Valentine's Day is a polarizing holiday. Some are obsessed with cutesy heart-shaped gifts while others are repulsed by them. Maybe you're a secret hopeless romantic or maybe you think the holiday is one big marketing scam.
The 2010 rom-com "Valentine's Day" features storylines of singles that hate the holiday and couples that love it. With clear influences from "Love Actually," the film follows at least six relationship arcs, including best friends, married couples and secret crushes. For those not in the mood for love, it's the perfect film to hate-watch. It's also quite fitting for those feeling particularly gushy this year.
Just over two hours long, the cast is stacked with familiar faces, many of them Oscar winners: Anne Hathaway, Bradley Cooper, Julia Roberts and Jamie Foxx to name a few. A 21-year-old Taylor Swift also makes her film debut alongside ex-romantic partner, Taylor Lautner.
Here's what to know about "Valentine's Day," and when and where to watch it this year.
Valentine's Day is available on Hulu with a subscription or available for purchase or rent on YouTube, Amazon Prime Video, Google Play and Apple TV.
The cast list does not disappoint. There's a favorite actor for everyone: Academy Award winner Shirley MacLaine is known for her many iconic roles, including Fran in the 1960s rom-com "The Apartment." Then of course there's George Lopez, known for his ABC sitcom, and Patrick Dempsey, aka McDreamy from "Grey's Anatomy."
Swifties will be happy to see Taylor Swift makes an appearance as the character Felicia Miller. Swift and Lautner's characters play high school sweet hearts, and she wrote the song "Today Was a Fairytale" for the film.
Here's the full cast list:
2025-04-20 10:161328 view
2025-04-20 10:14735 view
2025-04-20 09:49721 view
2025-04-20 09:121374 view
2025-04-20 08:561373 view
2025-04-20 08:312493 view
PARIS — A female wrestler from India was disqualified from her gold-medal bout at the Paris Olympics
Jerry O'Connell is speaking out on John Stamos' memoir comments about Rebecca Romijn.The "Stand By M
MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mexican authorities sent conflicting messages Tuesday about the violent deaths of