Sometimes there is nothing better than to cuddle up with your sweetheart on a big couch and watch a sweet romantic flick, making a journey to the magical reel world and merging yourselves with the characters onscreen, the only bond being that four letter word...love. Looking for some tips on what to watch with your sweet one on Valentine's Day? You've come to the right place then. Here are ten nice Valentine's Day movie suggestions for you. Check these out and find out all about the movies that you can catch on Feb 14! Celebrate Valentine's Day with everybody and have a great time with your sweetheart. Happy Valentine's Day!
Watching a romantic comedy is a fun way to celebrate Valentine's Day, whether you're spending the holiday with your special someone or a whole slew of friends and family. And there are lots of lovely movies to choose from. I suggests you the following movies that are all-time hits with cinegoers and celebrate the wonderful feeling called love in a beautiful way.
Watching a romantic comedy is a fun way to celebrate Valentine's Day, whether you're spending the holiday with your special someone or a whole slew of friends and family. And there are lots of lovely movies to choose from. I suggests you the following movies that are all-time hits with cinegoers and celebrate the wonderful feeling called love in a beautiful way.
- Gone With The Wind (1941)
- Language: English
Genre: Drama/ Romance
MPAA rating: PG
Director: Victor Fleming
Actors: Clark Gable, Vivien Leigh, George Reeves
Plot: An epic civil war tale of a strong woman, Scarlett, who loves the man she didn’t marry. It is simple tale of love.
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- The Notebook (2004)
- Language: English
Genre: Romance/ Drama
MPAA rating: PG-13
Director: Nick Cassavetes
Actors: Ryan Gosling, Rachel McAdams, James Garner
Plot: A man tells the story of a young couple who struggle through the times as rich daughter and a poor mill worker some 50 or 60 years ago. An old man is reading a story to an old lady in a nursing home. The story is about two young lovers (Allie and Noah) who are from two completely different upbringings.- Allie's family is quite wealthy and disapproves of Noah because of his lack of wealth. So her parents move her away and make every attempt to never let her see him again.
- Titanic (1997)
- Language: English
Genre: Romance/ Drama
MPAA rating: PG-13
Director: James Cameron
Actors: Leonardo DiCaprio, Kate Winslet, Billy Zane
Plot: The maiden voyage of the Titanic sets the stage for a love affair between a young socialite and a poor artist. An old woman tells a story of her days on the Titanic. The romance between herself and a young man who loved her and would do anything for her to survive.
- Casablanca (1943)
- Language: English
Genre: Drama/ Romance
MPAA rating: NR
Director: Michael Curtiz
Actors: Humphrey Bogart, Ingrid Bergman, Paul Henreid
Plot: Set in Africa during the 1940s, Humphrey Bogart stars as a man with a past trying to hide the past. He meets his former lover at his own bar as things begin to complicate. Rick Blaine owns a nightclub in Casablanca during World War II. One night an old flame Ilsa arrives in town with her husband Victor Laszlo, who is a Czech underground leader. Rick and Ilsa plan to run off together with 2 valuable pieces of transit. But it doesn't all go as planned.
- An Affair to Remember (1957)
- Genres: Drama/ Romance
Rating: NR
Language: English
Director: Leo McCarey
Actors: Cary Grant, Deborah Kerr, Richard Denning,Neva Patterson, Cathleen Nesbitt,Robert Q. Lewis
Plot: In this poignant and humorous love story nominated for four Academy Awards, Cary Grant and Deborah Kerr meet on an ocean liner and fall deeply in love. Though each is engaged to someone else, they agree to meet six months later at the Empire State Building if they still feel the same way about each other. But a tragic accident prevents their rendezvous and the lover's future takes an emotional and uncertain turn.
- Love Story (1970)
Genres: Drama/ Romance
Rating: PG
Language: English
Director: Arthur Hiller
Actors: Ali MacGraw, Ryan O'Neal, John Marley, Ray Milland
Plot: What makes this film a great love story is it shows the sacrifices people who love each other make in order to love each other despite the odds and the disapproval of others. This is a tear jerker as in the end one of the two does die, leaving the other to face the world alone. If you're looking for uplifting, Love Story is not your movie. If you're looking for an emotional tear-jerker, pop the popcorn and draw up a chair.
This film was marketed to a generation of Baby Boomers proclaiming "Love means never having to say you are sorry," which is probably the worst advice any person has ever received. It may also be why Boomers have the highest divorce rate in history!
- Romeo and Juliet (1968)
Genres: Drama/ Romance
Rating: PG
Language: English
Director: Franco Zeffirelli
Actors: Olivia Hussey, Leonard Whiting, Milo O'Shea, Michael York, & John McEnery
Plot: This award winning interpretation of Shakespeare’s most beloved tale of star-crossed lovers is as epic in its visual elements and costumes as it is in the quality of the acting.
Even if you think you won't like Shakespeare, this film will change your mind. The script is his, no alterations.
Romeo & Juliet proves that this Renaissance man is truly the age’s master storyteller and still holds the key to enduring and unequivocal sensuality. Viva la romance!
- When Harry Met Sally (1989)
Genres: Drama/ Romance
Rating: PG
Language: English
Director: Rob Reiner
Actors: Billy Crystal, Meg Ryan, Carrie Fisher, Bruno Kirby
Plot: Nora Ephron's rendition of modern love is much more realistic than any of the films previously mentioned. It plays on the love-hate relationship most encounter when falling in love and the terror that accompanies that letting go and letting in of another. Rich in both comedy and drama it explores the long building friendship between a man and a woman over the course of many years and many loves.
When Harry Met Sally will have you believing in fate and taking a second look at those whom enrich your life. This film drives home the greatest indicator of a healthy marriage, that of friendship, respect and mutual trust.
- Edward Scissorhands (1990)
Genres: Drama/ Romance/ Comedy
Rating: PG-13
Language: English
Director: Tim Burton
Actors: Johnny Depp, Winona Ryder, Kathy Baker, Anthony Michael Hall, Dianne Wiest, Vincent Price
Plot: Edward Scissorhands is a modern day Beauty and the Beast which borrows some ideas from Frankenstein. What we like about this movie is its focus on the uniqueness in each person and how even the most unlikely can enhance the life of another.
Edward Scissorhands bypasses the negatives and creates positives from adversity. Through the story, compassion unfolds bringing to light the gift of love through the acceptance of even the most daunting differences. Edward Scissorhands is a love story for anyone who has thought he or she wasn't good enough and later discovered how exceptional he or she really is through the eyes of love.
- French Kiss (1995)
Genres: Drama/ Romance/ Comedy
Rating: 16+
Language: English
Director: Lawrence Kasdan
Actors: Meg Ryan, Kevin Kline, Timothy Hutton, Jean Reno, Renée Humphrey, François Cluzet
Plot: A girl runs behind her boy, thief behind money and a love happens.
Ryan plays a woman whose fiancé (Timothy Hutton) leaves her for a Parisian beauty. She jets over to the City of Lights to fight for her man, but an incapacitating fear of flying forces her to seek help from a fellow passenger, a French thief played by Kevin Kline, who then tutors her in the ways of getting her beau back.
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