Plots(1)

When a self-help author arrives in Seattle to teach a sold-out seminar, he unexpectedly meets the one person who might finally be able to help him help himself. Dr. Burke Ryan (Aaron Eckhart) is on the precipice of a major multimedia deal, but the therapist who asks his patients to openly confront their pain is secretly unable to take his own advice. Eloise Chandler (Jennifer Aniston) has sworn off men and decided to focus on her floral business. However, when she meets Burke at the hotel where he's speaking, there is an instant attraction. But will two people who have met the right person at exactly the wrong time be able to give love another chance? As each struggles with the hurt of love and loss, they realize that in order to move forward, they need to let go of the past. And if they can, they'll find that, sometimes, love happens when you least expect it. (Roadshow Entertainment)

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Reviews (3)

gudaulin 

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English Love Happens is like a woman who, in an effort to make the best impression on her surroundings, goes overboard with Botox. The film lacks naturalness and lightness. The beautiful Eckhart and Aniston may seem perfect at first glance, but they somehow end up appearing sterile and unable to generate a romantic spark in their atmosphere, despite all their efforts. Perhaps this is related to the excessive effort to create emotions, or to how the film tries to meet the expectations of the settled American middle-class audience about romantic relationships. The excessive anchoring in American society, obsessed with finding successful recipes for anything (in this case, dealing with the death of a loved one), also affects the choice of the male protagonist's profession. All in all, it's an unremarkable, easily forgettable affair that is not worth deeper attention. Overall impression: 40%. ()

NinadeL 

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English Fancy a classic romcom starring Jennifer Aniston? You do? Then pick something else. Although she does play her role as she does in a number of her romantic comedies, she has a polished style, she's sweet, endearing, and snappy, and her micro-world works. But the story of her counterpart is a different movie altogether, about the great pains of grief and repressed feelings. The power with which Aaron Eckhart plays his widower could boldly rival in another film, for example, Birth with Nicole Kidman. And together, unfortunately, it doesn't work at all. ()

Necrotongue 

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English One star goes to the cast and the other one is for the few bright moments, but that's about it. The film was melodramatic and clichéd for the most part. It was simply too American for me. ()