Heart Eyes Movie Review & Film Summary (2025)

In Josh Rubens “Heart Eyes” Ally (Olivia Holt) works in advertising for an advanced jewelry brand. Her latest campaign course on death -convicted lovers (Romeo and Juliet, Bonnie and Clyde, Jack and Rose, etc.) land with bad taste in the shade of a third year of brutal murder of the famous “heart eyes” sheds – a masked madman, There are goals on Valentine’s Day Ting her company to bring the big guns into the form of a young man, Jay (Mason Gooding), who is a charming, sought-after concept master on the marketing ball.

Jay has a hug on a very downturned ally who is stuck to mourning over his now linked ex via his social media posts with his new girlfriend. Jay is suave, smooth and confident and puts it all out there despite Ally’s hard facade. For her, love is a cheat that ends only in death or despair. But when Jay and Ally encounter her ex on Valentine’s Day, a plain smooch puts them right in the sights of the eyes of the heart. When they try to escape and avert him, despite ebbs in their chemistry, Ally and Jay must constantly argue that they are not much together. Their life depends on it.

“Heart Eyes” is a furious good time. Like a Valentine’s Day -Flick and a horror image it lands for fans of all kinds: those who seek warmth, anger or both. Valentine’s Day is one of the polarizing holidays that people either embrace or reject as a Hallmark holiday. No matter which side of the spectrum you land on, “Heart Eyes,” you have covered, giving enough cynicism and romance to paint a pretty full picture of peaks and valleys in the romantic experience.

In his core, Ally’s Adamant Dispondence of Jay’s optimistic romantic sight, and when they constantly stop heads on the principles of love (in the moments they don’t fight for their lives), “Heart Eyes” all give something to identify with. The self-conscious manuscript is fun on the conventions of a typical ROM COM that works them into the blood edition with funny hand. But still, there is charm in scorn.

While he maintains full attention to his cliches, Holt and Goodings Chemistry still draw you into the will-they will not of it all, leaving plenty of room to swing between screams. We become interested in all kinds of couples transactional (Ally’s Sugar Baby Bestie), quiet, tired, rocky “Summer of Love” wannabes (one of the funniest sets of pieces of the movie), year olds (Jordana Brewster plays a fun Lusty Cop), and Of course, those who are happy and clearly in love (or on the road).

Heart eyes, as the villain has a fashionable design, something underrated, but necessary in the manufacture of a memorable slasher. His sneaky yellow mask with glowing red heart eyes finds himself somewhere between the noticed emoji and “the collector.” And when it comes to the carnage, Ruben’s movie doesn’t hold back. Whether spoiling machines, available items or a reliable knife, the ingenuity becomes a character in itself both for the killer and the hunting. The killers are creative, absurd and pulpy. With places of blood edition and homicidal techniques, “Heart Eyes” is a good pace drag race that pushes speed forward in its violence while taking perfectly timed comedic turns to stay on the field.

Only in theaters on February 6th.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1crzzcmljh8