You, Me & Tuscany promised a breezy romance beneath the Tuscan sun, but the Kat Coiro‑helmed release lands with a familiar beat and little to make it feel fresh.
What the film sets out to do
Anna, a culinary‑school dropout, loses her job and finds herself at a loose end after a misstep at a glamorous household. In the wake of a mother’s death, she accepts a spur‑of‑the‑moment trip to Tuscany — a plan she once shared with her mother, a detail the film treats lightly through voiceover and glossy stills.
With no lodging available during a local festival, Anna ends up sneaking into Matteo’s vacant villa. She improvises a cover, posing as the runaway fiancée of Matteo’s supposedly vanished son, only to discover a pull toward his cousin Michael.
Where the film trips up
The screenplay by Ryan Engle leans on sentimentality and a predictable arc that never builds momentum. The dialogue tilts toward clichés, and a few glossy product placements, like Aperol Spritz, feel shoehorned in to push a lifestyle instead of deepening character.
The look and the vibe
Tuscany is a gorgeous backdrop, but the cinematography keeps the mood flat — drone shots dominate and intimate moments often land as staged rather than real. The landscape should lift the romance; here it only emphasizes the film’s stagnant pace.
On‑screen chemistry
Halle Bailey and Regé‑Jean Page deliver capable performances, yet the romance never catches fire. The pair rarely conjure a convincing connection, with lines that read more as exposition than genuine feeling.
The bottom line
Romantic comedies still need a reason to believe in love, and You, Me & Tuscany offers plenty of sun but little warmth. It prioritizes surface over substance, leaning on tired stereotypes and crude humor instead of real tenderness. The old rule still holds: aim higher than the familiar and never settle for less.
Source: Original article

