Choose Love | |
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Directed by | Stuart McDonald |
Screenplay by | Josann McGibbon |
Produced by |
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Starring | |
Cinematography | Toby Oliver |
Edited by |
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Music by | Gabriel Mann |
Production companies |
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Distributed by | Netflix |
Release date |
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Running time | 77 minutes [1] |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Choose Love is a 2023 interactive romantic comedy film on streaming service Netflix. Viewers make choices for the main character Cami, played by Laura Marano, as she questions her relationship with her partner Paul when two other men enter her life. It was released on August 31, 2023 and was made unavailable on December 1, 2024. It received a generally negative reception.
Cami's happy relationship with her boyfriend Paul is disrupted when two other men enter her life: her first partner Jack and British rock star Rex. [2] Viewers are given choices for Cami to make, which affect the future of the story. For example, on the first such occasion, Cami is getting a tarot card reading, and the audience is to choose whether she wants to hear the 'good news' or 'bad news' first. [1] The choices are sometimes initiated by Cami's breaking the fourth wall to directly address the audience. [3] [4] The film is designed such that, after making a choice and seeing the result, the audience may go back and make a different choice, yielding a different result. [1] [3]
The film has six possible endings that branch from viewer decisions: [5] [6] [7]
In March 2022, it was announced that Robyn Snyder, Deborah Evans, Mel Turner, and Axel Paton would produce the picture. It is written by Josann McGibbon, with Stuart McDonald directing. [10]
In March 2022, the cast was announced. [11]
Filming primarily took place in May 2022 in and around Auckland, New Zealand. [12]
The film was released on Netflix on August 31, 2023. [8]
In November 2024, Netflix announced that they would remove most of the interactive media, including Choose Love, from their catalogue on December 1, 2024. [13] [14]
Choose Love received generally negative reviews from critics. Claire Shaffer wrote for The New York Times that, unlike other interactive films whose "unpredictability [...] kept the gimmick somewhat afloat", the film was "a series of disconnected, shallow interactions, each leading to a different predetermined cliché." [1] Liz Kocan wrote for Decider that the otherwise-likeable character design suffered from the interactivity. [15] Brian Lowry wrote for CNN that the film "strains the storytelling to fit the gimmick" and demonstrates that interactive films, "while theoretically intriguing, seldom match the appeal of a well-told story." [3] Courtney Howard wrote for Variety that the setting was "difficult to be fully immersed in" and that the "[m]en are one-dimensional at best, used solely to further [Cami's] arc." [4] Linda Holmes wrote for NPR , "You pick the ending you want, and it gives it to you." as a critique of the film, which she compared to AI-generated content. [16] Adrian Horton, writing for The Guardian , criticized the "flatly lit and oversaturated style" and "overdrawn acting and stakes-less swooning", also calling the film "another poor conclusion of algorithmic content" and saying that it has contributed to the "oppression of choice" present in such media, but praised it "for entertaining the prospect of a female protagonist ultimately choosing to go solo". [17] Lydia Venn writing for Cosmopolitan [6] and Pratik Handore writing for The Cinemaholic [7] both also praised the endings where Cami chooses to be single, calling them "empowering".
Several critics compared Choose Love's interactivity to that of the films Black Mirror: Bandersnatch (2018) – also from Netflix [1] [3] [4] [16] [17] – and Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt: Kimmy vs the Reverend (2020). [1] [3] [4]
On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds a score of 38% from 16 critics, with an average rating of 5/10. [18] On Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, it has a "generally unfavorable" score of 35% from 8 critics. [19]
Organization | Year | Category | Result | Ref. |
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26th Family Film and TV Awards | 2024 | Best Family Film (Television) | Nominated | [20] |
Laura Marie Marano is an American actress and singer. She is known for her role in the Disney Channel series Austin & Ally as Ally Dawson. Marano was one of the five original classmates in Are You Smarter than a 5th Grader?. She starred in Without a Trace for three seasons and Back to You. Marano starred in the indie film A Sort of Homecoming, the Disney Channel Original Movie Bad Hair Day, the fifth installment of the A Cinderella Story film series A Cinderella Story: Christmas Wish, the Netflix original movie The Perfect Date, and the Netflix interactive romcom Choose Love.
Vanessa Nicole Marano is an American actress and producer. She has starred in television movies and had recurring roles in such series as Without a Trace, Gilmore Girls, Ghost Whisperer, Scoundrels, Grey's Anatomy and The Young and the Restless. From 2011 to 2017, she starred as Bay Kennish on the Freeform television series Switched at Birth.
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In the end the Choose Love endings include Rex and Cami in Paris, Rex and Cami as friends, Cami marrying Paul in Vegas or proposing at home, Cami kissing Jack, or Cami deciding to be single.