Key Takeaways
- Office Romance premiered on Netflix on June 5, 2026 — rated R, runtime 1 hr 53 mins
- Directed by Ol Parker (Mamma Mia: Here We Go Again, Ticket to Paradise)
- Written by Brett Goldstein and Joe Kelly — the Ted Lasso creative team
- Stars Jennifer Lopez as Jackie Cruz, a driven airline CEO, and Goldstein as her company lawyer Daniel Blanchflower
- Supporting cast: Betty Gilpin, Amy Sedaris, Tony Hale, Bradley Whitford, Edward James Olmos
- The film is a modern workplace rom-com about two competitive workaholics who fall for each other
- Critics are divided — some praise the chemistry, others call the R-rated moments unnecessary

Quick Facts
- Premiered: June 5, 2026 — streaming now on Netflix
- Rating / Runtime: R · 1 hr 53 mins
- Director: Ol Parker (Mamma Mia: Here We Go Again, Ticket to Paradise)
- Written by: Brett Goldstein & Joe Kelly — the Ted Lasso creative team
- Stars: Jennifer Lopez as Jackie Cruz (airline CEO) · Brett Goldstein as Daniel Blanchflower (company lawyer)
- Supporting cast: Betty Gilpin, Amy Sedaris, Tony Hale, Bradley Whitford, Edward James Olmos
- The pitch: Two competitive workaholics, one strict no-dating policy, zero self-control
- Critics say: Divided — the chemistry wins, some R-rated moments divide opinion
Opening Verdict
Watch It — With One Caveat
Office Romance is worth your two hours, and the lead pairing is the reason why. Jennifer Lopez and Brett Goldstein are unexpectedly magnetic together, carrying a film that knows exactly what it wants to be: warm, a little raunchy, and unabashedly crowd-pleasing. The caveat is that director Ol Parker — and the R-rating — occasionally push the tone past the film’s natural sweet spot, leaving some scenes feeling gratuitous rather than bold. But if you’re hunting for a summer streaming rom-com with genuine spark, this is the best one Netflix has served up in a while.
Plot Summary
What Is Office Romance?
Jackie Cruz (Lopez) didn’t inherit AirCruz so much as build it — she’s the CEO of the regional airline her father, Captain Jack Cruz (Edward James Olmos, reuniting with Lopez nearly three decades after Selena), founded, and she runs it with a precision that leaves little room for anything outside work. When a legal crisis involving gate disputes at Dallas-Fort Worth lands on her desk, AirCruz brings in Daniel Blanchflower (Goldstein): a gravel-voiced, professionally devoted British lawyer who respects his boss completely — and can’t quite stop himself from falling for her.
There’s a strict no-relationships policy at AirCruz, which provides the central tension. Both characters are workaholics who regard their professional identities as non-negotiable. The collision — funny, tender, and occasionally explicit — is the film’s entire reason for being.
The origin story behind the script is part of the appeal. Goldstein and co-writer Joe Kelly conceived the idea during a three-hour train ride between the Ted Lasso Manchester set and London, bonding over their shared love of classic rom-coms and their conviction that the genre had lost its footing. Their shortlist of dream leads contained exactly one name.
“We were both like, ‘Who’s your dream person to make a rom-com with?’ Without hesitation, we were both like, ‘J.Lo, because she’s the best rom-com actor.'”
Lopez, already an avowed fan of Goldstein’s work as Roy Kent in Ted Lasso, received the script and said yes immediately. The match felt fated — and on screen, it shows.
The Central Question
The Chemistry: Does It Actually Work?
Here is the honest answer: yes, more than you’d expect, and more than the film probably deserves credit for on paper. On the surface, the Lopez–Goldstein pairing reads as a calculated mismatch — one of the most recognisable faces in pop culture opposite a character actor whose screen magnetism has largely expressed itself through sarcasm and barely suppressed rage. In practice, that gap is almost entirely what makes the film tick.
Lopez is doing career-best rom-com work here. Jackie Cruz is the first time she’s played the boss rather than the aspirational underdog — no wedding planners, no maids, no women striving upward. She built this company. That confidence changes the register of her performance. There’s a self-assuredness to her Jackie that creates real stakes: this is a woman with something to lose, which makes the vulnerability more affecting when it arrives.
Goldstein, for his part, earns the role. His Daniel isn’t simply Roy Kent in a suit — he’s quieter, warmer, funnier in a more self-deprecating key. The British-American comedic friction built into the script gives both actors room to play, and they use it. The romantic tension between them is credible precisely because neither actor is performing desire at the audience; they seem to actually enjoy each other’s company, which is rarer than it should be.
Where the chemistry is tested is in the film’s R-rated moments. Audience reaction has been broadly enthusiastic but divided on some of the more explicit sequences — a reasonable view seems to be that the film is pleasurably raunchy in places, but that at least one extended scene strains credulity and disrupts the tone without earning its keep. The connection between the leads is strong enough to survive it, but it’s a genuine wobble in an otherwise well-calibrated film.
Direction & Writing
Ol Parker, the Ted Lasso DNA, and That R-Rating
Ol Parker is a director of consummate, calibrated pleasures. He doesn’t surprise you; he perfects you. His work on Mamma Mia: Here We Go Again and Ticket to Paradise established a house style — warm lighting, crowd-pleasing pacing, leads you want to spend time with — and Office Romance fits squarely within it. The film is handsomely shot by Robert Yeoman (Wes Anderson’s longtime cinematographer), and that slightly heightened, lacquered quality gives the whole thing a tactile warmth you don’t often find in direct-to-streaming releases.
The screenplay carries the unmistakable fingerprints of Ted Lasso: workplace dynamics rendered with genuine affection, a cultural collision played for laughs without condescension, and an emotional intelligence that keeps the comedy honest. Goldstein and Kelly understand that funny scenes land harder when the characters underneath them are real. The dialogue crackles.
The R-rating marks a meaningful departure for Lopez on Netflix — her previous streaming films (The Mother, Atlas) skewed toward action and sci-fi. This is her returning to romantic comedy territory, but in a decidedly more adult register than Marry Me or Second Act. Whether that tonal shift feels earned or gratuitous will likely depend on the viewer.
Supporting Cast
Who Stands Out (and Who Gets Away With It)
Betty GilpinSydney Bloom — Jackie’s best friend & right hand
Tony HaleGeorge Zein — a beleaguered HR rep
Amy SedarisJulie Schatz — ditzy hotel employee
Bradley WhitfordPeter Vance — the high-powered lawyer Daniel replaces
Edward James OlmosCaptain Jack Cruz — Jackie’s formidable father
Jodie WhittakerLizzy — Daniel’s British counterpart
Betty Gilpin is the clear standout in the supporting tier — her Sydney is the kind of best-friend role that usually functions as pure exposition delivery, but Gilpin locates real comic rhythm in it and steals several scenes outright. Tony Hale is reliably funny as a HR representative whose workplace policies are in open war with everyone around him. Amy Sedaris is a known quantity doing what she does, which is more than enough. Edward James Olmos, meanwhile, quietly anchors the film’s emotional stakes — his scenes with Lopez are brief but carry real weight.
Who Should Watch: Is This Your Kind of Film?
Be honest with yourself before pressing play. Office Romance rewards a specific kind of viewer:
Watch If You Are…
If you loved Ticket to Paradise and wished it were a little sharper and slightly more adult, this is your film. If you’re a Ted Lasso fan who wants to see what Goldstein and Kelly do when freed from the constraints of sports television, it’s a genuinely interesting watch. And if you’ve been waiting for a Lopez rom-com where she’s actually treated with the care and creative investment her screen presence demands, this one comes closer than anything she’s been handed in years.
Skip it if you want a sweeping location-driven romance (there’s no Greece, no Amalfi Coast), or if R-rated content is a dealbreaker.
Final Verdict: The Bottom Line
Watch It
Imperfect but thoroughly enjoyable. Lopez and Goldstein make this work when the script occasionally doesn’t, and the Ted Lasso creative DNA gives the film a warmth that direct-to-streaming rom-coms rarely achieve.
Office Romance is not a masterpiece of the genre. It’s a well-made, often very funny, genuinely warm summer film elevated by two leads who are, against any reasonable expectation, electric together. Lopez looks and performs at a level the genre rarely affords her; Goldstein proves his appeal extends well beyond football pitches and gravel-voiced grunts. Ol Parker keeps things moving. The screenplay has teeth.
The R-rating introduces some tonal turbulence, and not every detour earns its place — but these are quibbles inside a film that largely delivers on its premise. If you’ve been burned by enough algorithmically-generic Netflix rom-coms, it’s worth knowing this one has a heartbeat.
Is a rom-com worth watching without an iconic setting like Greece or Italy?
Or do Lopez and Goldstein make the corporate world enough? Tell us in the comments below.
Sources: Deadline (Pete Hammond, June 5, 2026) · Variety (June 5, 2026) · IndieWire (June 5, 2026) · Time (Stephanie Zacharek, June 5, 2026) · Netflix Tudum · Wikipedia: Office Romance (2026 film)