
Celebrate Valentine’s Day with a feel-good love story! Check out Kanopy’s Valentine’s Day Collection and stream a love story now at kanopy.com/category/29297.

Set in the Detroit suburbs, this punk rock comedy follows Simon (Kyle Gallner), a volatile on-the-run band frontman, who finds unlikely refuge with Patty (Emily Skeggs), a shy misfit obsessed with his music. As their chaotic connection grows, the two outcasts spark a rebellious, foul-mouthed romance fueled by shared rage and outsider pride. With cops, parents, and conformity closing in, their bond becomes the loudest act of defiance.
After a personal loss, Carol (Blythe Danner) finds the everyday activities that have given her life structure – her regular bridge game, gardening, a glass of wine or two – have lost their luster. With the support of three loyal girlfriends, Carol decides to embrace the world, embarking on a new relationship and discovering that life can begin anew at any age.
In this charming romantic dramedy based on the novel by Nick Hornby, Annie (Rose Byrne) is stuck in a stale seaside relationship with Duncan (Chris O’Dowd), an obsessive fan of reclusive musician Tucker Crowe (Ethan Hawke). When Annie posts a scathing review of Tucker’s lost album, it sparks an unexpected correspondence and an even more unlikely connection with the musician himself.
Barry Egan (Adam Sandler) is a small business owner with seven sisters whose abuse has kept him alone and unable to fall in love. When a harmonium and a mysterious woman (Emily Watson) enter his life, his romantic journey begins.
Set in contemporary Oslo, this sharp romantic comedy follows Julie (Cannes Best Actress winner Renate Reinsve), a witty and impulsive woman in her thirties, as she ricochets between careers, lovers, and existential doubts. Torn between the stable, older Aksel (Anders Danielsen Lie) and the free-spirited Eivind (Herbert Nordrum), she stumbles through a whirlwind of breakups, hookups, and self-reinvention. With bursts of surreal humor and emotional honesty, her search for meaning becomes both chaotic and painfully relatable.








