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Top 100: Are these the most-loved romantic films of all time?

Love is in the air in the lead up to Valentine’s Day and we’ve surveyed our resident movie buffs to find out their 100 most-loved romance films. Do you agree with their pick of the flicks?

"When Sally Met Hellmann's" Hellmann's Super Bowl advert 2025

Who needs flowers and chocolates for Valentine’s Day? Just stay in and watch a romance movie.

What’s not to love about a film that tugs on your heart strings.

In the lead up to February 14, we asked a panel of our resident movie buffs to name their favourites to create a list of 100 much-loved romantic films.

They included epic tales Gone With The Wind and Dr Zhivago, tear-jerkers like Love Story, bittersweet sagas such as The Way We Were and a reel of rom-coms including My Best Friend’s Wedding and You’ve Got Mail.

Here they are:

1 WHEN HARRY MET SALLY

Meg Ryan and Billy Crystal in When Harry Met Sally. Picture: Advertiser Library
Meg Ryan and Billy Crystal in When Harry Met Sally. Picture: Advertiser Library

A 1980s rom-com famous for an infamous one-liner has topped our poll.

Starring Billy Crystal and Meg Ryan in the titular roles, the film, directed by Rob Reiner, was a modern take on the screwball comedies of the 1940s which focused on the battles of the sexes with women often coming out on top.

Written by Nora Ephron, the script included a scene in which Meg fakes an orgasm.

At Ryan’s insistence it was shot in a restaurant, with Crystal suggesting the addition of the “I’ll have what she’s having” line.

2 CASABLANCA

Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman in Casablanca. Picture: Advertiser Library
Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman in Casablanca. Picture: Advertiser Library

Coming in at a close second was this 1942 masterpiece.

With its classic quotes “Of all the gin joints in all the towns in all the world, she walks into mine”, “We’ll always have Paris” and “Here’s looking at you, kid”, the film was The Advertiser entertainment editor Antimo Iannella’s top pick.

“Michael Curtiz’s epic drama starring Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman is one of the most popular and romantic films ever made, with iconic dialogue that has been recited for decades since,” he says.

“Ultimately its bittersweet ending is about sacrificing love … but I always ask myself, “Why did Ilsa get on that plane?” and then watch it again.”

3 ROMAN HOLIDAY

Gregory Peck and Audrey Hepburn in Roman Holiday Picture: Advertiser Library
Gregory Peck and Audrey Hepburn in Roman Holiday Picture: Advertiser Library

In third spot was 1953’s Roman Holiday, for which leading lady Audrey Hepburn won an Oscar in what was her breakthrough role.

It is the all-time favourite of reporter and movie buff Shashi Baltutis.

“Gregory Peck is impeccable and Audrey Hepburn is having the time of her life as the pair prance around the Eternal City,” he says, adding: “Peck and Hepburn’s chemistry makes one believe the improbable meeting between journalist and princess and always leaves me with tears in my eyes at the inevitable but soul crushing ending.”

4 AN AFFAIR TO REMEMBER

Deborah Kerr and Cary Grant in An Affair to Remember. Picture: Supplied
Deborah Kerr and Cary Grant in An Affair to Remember. Picture: Supplied

A remake of an earlier film, 1939’s Love Affair, this 1957 melodrama directed by Leo McCarey provided inspiration for another movie in our top 10, Sleepless in Seattle.

With its charismatic, compelling coupling of Cary Grant and Deborah Kerr as “international playboy” Nickie and former nightclub singer Terry – and also starring the Empire State Building – the tear-jerker includes the much-quoted: “Winter must be cold for those with no warm memories. We’ve already missed the Spring.”

5 NOTTING HILL

Hugh Grant and Julia Roberts in Notting Hill. Picture: Advertiser Library
Hugh Grant and Julia Roberts in Notting Hill. Picture: Advertiser Library

Just as Sleepless in Seattle is an homage to An Affair to Remember, this 1999 rom-com with a boy-meets-princess storyline is a nod to Roman Holiday. Julia Roberts pretty much plays herself; her character Anna Scott is Hollywood royalty and hounded by the press. Hugh Grant, meanwhile, is bumbling bookshop owner William Thacker. With a screenplay by Richard Curtis and directed by Roger Michell, Notting Hill opens with Elvis Costello’s superb cover of Charles Aznavour’s She and includes the much-parodied but adorable line delivered by Anna, the superstar, “I’m also just a girl standing in front of a boy asking him to love her”, plus brilliant performances by its stellar supporting actors including Rhys Ifans as Spike.

6 BEFORE SUNRISE

Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy in Before Sunrise. Picture: Advertiser Library
Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy in Before Sunrise. Picture: Advertiser Library

Dubbed “Brief Encounter for Generation X” by one reviewer back in the day, this 1995 film doesn’t have a particularly involved plot but is about a relationship, albeit fleeting, that belongs in the “it’s complicated” category. Basically, Ethan Hawke’s Jesse and Celine, played by Julie Delpy, meet on a train in Europe and end up roaming the streets of Vienna as they bare their souls to one another – and fall in love – before they go their separate ways.

Directed by Richard Linklater, who was also co-writer with Kim Krizan, Before Sunrise spawned a 2004 sequel Before Sunset, set in Paris, and, again nine years later, Before Midnight where we catch up with Jesse and Celine in Greece.

7 THE PRINCESS BRIDE

Cary Elwes and Robin Wright in The Princess Bride. Picture: Advertiser Library
Cary Elwes and Robin Wright in The Princess Bride. Picture: Advertiser Library

This 1987 film, also directed by Rob Reiner, turned soapie star Robin Wright into Hollywood hot property. National music writer Kathy McCabe’s and reporter Aden Hill named The Princess Bride as their most loved romantic film.

“Universally described as a swashbuckling, damsel-in-distress fairytale, The Princess Bride charts the timeless romantic arc of unspoken infatuation blooming into true love, before the star-crossed soulmates are separated by tragedy and reunited to prove love conquers all petulant princes.” McCabe says.

Hill adds: “As the child at the start of the film asks his grandfather, ‘is this a kissing story?’. Yes, but it’s one of the best.”

8 SLEEPLESS IN SEATTLE

Meg Ryan in Sleepless in Seattle. Picture: Advertiser Library
Meg Ryan in Sleepless in Seattle. Picture: Advertiser Library

Directed and co-written by Nora Ephron, this 1993 rom-com stars “America’s sweetheart” Meg Ryan and Tom Hanks. From the get-go there’s captivating chemistry between Hanks’ character, widower Sam, and Ryan’s reporter Annie – despite the two having very little screen time together. The references to An Affair to Remember also make it a must-watch for lovers of the romance genre. As Ephron, who died in 2012, once said: “Our dream was to make a movie about how movies screw up your brain about love, and then if we did a good job, we would become one of the movies that would screw up people’s brains about love forever.”

9 ROMEO+JULIET

Claire Danes and Leonardo DiCaprio in Rome+Juliet. Picture: Advertiser Library
Claire Danes and Leonardo DiCaprio in Rome+Juliet. Picture: Advertiser Library

Directed, produced, and co-written by Australia’s Baz Luhrmann, this 1996 film adaptation of Shakespeare’s play stars the then 21-yerar-old Leonardo DiCaprio and Claire Danes, then 17, as the star-crossed lovers. Some critics, notably the late, great Roger Ebert, seemed to love to hate Romeo+Juliet upon its release but it fared well with our panel. Ebert said: “I have never seen anything remotely approaching the mess that the new punk version of Romeo and Juliet makes of Shakespeare’s tragedy.” But that’s exactly why fans of Luhrmann’s grungy take on The Bard’s ill-fated romance dig it so much.

10 ETERNAL SUNSHINE OF THE SPOTLESS MIND

Kate Winslet and Jim Carrey in Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind. Picture: Advertiser Library
Kate Winslet and Jim Carrey in Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind. Picture: Advertiser Library

Arguably the movie with the most unconventional plot in our top 10, this 2004 sci-fi rom-com was born out of conversations between director Michel Gondry and co-writer Pierre Bismuth. It explores something everyone who has loved and lost has, no doubt, at some time (even if momentarily) wished they could do – completely erase their ex from memory. Kate Winslet’s Clementine has had a procedure to do just that but when her former partner Joel, played by Jim Carrey, decides to do the same, halfway through he changes his mind.

11 From Here to Eternity

12 Love Actually

13 Ghost

14 Titanic

15 An Officer and a Gentleman

Richard Gere and Debra Winger in An Officer And A Gentleman. Picture: Advertiser Library
Richard Gere and Debra Winger in An Officer And A Gentleman. Picture: Advertiser Library

16 Call Me By Your Name

17 Four Weddings and a Funeral

18 Moonstruck

19 While You Were Sleeping

20 La La Land

21 Past Lives

22 You’ve Got Mail

23 Brief Encounter

24 The English Patient

25 Love Story

Ryan O’Neal and Ali McGraw in Love Story. Picture: Supplied
Ryan O’Neal and Ali McGraw in Love Story. Picture: Supplied

26 West Side Story

27 Out of Sight

Jennifer Lopez and George Clooney in Out of Sight. Picture: Advertiser Library
Jennifer Lopez and George Clooney in Out of Sight. Picture: Advertiser Library

“Steven Soderbergh’s 1998 gem Out of Sight might not be regarded as a classic of the genre by many – in fact it might not technically even be a romance – but the hill I will die on is that George Clooney and Jennifer Lopez are the hottest couple to ever grace a movie screen. In fact if a way could be found to retrospectively harness their crackling, electric chemistry as charming rogue bank-robber Jack Foley and Karen Sisco, the US Marshal on his trail, the world’s energy problems would be solved forever. Movie reviewer Leigh Paatsch described their steamy meet-cute in the boot of a car as “the dirtiest ‘clean’ love scene of all time” (literally, he’s just climbed out of prison escape tunnel) and if the risqué rendezvous when they finally embrace their irresistible attraction – despite all the obstacles – in a hotel as the snow swirls outside doesn’t set your pulse racing, you might already be dead.” – National Entertainment Writer James Wigney.

28 My Best Friend’s Wedding

29 Bridget Jones’ Diary

Colin Firth, Renee Zellweger and Hugh Grant in Bridget Jones's Diary. Picture: Advertiser Library
Colin Firth, Renee Zellweger and Hugh Grant in Bridget Jones's Diary. Picture: Advertiser Library

“This is my favourite romantic movie mostly because of the famous line uttered by Mark Darcy to Bridget, “I like you, very much, just as you are” and what it represents.

Isn’t that what everyone wants, to be liked just as they are, without reservation and despite (or perhaps because of) our imperfections and quirks?

This film explores the pressure felt by women to fit into a perceived physical and societal ideal, slim and successful in order to bag a man.

However, the titular character finds love and realises she did so without needing to transform herself into something she thinks her partner needed, either through weight loss or by achievements in career and personal life” – Adelaide Advertiser librarian Milly Wise

30 The Notebook

31 The Remains of the Day

32 A Star is Born (2018)

33 His Girl Friday

34 Like Water for Chocolate

35 Chocolat

Juliette Binoche in Chocolat. Picture: Advertiser Library
Juliette Binoche in Chocolat. Picture: Advertiser Library

36 Breakfast at Tiffany’s

37 The Way We Were

38 The Philadelphia Story

39 To Catch a Thief

40 Pretty Woman

41 Gone With The Wind

42 Jerry Maguire

43 A Room With A View

44 Sabrina

45 Strictly Ballroom

A Paul Mercurio and Tara Morice in Strictly Ballroom. Picture: Advertiser Library
A Paul Mercurio and Tara Morice in Strictly Ballroom. Picture: Advertiser Library

46 Brokeback Mountain

47 Breathless

48 Guess Who’s Coming To Dinner

49 10 Things I Hate About You

50 Love and Other Catastrophes

51 High Society

52 Lost In Translation

53 Bringing Up Baby

54 Moulin Rouge!

55 Singing in the Rain

56 My Girl

57 Pretty In Pink

58 Silver Linings Playbook

59 Notorious

60 The Wedding Singer

Adam Sandler in The Wedding Singer. Picture: Advertiser Library
Adam Sandler in The Wedding Singer. Picture: Advertiser Library

61 How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days

62 Intolerable Cruelty

63 Cinema Paradiso

64 Muriel’s Wedding

65 Midnight in Paris

66 Annie Hall

67 Say Anything

68 It Happened One Night

69 Twilight

70 In the Mood for Love

Tony Leung and Maggie Cheung in In The Mood For Love. Picture: Advertiser Library
Tony Leung and Maggie Cheung in In The Mood For Love. Picture: Advertiser Library

71 Top End Wedding

72 The Bridges of Madison County

73 Portrait of a Lady on Fire

74 Razing Arizona

75 What’s Up Doc?

76 Working Girl

77 Fifty First Dates

78 Only You

79 How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days

80 The Lake House

Keanu Reeves and Sandra Bullock in The Lake House. Picture: Advertiser Library
Keanu Reeves and Sandra Bullock in The Lake House. Picture: Advertiser Library

81 Singles

82 High Fidelity

83 Down With Love

84 The Umbrellas of Cherbourg

85 Pierrot Le Fou

86 500 Days of Summer

87 Doctor Zhivago

88 Once

89 Portrait of a Lady on Fire

90 Ice Castles

Lynn-Holly Johnson and Robby Benson in Ice Castles. Picture: Advertiser Library
Lynn-Holly Johnson and Robby Benson in Ice Castles. Picture: Advertiser Library

91 Love Hard

92 Jules and Jim

93 About Time

94 Groundhog Day

95 Wall-E

96 Punch-Drunk Love

97 The Circus

98 City Lights

99 Meet Joe Black

100 Rust and Bone

Matthias Schoenaerts and Marion Cotillard in Rust and Bone. Picture: Advertiser Adelaide
Matthias Schoenaerts and Marion Cotillard in Rust and Bone. Picture: Advertiser Adelaide

THE MOST-LOVED ROMANTIC FILMS VOTING PANEL

Shashi Baltutis – Reporter, Adelaide Advertiser

Darren Chaitman – Reporter, Adelaide Advertiser

Aden Hill – Reporter, Adelaide Advertiser

Antimo Iannella – Head of Entertainment, Adelaide Advertiser

Kathy McCabe – National Music Writer

Anna Vlach – Deputy Head of Arts and Entertainment, Adelaide Advertiser

James Wigney – National Entertainment Writer

Milly Wise – Librarian, Adelaide Advertiser

* The poll was decided by personal passions. It is not a critics’ list; it’s the favourite romance movies of people who love cinema.

Originally published as Top 100: Are these the most-loved romantic films of all time?

Original URL: https://www.thechronicle.com.au/news/south-australia/top-100-are-these-the-mostloved-romantic-films-of-all-time/news-story/b2dda5821a1b8a619f1a7fe2f3f2ee40