"Oh, Hi!": Prepare for the Messiest, Most Manic Rom-Com Yet

Madeline Everleigh

Moderator
Staff member
“Oh, Hi!” – Your New Favorite Rom-Com Just Got… Twisted Get ready to ditch your notions of meet-cutes and grand gestures, because “Oh, Hi!” is coming to dismantle everything you thought you knew about romantic comedies. Written and directed by the audacious Sophie Brooks, and produced by her equally brave brother David Brooks, this isn’t your grandma’s rom-com. It’s a rom-com with a side of… well, let’s just say a very specific kind of syndrome. The film stars Molly Gordon (of Booksmart fame, proving she’s got range beyond being perpetually stressed about college) as Iris, and Logan Lerman (yes, OG Percy Jackson is all grown up and apparently ready to break hearts and potentially laws) as Isaac. Our story begins innocently enough, with Iris and Isaac seemingly in the honeymoon phase of their relationship. Isaac, a master of romantic theatrics, whisks Iris away to a secluded wooden cabin in the middle of nowhere. Because nothing says “I love you” like being completely isolated from society, right? They swim by the lake, dance under the moonlight (we assume to a Spotify playlist titled “Romantic-Yet-Slightly-Manipulative Tunes”), and Isaac even cooks her dinner. All of which, naturally, leads to the bedroom. It’s all […]
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This movie sounds like my worst nightmare. I watch rom-coms with my wife sometimes, and usually I just sit there waiting for it to end. But this one? Honestly, I might be into it. A man gets tied to the bed and then Girl dumped mid-afterglow? That’s brutal. It flips the usual “girl gets her heart broken” plot, and I respect that. I don’t know if I’d call it romantic, but at least it’s original. I’ll probably hate the ending, but I’m weirdly looking forward to it now.
 
I don’t know how I feel about this. It sounds funny but also a little scary. I understand heartbreak. I know what it feels like to fall for someone who lies. But keeping him tied up to convince him of love? That’s extreme. Still, I love when rom-coms take risks and don’t just follow the same path. If the movie handles the emotions well and makes us feel Iris’s pain and confusion, I could end up loving it. If not, it might feel like a weird joke. I’m hopeful but nervous.
 
This is exactly the kind of chaos I live for. Give me the handcuffs. Give me the emotional games. Give me the woman losing her mind over a man who played her. I eat this stuff up. Real life is boring—movies like this let us experience all the mess without consequences. I don’t watch rom-coms for healthy relationship advice. I watch them for passion, drama, and people doing the absolute wrong thing for love. Isaac totally deserves to be chained up after that stunt, and honestly, 12 hours is generous. I hope she drags him emotionally before letting him go. Maybe even makes him beg. I know some people will say this is toxic or wrong, but that’s what makes it fun. I’ll be in the theater with popcorn and zero judgment. This is my kind of romance.
 
Wait, Logan Lerman is playing the manipulative boyfriend now? I feel ancient. I remember watching him as Percy Jackson and thinking he was just a kid like me. Now he’s in adult rom-coms with weird power dynamics and handcuffs? Time really flew past while I wasn’t paying attention. It’s like one minute he’s wielding a sword, and the next he’s breaking hearts in a cabin. This movie sounds chaotic, but honestly, seeing Logan in such a different role makes me want to watch it even more. I guess we all grow up—even Percy.
 
In Japan, rom-coms are very polite and soft. Reading this story surprised me. The characters in this film are very direct and strange. But I like that it is different. Love stories do not have to be perfect. I think it will be interesting to watch a movie where a woman does not act nice when she is hurt. Maybe it is uncomfortable, but real feelings are like that. I want to see how this story ends. Maybe it will help me understand Western relationships better.
 
What Sophie Brooks is doing here excites me. The rom-com genre has felt tired for years. We need to see relationships presented in new forms, even ones that are uncomfortable. People are complex, and love isn’t always sweet. Sometimes it’s desperate, irrational, even a bit dangerous. This doesn’t mean we excuse harmful behavior, but stories like this let us explore darker sides safely. I hope the film isn’t afraid to let the audience feel weird. That’s where the truth often is.
 
This movie sounds like therapy I can watch. You’re telling me it starts like a Nicholas Sparks picnic and then becomes a revenge sleepover with handcuffs? I’m in. I’m bringing snacks. I’m bringing friends. I’m bringing my ex just to see his reaction. We need more films where the woman says, “Nope, we’re not doing this emotional ghosting today
 
I would just like to personally thank Sophie Brooks for putting my last situationship into a movie. Same gaslighting, same cabin vibes, minus the satisfying revenge. Next time someone tells me they’re “not ready for a relationship,” I’m showing them this movie and hiding the car keys
 
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