
From the age of 5 Rosie Dunne and Alex Stewart have been best friends, as they take on life they just end up getting separated time and time again. When it comes to love it's just everyone else but each other.... But when will they realise they are meant to be together?... (Full plot summary below)
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From the age of 5 Rosie Dunne and Alex Stewart have been best friends, as they take on life they just end up getting separated time and time again. When it comes to love it's just everyone else but each other.... But when will they realise they are meant to be together?
Leave your thoughts about Love, Rosie.
| The PlaylistKevin JagernauthLove, Rosie doesn't aspire to be anything more than a digestible rom-com trifle. It's a sweet movie about sweet people who are always sweet to each other and it's enough to make one sick on the saccharine. |
| CinemalogueTodd JorgensonIt's obvious how this British romantic comedy will turn out, and getting there isn't funny or charming enough to generate much emotional investment. |
| Village VoiceAbby GarnettThe message is more pedestrian than passionate: Life is long, and full of instant messages. |
| The Times of IndiaMohar BasuLove, Rosie is quaint comfort-cinema that makes for an amiable watch. |
| New Zealand HeraldFrancesca RudkinLove, Rosie succeeds well enough on its own, largely due to the fabulous chemistry between the leads, who bring their flawed, well-rounded characters to life in a funny, warm and amiable manner. |
| Blu-ray.comBrian OrndorfFew scenes connect as profoundly as director Christian Ditter envisions, rendering the effort heavy with quirk and an abuse of coincidence, and light with urgent matters of the heart. |
| VarietyGuy LodgeAs appealingly humanized by Collins and Claflin, Rosie and Alex are sufficiently flawed, three-dimensional beings for their continued attachment to each other to convince. |
| At the Movies (Australia)Margaret PomeranzIt's all a bit of a mess really. Despite the likeability of the two stars - Lily Collins and Sam Claflin, whose mouth resembles Hugh Grant's - there is so much silliness in this film that I found it alienating. |
| EmpireAdam SmithLikeable leads and the odd good joke makes this romance an amiable time-passer. |
| Globe and MailKiva ReardonLove, Rosie’s early charm fades by the end, given that, as time (and the movie) wears on, neither Rosie nor Alex get any more mature when it comes to matters of the heart. |