If your plans for Valentine's Day contain snuggling up with a movie, here is our list of which films to avoid...
So,
it's Valentine's Day, and you're looking for a movie with which you and
your honey can snuggle up. Gosh, there are certainly plenty to choose
from, with intolerable rom-coms and holiday themed movies littering HMV
shelves and the Amazon homepage for the last few weeks, but it's easy to
make a mistake, too.
To help you out, here is our comprehensive list of films to avoid this Valentine's Day. Some even have the cheek to masquerade as romantic movies, with great-looking male leads and sexpot ladies, but they are anything but feel-good date movies, and should be given a miss.
This is a recent example of the anti-romance film, in which Michael
Fassbender's protagonist deals with his crippling sex addiction in the
lonely city. Fassbender fans may, of course, be tempted to try this one
out for the first time, but it certainly won't make you feel good about
the state of relationships and intimacy in this modern world.
This one dares to include the holiday's name in its title, but should
only be sampled by dateless horror fans this Feb 14th. I am referring
to the remake, however, and even fans of hack and slash movies should
dig around for the original if they have any hope of an entertaining
night in. Just make sure you exclude it from any date plans you have.
Revolutionary Road is one of those movies that makes you
fall in love with the possibility of true love before ripping it away
from you by its end. Reuniting Titanic co-stars Leonardo
DiCaprio and Kate Winslet should have been a recipe for romantic heaven,
but in reality, the film chooses to show the reality in dysfunctional
married life. If you're planning to propose on the night, never show
this to your bride-to-be.
I can't recall a movie title more suggestive of heartbreakingly intense romance than Blue Valentine,
and the film certainly contains those aspects of young love we all
aspire to feel. But by flitting back and forth through Ryan Gosling and
Michelle Williams' relationship, the film destroys all hope for the
marriage lasting before we can even see them get together. It can't end
well, and *spoiler* it doesn't.
This one's a film to avoid if you're planning on going out and
getting lucky on Valentine's night. That man or woman you think is a one
night stand could just come back to haunt your previously perfect
domestic set-up, and soon there'll be bunnies in the boiling pot and
crazy people bleeding in the bath. Stay home tonight, trust us it's for
the best.
What's this doing on the list, we hear you ask. Well, even though
it's walking around looking and sounding like the quintessential
romantic comedy, the film only serves encapsulate the fleeting nature of
romance and relationships for young people afraid, or preoccupied, by
commitment. Whether you're Gordan Joseph Levitt's hopeless romantic, or
Zooey Deschanel's intimacy-phobic dream girl, watching this might just
make you revaluate your current situation.
They may have stayed together until the very end, but their
dysfunctional exploits led to a joint death by a hail of machine gun
bullets. Clyde was also not the best partner in other senses, but the
film makes the viewer care for this off-beat coupling before they're
taken down, making us a little depressed when the inevitable happens.
Love is doomed, especially if society happens to frown on you. That's
the tragic message behind Ang Lee's daring romance, as Heath Ledger and
Jake Gyllenhaal are torn apart by expectation and prejudice. If you
happen to be in a same-sex relationship, we recommend you track down the
recent Weekend instead, as it paints a much more hopeful picture of two men falling in love.
To help you out, here is our comprehensive list of films to avoid this Valentine's Day. Some even have the cheek to masquerade as romantic movies, with great-looking male leads and sexpot ladies, but they are anything but feel-good date movies, and should be given a miss.
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