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Tag: rom-com

  • ‘You, Me & Tuscany’ Trailer: Halle Bailey & Regé-Jean Page Exchange Heart Eyes In Sweet Tuscan Rom-Com, Send Social Media Into Swoonlivion

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    Source: Universal Pictures

    Social media is abuzz over upcoming Rom-Com You, Me & Tuscany starring Halle Bailey and Bridgerton alum Regé-Jean Page as strangers-turned-potential lovers who get entangled in a Rom-Commy conundrum stemming from one little lie in one large Italian villa.

    You, Me & Tuscany asset

    Source: Universal Pictures

    Bursting with bright-eyed wonder is Halle Bailey who stars as Anna–a 20-something woman trying to figure life out after a string of bad decisions that include abandoning her dreams of becoming a chef.

    When Anna loses her house-sitting job (and housing), a chance encounter with a handsome Italian man named Matteo (who happens to have a villa sitting empty in Tuscany) inspire her to jet off for Italy against the advice of her always-honest bestie, Claire.

    But Anna’s plan to crash at Matteo’s villa without permission for one night falls apart when Matteo’s mother, Gabriella (Italian film icon Isabella Ferrari), shows up at the house unexpectedly.

    In a panic, Anna allows Gabriella to believe that she is Matteo’s fiancée. Uh oh!

    Naturally, that one little lie grows into a big problem when Matteo’s cousin, Michael (Regé-Jean Page) shows up and connects with Anna who, as you probably can guess, discovers that the heat between them may ignite a fire that will transform her life. Whew!

    You, Me & Tuscany asset

    Source: Universal Pictures

    Check out the trailer below:

    Produced by Will Packer and directed by acclaimed filmmaker Kat Coiro, the buzzy film has all of the deliciously cheesy ingredients of a great Rom-Com with lovable leads, Halle and Rege, at the forefront of the feel-good story.

    In an exclusive interview with PEOPLE, the two young stars opened up about their real-life meet-cute and more ahead of filming in Italy’s gorgeous countryside.

    “I remember I saw him [at this year’s Met Gala]–you were wearing all red, it was so cool,” said Bailey about meeting Regé for the first time.

    “It’s very weird ’cause you’re nervous and you’re like, ‘Oh, if I go up to this person, are they gonna be nice?’ And then I’m like, we’re doing a movie together, I’m gonna just go up.”

    Jumping in was Regé who complemented his co-star perfectly during the cutesy chat currently going viral online.

    “It’s kind of a wild place to meet someone,” said Page. “And we just kind of hung out because those rooms can be pretty intimidating. It’s a room full of every luminary in the world. So finding someone who’s just like, ‘Hey, you wanna be friends? Well, we’re gonna be friends. We’re about to go on this great long holiday.’”

    Will you be seated for You, Me & Tuscany (on April 10, 2026)? Do you already have a date in mind? Tell us down below and peep the social media hysteria over the upcoming Rom-Com on the flip.

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    Alex Ford

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  • Our 3 Favorite Things About Seeing Stars By Candice Jalili

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    Whew! It’s been a long time since we’ve felt this giddy about a new book, and we want to shout it so the world can hear. Candice Jalili’s new YA rom-com, Seeing Stars, needs to be your next read!

    Seeing Stars is a spin-off story to Finding Famous, the first book in Candice Jalili’s Mashad Family series. It follows Mona Mashad, a reality TV star and the youngest daughter of the famous Mashad family. She reluctantly navigates a fake relationship with the President’s all-too-charming son, Lucas Sterling.

    We got hooked as soon as an inkling of romance started to form between Mona and Lucas, and we hope you do too. Here are three of our favorite things about Seeing Stars by Candice Jalili!

    Seeing Stars by Candice Jalili
    Image Source: Penguin Random House

    Book Overview: Seeing Stars

    Content warnings: mention of parent deaths, gun violence, panic attacks, vomiting

    Summary: Mona Mashad grew up on camera, with millions of fans around the world tuning in to see her every move. Nothing was off-limits: not her first pimple, her first crush, and definitely not the death of her father, Mashad family patriarch and the best dad ever, Ali.

    After more than a decade on screen, Mona has discovered the key to being the most famous teenager on the planet: never let your guard down and never give your heart away (because if it breaks, the whole world will know).

    But she didn’t expect to meet Lucas Sterling, notorious heartthrob and only son of Jordana Sterling, the beloved President of the United States. Lucas sweeps Mona off her feet—he literally saves her when she falls down the stairs at the Met Gala—and for just one second Mona wants to let her walls come down. So, it hurts a lot when he betrays her, and even more when their moms demand they pretend to keep dating to appease their respective fan bases.

    Normally, a fake relationship would be manageable for Mona. After all, she’s used to playing a part for the camera. But pretending to fall in love with Lucas when she’s still furious with him is no easy feat. And things get extra complicated when she meets Kai. A (hot) surfer and all-around normal guy. For the first time in her life, she can forget the cameras and just be…Mona. Could he be the escape from this fake reality that Mona needs? Or will fake dating America’s most eligible bachelor lead to real feelings?

    Flirty Banter & Romantic Tension

    We, along with most people on BookTok, love to read banter between two characters. It’s the way into our hearts, and we immediately fell in love with Seeing Stars because of Lucas and Mona’s banter. We could feel the chemistry from their very first meeting. And even though Lucas has to make up for a lot during their fake relationship, he’s relentless in pursuing Mona. He’s also self-assured and effortlessly charming, and Mona held out on him a lot longer than we would’ve if we were her.

    Second-Lead Syndrome

    As with any good love triangle, Seeing Stars gives us the ultimate second-lead syndrome. Kai, AKA Hot Surfer, is a respectful, down-to-earth guy that gives Mona a taste of a normal teenage life. He’s easy to talk to and so earnest. Their surfing lessons are so intimate and brimming with tension of what could happen if either of them admitted their budding feelings. We were so stuck between Kai and Lucas and rooted for them both at one point. Alas, this novel is not a “why choose?” story.

    The Confessionals

    Another one of our favorite things about Seeing Stars is reading the filmed confessionals that are a staple to reality TV shows. These scenes take us out of the main story to get an in-depth look at each character’s reactions and thoughts on the events as we read about them. It adds a very meta layer to this novel. We especially love seeing Mona and Lucas’s differing opinions at various stages of their fake relationship. While Lucas was ready to be all in, Mona was still in denial.

    From flirty banter and fake dating to falling for the first (and second) lead, Candice Jalili’s Seeing Stars might be one of our favorite books this year!

    Seeing Stars by Candice Jalili comes out October 14th, and you can order a copy of it here!

    What do you think of Candice Jalili’s spin-off story, Seeing Stars? Let us know on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram!

    Want to hear some of our audiobook recommendations? Here’s the latest!

    TO LEARN MORE ABOUT CANDICE JALILI:
    FACEBOOK | INSTAGRAM | TWITTER | WEBSITE

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    Julie Dam

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  • From ‘Say Anything’ to ‘13 Going on 30’: Why Taylor Swift’s ‘Showgirl’ Feels Like an Early-Aughts Rom-Com

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    The undercurrent of anxiety present in some love songs on Reputation, Lover (2019), and Midnights is gone (“I thought I had it right, once, twice, but I did not,” Swift sings on “Wi$hli$t,” track eight on Showgirl)—replaced with the kind of buoyant hope only found in romantic comedies. In the weeks before Showgirl’s release, Kelce joked that he and Swift were living out the Cinderella-style plot of Pretty Woman (1990)—which “has been on [his] and Tay’s movie list for a while.” Actually, he and his brother Jason Kelce agreed on their New Heights podcast that it was more of a “reverse Pretty Woman” with Travis “wearing nothing but a tie when Taylor comes home.” The younger Kelce then made a point of advocating for a twist on the film called Pretty Man, a concept that is semi-realized on the Showgirl track “Father Figure.” “We need to have a CEO billionaire woman be so high-class that she doesn’t know where she’s going. She doesn’t know how to drive a car,” Kelce said.

    The ending of Pretty Woman and all its talk of saving princesses from towers is invoked in lead single “The Fate of Ophelia” with lyrics like, “I sat alone in my tower / You were just honing your powers.” Kelce publicly shooting his shot with Swift “felt more like I was in an ‘80s John Hughes movie, and he was standing outside of my window with a boombox saying, ‘I want to date you! Do you want to go on a date with me? I made you a friendship bracelet!’” she said while appearing on New Heights, referencing Cameron Crowe’s ‘80s coming of age film Say Anything. This song nods to that meet-cute with the album-opening line, “I heard you calling / On the megaphone.”

    On “Opalite,” named for the manmade version of Kelce’s opal birthstone, there’s a hint of spirited doo-wopping reminiscent of Grease’s “Summer Nights.” But given the fact that Swift and Kelce’s relationship has already inspired a few Christmas movies, it’s hard to ignore that this song feels like an homage to that twinkly, festive way of falling in love on film.

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    Savannah Walsh

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  • Jude Law Would Revive Mr. Napkin Head for ‘The Holiday’ Series on One Condition

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    Jude Law seduced more than a few viewers in the Christmas rom-com The Holiday. Released in 2006, the film starred Law as Graham, a widower and father of two little girls who gradually falls in love with Amanda, a recently separated Californian played by Cameron Diaz. Last month, fans of the romantic comedy that has become a holiday classic learned that the feature film would be adapted into a mini-series. The AppleTV+ project follows the original synopsis. Namely: the story of two young women, one British and one American, who swap homes for the festive season—and not without surprises, as they each end up finding true love during their journey.

    In an interview with Today to promote his new Netflix series Black Rabbit, Law spoke about the return of the cult film. A project he didn’t know existed until the original director, Nancy Meyers, told him about it. “You know, I’ve heard of it. I don’t know anything about it. Nothing, except that I don’t think I’m part of it. I don’t know,” he said. “I think Nancy wrote to me and asked, ‘Have you heard of it?’ literally.”

    So when asked if he’d be up for starring in the miniseries, Law had just one condition: that the director of the iconic rom-com be at the helm of the project. “Nancy Meyers would have to be involved [for me to accept],” he said. “She’s the one who gave the film its magic back in the day.” A pretty simple condition to meet, don’t you think? Well, far from it, since Meyers discovered the Apple TV+ project like millions of other Internet users—that is, on social media. It was in an Instagram story that the filmmaker shared her astonishment at the project’s announcement last August. “First news. Imagine my surprise when I opened Instagram and this was the first publication I saw,” she wrote.

    In addition to the romance between Law and Diaz under the gray skies of the UK, The Holiday followed the adventures of Iris (Kate Winslet), a British journalist staying in Los Angeles who falls for Miles (Jack Black), a music composer. So, while Law doesn’t appear to be reprising his role in this Apple TV+ adaptation, it remains to be seen who will step into the shoes of his character Graham. Last month, casting began for the lead roles, formerly played by Diaz and Winslet. According to Deadline, the project should receive the green light once the stars align.

    Originally published in Vanity Fair France.

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    Olivia Batoul

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  • From ‘Sex and the City’ to ‘Summer I Turned Pretty’: Why Paris Is Rarely Ever a Good Idea for Romantic Heroines

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    Stop me if you’ve heard this one before: Boy meets girl, girl seeks adventure in Paris, then girl’s complicated feelings for said boy ultimately taint her ability to actually enjoy the city of love. That scenario factors into the plot of both The Summer I Turned Pretty’s final season and the newly released Netflix rom-com The Wrong Paris—although this time, our heroines, played by Lola Tung and Miranda Cosgrove respectively, make it to Paris—and get to stay, at least for a while.

    On The Summer I Turned Pretty, Belly defers her acceptance to study abroad in Paris for premature marriage with Jeremiah (Gavin Casalegno). She then comes to her senses, calling off the wedding and moving overseas, where she fights through homesickness and language barriers to build a nice little life for herself. Of course, that independence will soon be interrupted by Belly’s ex Conrad (Christopher Briney), seen buying a plane ticket to Paris in the show’s penultimate episode. But at least she was given the opportunity to test out both versions of her future before making a choice.

    That’s also true of The Wrong Paris, a silly rom-com about a Bachelor-esque reality dating show that contestants are led to believe will be filmed in Paris, France, only to learn it’s actually Paris, Texas—population 25,000. Our heroine, Cosgrove’s Dawn, takes the twist in stride, vowing to compete on the show—not for love, but some prize money to fund studying at a Paris art school. “I don’t hate this,” she says of her hometown, “I just hate that this is the only thing I’ve ever known.” Then a cowboy named Trey (Pierson Fode—also, has anyone ever actually met a cowboy named Trey?) and his comically sculpted abs waltz in. “You ain’t gonna find no man like me in Paris,” he drawls, to which she replies: “Yeah, that’s the point.” Surprise, surprise, Dawn and Trey do fall in love and later strike a bicontinental compromise—she’ll finish school, then presumably come back to Texas.

    Hepburn and Astaire, near 30 years in age between them, leave Paris as husband-and-wife in Funny Face.LMPC/Getty Images

    Paris has long been a place for lovers onscreen. Casablanca (1942) famously ends with Humphrey Bogart’s Rick telling Ingrid Bergman’s Ilsa that they’ll always have their time in Paris, even if they can’t end up together. The European city has gotten in the way of a whole lot of love affairs ever since. Perhaps no one was more familiar with this than poor Audrey Hepburn, who starred in six films set in the City of Light throughout the 1950s and ’60s, most of which end with the idea that her lovelorn character would presumably rather return to the United States with a man twice her age than walk along the Seine solo. (Case in point: Hepburn choosing Bogart in 1954’s Sabrina—a frequent reference on The Summer I Turned Pretty, and then Fred Astaire in 1957’s Funny Face—which has been repeatedly mentioned on Netflix’s Emily in Paris.)

    Somewhere along the way, Paris became the go-to plot device standing in between a single woman and her love interest. The city represented female independence and agency—a culturally rich alternative to the happily ever after established in fairy tales.

    On ’90s to early aughts TV, Paris became a surefire tactic for injecting drama into long-running “will they or won’t they?” couples. Shannen Doherty’s Brenda flees her dramatic on-again-off-again dynamic with Luke Perry’s Dylan on Beverly Hills, 90210 for a summer study-abroad program. Sarah Jessica Parker’s beret-clad Carrie Bradshaw now famously hurls a McDonald’s “le Big Mac” upon learning that “Big is moving to Paris,” in Sex and the City season two. Then her own Parisian journey with Frenchman Aleksandr Petrovsky (Mikhail Baryshnikov) is cut short in the series finale once Big (Chris Noth) shows up to bring her back home. On another hotly anticipated final episode, Jennifer Aniston’s Rachel Green considers moving overseas with her toddler-aged daughter for a fresh start working at Louis Vuitton after years of across-the-hall pining for David Schwimmer’s Ross. But these flights of fancy don’t last long—a brief layover on the way to domesticated bliss right back where they started.

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    Savannah Walsh

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  • Grammy Winner Jhett Tolentino’s Debut Feature Asian Persuasion Sets North American Theatrical Release

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    Scatena & Rosner Films is proud to announce the North American release of the romantic comedy ASIAN PERSUASION, directed by Grammy and Tony Award-winning Jhett Tolentino, written by Mike Ang, and starring Dante Basco (“Hook) and KC Concepcion (“Boy Golden: Shoot to Kill”). Scatena & Rosner Films have partnered with Seismic Releasing for the theatrical, with the film set to open theatrically on March 21 in major markets including Atlanta, Charlotte, Chicago, Dallas, Detroit, Houston, Minneapolis, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Phoenix, Tampa, and Washington D.C.

    “It has been a long time coming”, said Tolentino. “I am beyond grateful that this humble gem will finally be available to wider audiences.”

    Set to capture the hearts of viewers with its witty dialogue, charming performances, and unique cultural insights, “Asian Persuasion” tells the story of a lovable underachiever who hatches a hilarious and outrageous scheme to avoid paying alimony to his fashion-executive ex-wife. The film deftly combines humor, drama, and romance, offering audiences a heartfelt and entertaining exploration of love, relationships, and second chances. Its blend of romance and comedy provides a fresh take on familiar themes, making it a must-watch for rom-com fans.

    Alongside Basco and Concepcion, “Asian Persuasion” features a dynamic ensemble cast including Kevin Kreider (“Bling Empire”), Paolo Montalban (“Cinderella”), Geneva Carr (“It’s Complicated”), Scarlet Sherr (“Hustlers”) Celia Au (“Lodge 49”), and newcomer Jax Bacani.

    “Asian Persuasion” is produced by Jhett Tolentino Productions with Tolentino and Mike Ang serving as Producers. Cinematography is by Andrea Walter (“The Fabulous Filipino Brothers”, “Empty by Design”) with production and costume design by Dedalus Moving Pictures’ Sheena Alexis (“Caretakers”). The music score is by Eunike Tanzil (“Be Somebody”) with casting by Bess Fifer.

    “As an Asian American growing up here in the United States, I struggled to find an accurate reflection of myself in the movies or TV shows of the time”, said Ang. “Asian Persuasion gave me the chance to tell a quintessentially American love story through the lens of the Asian-American experience. The very existence of this independent film is a testament to the power of community and authenticity, and we are truly grateful to all of those who have made it possible to share this work with a broader audience. We hope you enjoy watching it as much as we enjoyed making it.”

    During production, the cast and crew of “Asian Persuasion” harbored a deep commitment to AAPI representation, ultimately featuring creatives from 21 Asian countries in the film: Bangladesh, Cambodia, China, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Israel, Japan, Laos, Malaysia, Mongolia, Myanmar, Nepal, Philippines, Singapore, South Korea, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, Thailand, Tibet, and Vietnam.

    “Art can only be a success when it is measured by the positive impact it leaves behind”, said Tolentino.

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  • Get Yourself An Order Of Love & Lattes By Beth Reekles!

    Get Yourself An Order Of Love & Lattes By Beth Reekles!

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    We think everyone with an internet connection knows about Beth Reekles. You may know her from books like The Reunion and Love, Locked Down. And, of course, she’s the bestselling author of The Kissing Booth! Sound familiar yet?

    Love & Lattes is Beth Reekles’ new YA rom-com, also known as Sincerely Yours, Anna Sherwood in the UK! It follows Annalise Sherwood, a college student about to start a prestigious summer internship in London. But things go awry when she unknowingly kisses the son of the company CEO only nights before she starts interning.

    We’ve made Love & Lattes our latest obsession, and we don’t regret it! Here are three things we love about Love & Lattes by Beth Reekles.

    Cover: Love & Lattes by Beth Reekles
    Image Source: Penguin Random House

    Book Overview: Love & Lattes

    Content Warnings: deceased parent, mention of postpartum depression, divorce

    Summary: Annalise Sherwood has worked herself to the bone to get a place in a prestigious internship program, and nothing will stop her now. Work hard, play later, that’s her motto. She figures one night letting her guard down won’t hurt, though – especially when it ends with the best kiss of her life.

    But to Anna’s horror, she discovers that the mystery guy she kissed that night is none other than Lloyd, the company CEO’s son. Born with a silver spoon in his mouth, he’s everyone’s favorite guy and a total charmer, swanning around like he owns the place. And from the moment they meet again, he rubs Anna up the wrong way.

    As the summer and the internship wane, Lloyd seems to be finding any excuse to annoy Anna, and she’s not afraid to return it to him. But when a lot of late-night work brings them unexpectedly closer, she wonders if there’s more to him than she initially thought.

    The Romance

    We wouldn’t be writing a proper book review of Love & Lattes without highlighting Anna and Lloyd’s push-pull romance! An intern dating the boss’s son is already enough of a scandal on its own. But no matter how hard Anna tries, she keeps letting her guard down around Lloyd. And Lloyd somehow gets Anna to open up about secrets she’s never told anyone else. Everything would be easier for our main characters if they could be honest about their feelings, but there’d be no plot and no fighting for love!

    Lloyd’s Charm

    Anna is so much stronger than us because we wouldn’t have been able to reject Lloyd as many times as she did in Love & Lattes. She has to put her career first, of course. Her professional reputation would be ruined if people started to think that she was using Lloyd to move up the corporate ladder. But Lloyd’s personality makes us fold every single time! He’s considerate, funny, and charismatic. He asks the right questions and wears his heart on his sleeve. Lloyd communicates so well and knows his self-worth. (Pop off, king!)

    The Supporting Cast

    Finally, we love Love & Lattes for its supporting characters. The other interns in Anna’s cohort are the types of friends we need in our lives. They invite you everywhere even though you have a busy schedule. They look after everyone who’s been drinking, which happens almost every weekend. And when someone tries to blackmail you and blast your personal life for the office to see, they help you clean up the mess. Monty, Dylan, and Elaine are just the realest.

    With a delightful will-they-won’t-they romance and a lovely supporting cast, we fell head over heels for Beth Reekles’ Love & Lattes!

    Love & Lattes by Beth Reekles comes out on October 22nd, and you can preorder a copy of it today!

    What do you think about Love & Lattes? Are you excited about Beth Reekles’ latest novel? Let us know on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram!

    Want to hear some of our audiobook recommendations? Here’s the latest!

    TO LEARN MORE ABOUT BETH REEKLES:
    FACEBOOK | INSTAGRAM | TIKTOK | TWITTER | WEBSITE

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    Julie Dam

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  • Why Rom-Coms Show Timeless Truths About Love

    Why Rom-Coms Show Timeless Truths About Love

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    Rom-coms often portray couples as perfect soulmates, effortlessly compatible. But in real life, relationships need work. How do these movies connect to what Gottman’s research tells us about relationships?

    Rom-coms Spark Our Imagination

    Rom-coms sometimes showcase impossibly “perfect” lovers, and we get the idea that these made-up stories represent real feelings in relationships before we think about if they’re grounded in reality. By watching these movies, our imagination helps us figure out the meaning of love, even if the stories aren’t real.

    The 1999 comedy “Notting Hill” humorously depicts the complex dynamics between an “average man” and a famous actress. Its witty scenes capture the complicated emotions involved in overcoming societal barriers and developing trust. It’s far-fetched, but the themes of open communication, building love maps, and friendship can translate to real life as well.

    Movies Use Metaphors to Show Lasting Love

    Simple advice like “choose each other every day” is important but can sound overused. Movies use stories to create lasting metaphors. “The Notebook” (2004) shows a love that lasts a lifetime, making us remember how deep love can be.

    Movies Bring Meaning Back to Worn-Out Words

    Sometimes, common phrases lose their meaning because we use them too much. Saying “you complete me” might not feel special anymore. Movies like “(500) Days of Summer” (2009) bring these phrases back to life by changing the focus from finding a perfect match to facing life’s challenges together.

    We Can Find Wonder in Everyday Moments

    Daily routines can sometimes feel boring, but rom-coms help us rediscover excitement in everyday moments. The 1995 movie “Before Sunrise” shows that even simple interactions can be extraordinary, reminding us that beauty is in everyday experiences.

    The Path to True Love in Real Life is Attainable

    No Hollywood movie perfectly outlines the path to true love. But imagining extraordinary things can help us see where our real lives might need improvement. 

    Plus, when you need a little more help, tools from Gottman’s research can provide practical steps to improve our relationships, bridging the gap between ideals and reality.



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    The Gottman Institute

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  • ‘Anyone but You’ Is an Ode to Rom-Com Classics

    ‘Anyone but You’ Is an Ode to Rom-Com Classics

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    When Ilana Wolpert imagined her life, she pictured much of it tucked away in a library, analyzing the works of Shakespeare after earning her PhD in English. Instead, she’s days away from walking the red carpet for her feature screenwriting debut Anyone but You, a modern-day romantic comedy inspired by Much Ado About Nothing that stars Sydney Sweeney and Glen Powell. Wolpert uprooted her own trajectory during her senior year of college, when she opted to enroll in a screenwriting class. It was love at first sight. “Everything clicked,” she tells Vanity Fair, “I haven’t looked back since.”

    After her collegiate meet-cute, Wolpert moved to Los Angeles, where she worked as an assistant to Rachel Bloom on The CW’s Crazy Ex-Girlfriend and then secured a plum staff writing position on High School Musical: The Musical: The Series. “I met some of my best friends writing on the show, met my girlfriend writing on the show,” Wolpert says, referencing Tony-nominated cast member Julia Lester. But during breaks from production on the Disneyfied teen series, Wolpert devoted herself to her passion project: an R-rated romantic comedy she wrote in her parents’ Utah home mid-pandemic. Often she’d work next to her dog Ella, who snoozes behind Wolpert during our Zoom interview. “I missed my friends. I missed weddings. I wanted to fall in love,” she remembers. The film “was an escapist fantasy for me.”

    But what resonated with Sweeney, who was the first to board the project as an executive producer, was the realistic uncertainty that plagues protagonists Ben and Bea (named for Much Ado’s Benedick and Beatrice, naturally). Like Wolpert, Bea upends her plans by withdrawing from law school and getting “deprogrammed” from the idea of marriage, despite childhood Halloweens spent dressing as a bride.

    “One of the things that we talked about is this pressure in your mid-to-late 20s to have your life look a certain way, to know what your career is going to be, who you’re going to be with,” Wolpert says. “When we first met, we were in the place of all of our friends getting married, dealing with people trying to set me up or meddle in my life because they think that, to be happy, you need to be in a relationship…. She just totally got that.” And even as Sweeney’s star status soared with dual Emmy nominations for Euphoria and The White Lotus, Wolpert says that she always made room for the movie. “It would not exist at all without her,” she says.

    Just as it did with May December’s Samy Burch, what started as a first-time film writer’s spec script morphed into a major motion picture once big names got attached. This time, they were Top Gun: Maverick’s Powell and director Will Gluck, whose own film Easy A was inspired by classic literature in Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter. Persistent discourse about the state of the rom-com is “a little tiresome,” says Wolpert, but the fact that hers is getting a prime Christmas release is a promising sign.

    “What I’m grateful for is that both Sydney and Glen were so down for a rom-com. There are not a lot of people in their age demographic, actors of any gender, who wanted to do rom-coms—at least from early stages when we were exploring the cast,” she adds. But Wolpert doesn’t consider it “a dying genre.” In fact, she’s set her sights on tackling a queer rom-com next.

    “I really just wanted my life to look like a romantic comedy,” says Wolpert. Evidence of her lifelong adoration is all over Anyone but You, from a Titanic-referencing scene, to perhaps the most consequential grilled cheese since Nate’s burnt beauty in The Devil Wears Prada.

    Wolpert drew inspiration from Much Ado About Nothing, which she calls “the perfect enemies-to-lovers story,” as well as other modern works based on literary classics, including Clueless (loosely based on Jane Austen’s Emma), 10 Things I Hate About You (born from Shakespeare’s The Taming of the Shrew), and She’s the Man (from Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night). “The sense of farce, especially in She’s the Man, was something that I really leaned into and loved when it comes to Bea and Ben getting tricked into being together,” Wolpert explains. “That incredible scene where Amanda Bynes goes to the carnival and is running around and trying to be two people at once—I loved that sense of physical comedy too, which we have in Anyone but You.

    Like other faithful students of the rom-com, Wolpert classifies herself as a Nora Ephron devotee, referring to 1989’s When Harry Met Sally, 1993’s Sleepless in Seattle, and 1998’s You’ve Got Mail as “my holy trinity.” Wolpert continues: “She just so effortlessly made you fall in love with those characters and the conflict really came from a place of character…. But I definitely saw [the movies] at too young of an age on a cable channel I probably shouldn’t have been watching,” she adds with a laugh.

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    Savannah Walsh

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  • Julia Roberts Turned Down Meg Ryan’s Role in ‘You’ve Got Mail’

    Julia Roberts Turned Down Meg Ryan’s Role in ‘You’ve Got Mail’

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    With Pretty Woman, Notting Hill, and My Best Friend’s Wedding, Julia Roberts has starred in some of the best romantic comedies of all time. But as fate would have it, she could have added another to her impressive roster: 1998’s You’ve Got Mail.

    While promoting her latest film, the psychological thriller Leave the World Behind, on Thursday’s episode of Watch What Happens Live With Andy Cohen, Roberts was asked to reflect on any roles she regretted turning down. Instead, the Oscar winner shifted the question to share two movies she passed on that “maybe wouldn’t have been as great and wonderful” with her in them.

    One was 1992’s The Last of the Mohicans, starring Daniel Day-Lewis. The other? You’ve Got Mail, in which she would have acted opposite Tom Hanks and played Meg Ryan’s part as hopelessly romantic bookshop owner Kathleen Kelly. Instead of Roberts, who went on to star with Hanks in 2007’s Charlie Wilson’s War and 2011’s Larry Crowne, Ryan reunited with her Sleepless in Seattle love interest. That same year, Roberts opted to coheadline the domestic tearjerker Stepmom alongside Susan Sarandon.

    Nearly a decade prior, it was Ryan who was originally cast as Shelby in 1989’s Steel Magnolias, a part based on screenwriter and playwright Robert Harling’s sister, Susan. “The day after we cast her, she came to us in tears and said, ‘I’m sorry, but I just got offered this film, and I’ll be a leading lady with Billy Crystal…’” Harling recalled last year. “So you know we said, ‘Of course, go make When Harry Met Sally.’”

    It was Sally Field, who plays Shelby’s mother, M’Lynn, in the film, who suggested producers meet with Roberts, according to Harling. “Sally said, ‘You know, there’s this girl and she’s been off making some movie about a pizza. She’s Eric Roberts’s sister,’” he told Southern Living, referencing her breakout role in 1988’s Mystic Pizza. “We brought her in, and she was Julia Roberts, so she was magic. She just walked into the room and lit it up, and I thought, That’s my sister.”

    On WWHL, Roberts also mentioned the Steel Magnolias switch, which helped earn her the first of four Academy Award nominations. She noted that she also nearly missed out on her earliest project with the late filmmaker Mike Nichols. “Cate Blanchett was supposed to be in Closer, but she got pregnant, and so then I got that part,” Roberts said of the 2004 romantic thriller costarring Natalie Portman, Jude Law, and Clive Owen. “So I’ve lucked into some good stuff.”

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    Savannah Walsh

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  • 11 Feel-Good Queer Romances to Watch Right Now (or Very Soon)

    11 Feel-Good Queer Romances to Watch Right Now (or Very Soon)

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    Royal romances are the best kind. Directed and cowritten by Tony-winning scribe Matthew López, Red, White & Royal Blue adapts Casey McQuiston’s immensely popular New York Times best-selling novel in fabulous fashion. Red, White & Royal Blue follows two men with incredible family pedigrees—British prince Henry (Cinderella’s Nicholas Galitzine) and American first son Alex Claremont-Diaz (The Kissing Booth’s Taylor Zakhar Perez)—who must engage in a crisis-PR truce even though they get on each other’s nerves. But the more they talk, the more Henry and Alex discover that the line between love and hate is quite thin. “There are a lot of projects that have come and gone in my career that I have had the ability to let go of,” López told VF, “but if I wasn’t able to make this movie, it would’ve cost me something.” He got his wish as the helmer of this feel-good, fizzy romance, which also features none other than Uma Thurman as the president of the United States. You can paint yourself Red, White & Royal Blue when the film hits Amazon Prime August 11.

    But I’m a Cheerleader (1999)

    But I’m a Cheerleader© Lions Gate/Everett Collection.

    Some feel-good queer romances also double as camp classics. Look no further than But I’m a Cheerleader, the ’90s satirical rom-com which stars a young Natasha Lyonne as Megan Bloomfield, a lesbian cheerleader who gets sent to conversion therapy camp. Yes, that may not sound like the grounds for a feel-good queer love story—but in the hands of Lyonne, director Jamie Babbit, and screenwriter Brian Wayne Peterson, But I’m a Cheerleader becomes a romp about the queer experience, with Lyonne’s sexually confused cheerleader falling pom-poms-over-heels for Clea DuVall’s Graham, a cool, confident college student also at the camp. Along with DuVall and Lyonne, the cast includes once and future stars like Melanie Lynskey, Michelle Williams, and RuPaul, who does his darndest to butch it up as counselor Mike. RuPaul as an ex-gay? That’s even funnier than the hilarious Ross Mathews.

    The Birdcage (1996)

    The Birdcage© United Artists/Everett Collection.

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    Chris Murphy

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  • ‘Sleepless in Seattle’ Wanted to Screw With Our Expectations About Love

    ‘Sleepless in Seattle’ Wanted to Screw With Our Expectations About Love

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    “Shall we?” Tom Hanks’s Sam asks Meg Ryan’s Annie, lifting his hand toward hers as a slight breeze blows and the music swells. The Seattle widower and Baltimore journalist finally meet—where else—atop the observation deck of the Empire State Building on Valentine’s Day, as Sam’s son, Jonah (Ross Malinger), looks on adoringly. This is only the start of their romance, but it’s the end of Sleepless in Seattle, released 30 years ago and now remembered as one of the best romantic comedies of all time.

    Unfolding during the typically dreary period between Christmas and Valentine’s Day, Annie and Sam’s cross-country meet-cute begins with a Delilah-style radio show, which Jonah calls into with one request: find a new wife for his father. At one point, Sam gets roped into joining the call. Once on the line, he heartbreakingly describes the moment he fell in love with Jonah’s mother. “I knew it the very first time I touched her,” he says. “It was like coming home, only to no home I’d ever known.” Thousands of miles away, Annie is one of many listeners entranced by the story, maybe by the mere sound of Sam’s voice. A journey to meet him ensues.

    “You don’t want to be in love. You want to be in love in a movie,” Annie’s best friend, Becky (Rosie O’Donnell), says—both a warning to the character and summary of why Sleepless in Seattle, directed by Nora Ephron from a screenplay by Ephron, David S. Ward, and Jeff Arch, endures three decades later.

    Nominated for two Academy Awards and one of the highest-grossing films of 1993, Sleepless is the kind of movie that both comforts and confounds. “What if someone you never met, someone you never saw, someone you never knew was the only someone for you?” its tagline reads, a premise as fitting of a horror film as a romance. Repeat viewings lay bare the movie’s small pleasures—a kid-aged Gaby Hoffmann booking Jonah’s flight to New York, Rob Reiner explaining new-fangled ’90s dating to a stupified Sam—but can also leave the viewer stupified. As Roger Ebert wrote in his review,Sleepless in Seattle is as ephemeral as a talk show, as contrived as the late show, and yet so warm and gentle I smiled the whole way through.”

    Writer-director Nora Ephron, who sandwiched Sleepless in between 1989’s When Harry Met Sally and 1998’s You’ve Got Mail, understood the mix of sour and sweet required to get one love-drunk. According to film producer Gary Foster, Ephron was hired as “a slightly cynical New Yorker who was looking to put a little edge in the fairy tale.” As Ephron told Rolling Stone in 1993, she was merely “looking for a cash infusion.” But she had her directive in mind, once declaring of the film: “Our dream was to make a movie about how movies screw up your brain about love, and then if we did a good job, we would become one of the movies that would screw up people’s brains about love forever.”

    In Ephron’s hands, the script was infused with her biting East Coast wit, including a pre-Seinfeld “Soup Nazi” reference. (At one point, Annie enters her office at The Baltimore Sun to hear the tail-end of a coworker’s pitch: “he’s the meanest guy in the world, but he makes the best soup you’ve ever eaten.”) There’s also the following interoffice exchange:

    Coworker: It’s easier to be killed by a terrorist than it is to find a husband over the age of 40.

    Annie: That’s not true.

    Becky: But it feels true.

    (Sidenote: there’s a very similar riff on this joke in 2006’s The Holiday, made by Nancy Meyers, the Pepsi to Ephron’s Coke.)

    But it also retained the genre’s unabashedly romantic DNA. By the time Ephron, the film’s fourth attached writer, got to the script, 1957’s An Affair to Remember had already become a character in the movie, much to Ephron’s chagrin. When she first watched the Cary Grant and Deborah Kerr–led romance, “I was a hopeless teenage girl awash in salt water,” Ephron told Rolling Stone. As an adult, she continued, “I now look at this movie and say, ‘What was I thinking?’” She got downright disdainful about it in another interview, calling Affair a “weepy” film that appeals to “one’s deepest masochistic core…. It’s really kind of hooking into those pathetic female fantasies.”

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    Savannah Walsh

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  • Your Place or Mine Pulls From The Holiday and A Lot Like Love For a Banal Effect

    Your Place or Mine Pulls From The Holiday and A Lot Like Love For a Banal Effect

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    It seems telling that the intro to Aline Brosh McKenna’s latest rom-com, Your Place or Mine, is set in the 00s. Namely, 2003. We’re hit over the head with this (along with so many other things) “time period,” not just with a title card that says: “it’s 2003,” but with the additional “cutesy” explanation of the year via, “how can we tell?” followed by arrows that point to accessories worn by the characters the viewer is introduced to, including “trucker hat,” “flat-ironed hair,” “wallet chain,” “pointless earring,” “so many layered shirts” and “wonderbra®”. And yet, for all this “attention to detail,” the song echoing in Debbie’s apartment, “The Sweet Escape” by Gwen Stefani featuring Akon, didn’t actually come out until 2006.

    In any case, it’s “telling” that Brosh McKenna would set the movie at the start of the 00s because this feels like the type of cut-and-paste script she might have actually written in the early 00s, before securing clout with 2004’s Laws of Attraction (before that, her only credit was 1999’s forgettable Three to Tango starring Neve Campbell and Matthew Perry). After that, The Devil Wears Prada assured her place in the rom-com hall of fame, only to be further cemented by 27 Dresses and Morning Glory. Things took a dive with I Don’t Know How She Does It and We Bought a Zoo, but there was the promise of Brosh McKenna’s rejuvenation and renaissance in Cruella.

    Which is why for Your Place or Mine to follow that up and mark Brosh McKenna’s directorial debut almost leads one to believe that the movie is a script she had lying around in a drawer from back in the day that she nipped and tucked for a quick paycheck. At least, that’s the preferable thing to believe as we watch the predictable plot, which so overtly pulls from Nancy Meyers’ The Holiday and another Ashton Kutcher-starring movie from, quelle coincidence, the 00s called A Lot Like Love.

    Just as it is in the latter rom-com, Debbie Dunn (Reese Witherspoon) and Peter Coleman (Kutcher) are two best friends who have sex when they first meet and then devolve into the friend zone, where both are ostensibly “comfortable,” but each one has also long known that there’s a lingering attraction, they just have to repress it deep, deep down until the “appropriate” moment comes (i.e., end of Act Two). At the beginning of the movie, Brosh McKenna tries to “pull a fast one” on the audience with a “trick” split screen intended to make the viewer believe Debbie and Peter are in the same bed together twenty years later as Debbie looks into his eyes and wishes him a happy birthday.

    But no, there’s someone else in Peter’s bed as the camera pans over to his girlfriend du moment, Becca (Vella Lovell, a beloved Crazy Ex-Girlfriend alum), asking if he wants coffee. The split screen then becomes pronounced as the captions “Los Angeles” and “New York” provide the geographical context, both locations themselves being a tired cliché in rom-coms about “making a choice” (see also: Friends With Benefits—not to be confused with No Strings Attached, a similarly-premised movie also starring Kutcher). But Your Place or Mine appears designed almost deliberately to be one long, drawn-out cliché.

    What’s more, considering how self-aware Brosh McKenna is re: the genre, and how meta she was able to get with Crazy Ex-Girlfriend (co-created with Rachel Bloom, who appears in the movie as Scarlet), Your Place or Mine comes across almost like a knowing taunt on her part. As though to say, “Yeah, this is my genre, watch me dance circles around how easy it is to write one.” Easy to write, sure. Easy to differentiate from all the rest? Not so much. And Your Place or Mine thusly falls easily down the drain of other generic rom-coms fit for the Hallmark Channel.

    The only thing to set this one apart from such comparable schlock is that two higher-tier (read: higher cost) actors happen to be in the lead roles. But that does little to salvage what is an unapologetic “by the numbers” rom-com, complete with a requisite dramatic airport reunion in the third act. Then, of course, there’s Debbie’s initial assurance that her heart is made of stone, and that any energy that might be funneled into the search for romance has to go into caring for her only, highly-allergic-to-just-about-everything son, Jack (Wesley Kimmel, yes, Jimmy Kimmel’s nephew—because Hollywood nepotism). So who could possibly melt that “stone” but Peter? A man who himself declares that he’s an “unknowable piece of shit,” which is what he told Debbie after they first hooked up, offering it as a warning and a very viable reason not to pursue anything further with him.

    But now, twenty years later, Peter is very known to Debbie. Needless to say, no one knows him better than she does. And obviously, both of them have sold out on the lofty dreams they had when they first met, with Debbie wanting to be a book editor and, oh how perfect, Peter wanting to be a writer. In the present, Debbie has settled for “accountant” while Peter has veered into the nebulous “businessman” role—sure to mention that he makes a lot of money, without ever actually saying what he does. It’s on-brand for how vague “business” is and how undeserving of the salaries the people who work in it are. Plus, it’s important for the surrogate father figure in Jack’s life to be flush with cash as he swoops in to watch over Debbie’s precious spawn when her ex-husband’s girlfriend, Scarlet (Bloom), backs out of the “gig” after securing an acting job in Vancouver. Just one of many convenient and overt plot devices hurtling us down the path toward Debbie and Peter’s inevitable conclusion: happily ever after.

    In between, there will be one or two “snafus” at best, including Debbie catching the eye of a highly eligible bachelor named Theo Martin (Jesse Williams), who, well look at that, happens to be an Important Editor at Debbie’s favorite publishing house, Duncan Press (which might as well be called Duncan Hines). Even more “coincidental” still: Peter has a perfectly-polished manuscript in tangible form that Debbie can just hand right over to Theo, apparently taking solicitations if the person presenting them also has a snatch he might be interested in. And yes, it goes without saying that Debbie’s bold move is going to make Peter upset about offering up a “very personal work” without his consent. But, “luckily” (read: lazily), the outcome of the book’s publication is never shown later on.  

    While Debbie is gallivanting around neurotically in New York with one of Peter’s exes, Minka (Zoë Chao), intended as “comic relief” as opposed to all-out annoyance, back in L.A., there is the inexplicable presence of Steve Zahn, who, one supposes is playing a character named Zen (much downgraded from Mark Mossbacher in The White Lotus). Although he declares himself to be another rich man, he essentially lives in Debbie’s backyard “gardening” a.k.a. lending the requisite “zany” flair, as that’s just about all the “comedy” Brosh McKenna can muster for the script. With the romance element, too, being a bit lacking.

    Indeed, the one-note thud this entire production lands with is the only thing that makes it truly “standout.” That is to say, a shining beacon of banality, complete with the closing title cards, “And they lived happily ever after” and “just kidding marriage is hard but they had a good life.” Hopefully one filled with as few clunkers in the movie viewing realm as this attempt at teaching Rom-Com 101 to screenwriting students.

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    Genna Rivieccio

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