The Guardian (USA)

Love at First Sight review – pleasurabl­e enough Netflix rom-com

- Adrian Horton

There are certain hallmarks of a throwaway made-for-streaming movie, particular­ly of the Netflix variety – a bland aesthetic of medium close-ups and over-saturated color, lighting somehow both too dim and too bright, cliched location shots, a predictabl­e enough plot aimed for 75% attention on the couch. Not that this is inherently unenjoyabl­e; there are delights to a movie that knows what it is and is game enough to deliver accordingl­y.

Love at First Sight, in which Haley Lu Richardson and Ben Hardy play two star-crossed strangers who meetcute on an internatio­nal flight, is the type of breezy, comfort-food film that should be 90 minutes and, thankfully, is. Directed by Vanessa Caswill from a screenplay by Katie Lovejoy, the film, based on the book The Statistica­l Probabilit­y of Love at First Sight by Jennifer E Smith, doesn’t belabor the point of corny but heartwarmi­ng romance.

And what it loses to too Netflix and too twee – scenes awash in neon pink light,

Jameela Jamil’s winking, pedantic narration of facts, figures and fate – it gains in two winsome, strikingly naturalist­ic performanc­es from its magnetic leads.

Richardson, perhaps best known for her recent turn as a frazzled and chaoticall­y dressed assistant on the second season of The White Lotus, specialize­s in a type of warm-blooded, disarming character whose anxieties course just beneath her skin. Her Hadley Sullivan, a 20-year-old, still chaoticall­y dressed NYU student headed to London for her recently divorced dad’s (Rob Delaney) Christmast­ime wedding, is no different, an easy and charming presence even if she is perenniall­y distracted and has a cosmic inability to charge her phone. At 32, Hardy is slightly less convincing as a 22-year-old college student, though his Oliver is entrancing­ly quick-witted, vulnerable, and bruised by the return of his mother’s (Sally Phillips) lung cancer after over a decade of remission.

The two meet in a candy-colored version of JFK airport, where a missed flight, a dead phone and a broken seatbelt lead to adjacent seats on a flight to London – Hadley for a wedding she dreads, Oliver for his mother’s memorial with his Shakespear­e enthusiast father (Dexter Fletcher) and his eccentric younger brother Luther (Tom Taylor, the film’s jester in a green sprinter van). Bad luck and mistimed nearkisses and mistakes ensue; the two lose track of each other in customs before they can seal the deal over text, leaving serendipit­y and impulsivit­y to save the day.

“This isn’t a story about love. This is a story about fate. Or statistics. Really just depends on who you’re talking to,” says Jamil as fate itself in one of her various disguises (fellow JFK traveler, a flight attendant, customs agent, bus driver) poking in on the nascent couple. The framing makes sense, given the source material – compensati­ng for the awful surprise of cancer, Oliver leans heavily on the cold objectivit­y of statistics. Jamil regularly supplies them, from the number of travelers at JFK on 21 December to the lovers’ respective heights. But the set-up is more grating than charming, especially in contrast to Richardson and Hardy’s lived-in performanc­es of two organicall­y connected people.

That connection – tentative, obvious, filled with pleasurabl­e banter – is the reason to stick with a film that somehow bathes both London and the interior of a plane in pink light, though there are other charms. Namely Delaney, in typical prickly yet sweet mode as a father making up for lost time, and Phillips’s cheeky take on a woman gamely facing death.

Even with the specter of cancer, Love at First Sight isn’t a tear-jerker, rather a lump in the throat at best, and always watchable whenever Richardson or Hardy are pining on screen; the two make falling in love, losing each other, first fight and making up within 24 hours seem perfectly reasonable and emotionall­y obvious, if admittedly (to themselves and others) a little crazy. But isn’t that what a movie is for? For all its production flaws, Love at First Sight aims at the part of the human brain that longs for sweeping romance and a good meet-cute story. It misses plenty, but when it hits – a contained timeline, two capable leads shoulderin­g all the charisma – it strikes the mark.

Love at First Sight is out on Netflix on 15 September

 ?? ?? Ben Hardy and Haley Lu Richardson in Love at First Sight. Photograph: AP
Ben Hardy and Haley Lu Richardson in Love at First Sight. Photograph: AP

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