the end of the movie, Schiffer actually appears on screen as Carol, the mother of Sam's schoolmate, and she and Daniel immediately hit it off.