In the picture

Beth Webb
June 14, 2026

Facing litigation, impassioned airline CEO Jackie (Jennifer Lopez) is thrown together with her company’s lawyer Daniel (Brett Goldstein). As sparks begin to fly, their company’s internal anti-dating policy, plus Jackie’s reputation, is tested.

In the picture


Office Romance ☆☆☆

Starring: Betty Gilpin, Brett Goldstein and Jennifer Lopez

Directed by: OI Parker.

I

t’s been a fair few years since Jennifer Lopez: total goofball has made an appearance on our screens. Make no mistake, the usual tools in her arsenal are all deployed in this zesty work-based romp co-written by her co-star Brett Goldstein. Lopez still commands a room, her finessed swagger compounded by an extensive range of towering Louboutin heels. She still brings a street-smart edge to her high-flying, high-earning exec. Yet thanks to an R-rated, zinger-fuelled script from Goldstein and his Ted Lasso co-creator Joe Kelly, she gets to embrace a rare silliness, as her character’s crush on her moralistic British colleague deepens.

The stars align after Daniel’s assigned to represent Jackie in a case against a slippery competitor. Both have thus far maintained a reserved, professional energy at work; Daniel, who chafes against chatty American workplace culture, even puts on a clipped British accent (a pointed departure from the sweary growls of his Lasso character Roy Kent). To the chagrin of Jackie’s second-in-command and confidant Sydney, played by a scene-stealing, Betty Gilpin who should be booked as a comedy lead immediately, the pair inevitably fall into a forbidden affair. Cue elevator encounters and tropical fumblings that makes for one of the funniest scenes.

“To the chagrin of Jackie’s second-in-command and confidant Sydney, played by a scene-stealing, Betty Gilpin who should be booked as a comedy lead immediately, the pair inevitably fall into a forbidden affair. Cue elevator encounters and tropical fumblings that makes for one of the funniest scenes.”

The film is at its strongest within these pockets of weirdness. A monologue delivered by Goldstein fires off C-bombs like artful ammunition, while a punchline about misdirected fluids from Lopez lands a big laugh. The “rom” doesn’t quite keep up with the “com”, however. The dynamic between the couple is intentional: Goldstein, a relative newcomer to the genre, wrote Jackie with Lopez, a seasoned romantic lead, in mind. The glowing, Yank running circles around the bumbling Brit is of course a timeless trope, but at times fact and fiction blur, with Lopez’s breezy charms seeming to throw her co-star off-balance.

The story occasionally suffers from formulaic limits too, with certain third-act developments feeling hasty and frictionless. These quibbles will not be what linger after the credits roll, however. Office Romance delivers on big, outlandish gags courtesy of a gang of sweet, odd pros. All hail Goofball Lopez.

– Courtesy: Empireonline.com

Rating system: *Not on your life * ½ If you really must waste your time ** Hardly worth the bother ** ½ Okay for a slow afternoon only *** Good enough for a look see *** ½ Recommended viewing **** Don’t miss it **** ½ Almost perfect ***** Perfection

In the picture