Love Stories: Movies offer some Valentine's Day romance

Movies offer some Valentine’s Day romance

THE PROM (L to R) ARIANA DEBOSE as ALYSSA GREENE, KERRY WASHINGTON as MRS. GREENE in THE PROM. Cr. MELINDA SUE GORDON/NETFLIX © 2020
THE PROM (L to R) ARIANA DEBOSE as ALYSSA GREENE, KERRY WASHINGTON as MRS. GREENE in THE PROM. Cr. MELINDA SUE GORDON/NETFLIX © 2020

Although 2020 didn't exactly make a lot of people swoon, the past 12 months did feature a few notable films of love and whimsy, of laughter and sweetness, of hope and connection.

Here are six movies that that are available on streaming services or on demand.

"The Map of Tiny Perfect Things"

Amazon Prime

"Groundhog Day" became the standard-bearer film where a person lives the same day over and over. The conceit has been redone many times since, but this latest effort gets points for actually acknowledging "Groundhog Day." Mark and Margaret are teens who share the same time loop and fall in love. The title of the movie references a handmade map Mark creates summarizing the "perfect" moments the pair experience over repeated days. The story takes some unusual twists and turns to ensure it's not a literal repeat of "Groundhog Day" for teenagers.

"Palm Springs"

Hulu

Speaking of time loops, the past year also brought the world this delightful love story starring Andy Samberg and Cristin Milioti. Andy plays sardonic charmer Nyles, who is at a wedding in Palm Springs with his girlfriend, a bridesmaid. He has a secret: He has been living this day for seemingly months, if not years. During one of his seemingly endless days, he hones his sights on the bride's sour, cynical, heavy drinking sister Sarah, then accidentally drops her into the same vortex he's living in. She understandably doesn't take this well at first but over time, a bond develops and pure wackiness ensues.

"To All the Boys: Always and Forever"

Netflix

This is part of an endearing trilogy starring Lana Condor as the effervescent Lara Jean Covey. In the first film, she had written letters she never meant to send out to five crushes, but her sister does it for her. This eventually leads her to dating one of those crushes, Peter (Noah Centineo). Now a rom-com-loving high school senior, Lara Jean in the third film is focusing her hopes that she and Peter can maintain their relationship in college by attending the same school. Naturally, her plans don't quite work out, and she learns that shaping your future around a high school boyfriend may not necessarily be the right move. John Corbett plays Lara Jean's kind-hearted dad.

"All the Bright Places"

Netflix

Elle Fanning plays Violet, an Indiana teen suffering from grief after her sister died in a car accident. An eccentric loner, Thomas Finch (Justice Smith), who likes to spout literary quotes, sees her standing on a bridge, thinking she's pondering suicide. He talks her off the ledge and is deeply intrigued by her darkness. Via a school assignment about exploration and a budding romance, he brings Violet back into the light.

"The Love Birds"

Netflix

There is a standard-issue "meet cute" early in the film between documentarian Jibran (Kumail Nanjiani from "The Big Sick") and marketer Issa Rae (HBO's "Insecure") and they seem to blast off into happy coupledom. Flash forward four years, and the relationship has curdled into resentment and unmet expectations. They break up. But then they accidentally hit a dude on a bike, a mystery man commandeers their car and inexplicably murders the cyclist. Freaked out, the couple flees the scene of the crime, worried the cops would find them. As they run around town trying to clear their name, they learn to find common ground again, and well, it's really about the journey, not the predictable result.

"The Prom"

Netflix

This is a satire of liberal Broadway do-gooders swooping into a small Indiana town uninvited to help a teenage girl who just wants to take her girlfriend to a prom. But a dissenting PTA president (Kerry Washington) cancels the prom. Since this is from Ryan Murphy of "Glee" fame, there is no subtlety as James Corden, Meryl Streep and Nicole Kidman ham up this musical big time about tolerance and inclusivity. Fortunately, Jo Ellen Pellman, who plays the protagonist high school senior, Emma, provides a grounded authenticity as she grapples with the spectacle she engenders. "I just want to go to prom like every other kid," Emma says. She and Alyssa (Ariana DeBose) make an adorable couple.

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