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Heart Eyes

Heart Eyes

  • Status: Released
  • 06-02-2025
  • Runtime: 97 min
  • Score: 6
  • Vote count: 14

When the "Heart Eyes Killer" strikes Seattle, a pair of co-workers pulling overtime on Valentine's Day are mistaken for a couple by the elusive couple-hunting killer. Now, they must spend the most romantic night of the year running for their lives.

Olivia Holt

Ally

Mason Gooding

Jay Simmonds

Jordana Brewster

Detective Janine Shaw

Devon Sawa

Detective Zeke Hobbs

Gigi Zumbado

Monica

Ben Black

Collin

Chris Parker

Tommy

Latham Gaines

Nico

Lauren O'Hara

Adeline

Michaela Watkins

Caroline Cane

Josh Ruben

Movie Goer

Alex Walker

Patrick

Karlton Laing

Security Guard

Amy L. Workman

Reporter

Joseph Wycoff

Reporter

Sahil Arora

Reporter

Kali Kopae

Reporter

Gary Young

Specialist

Madeleine McCarthy

Panicked Teen

Alaina Wilks

Grunge Girl

Kaylim Miller

Grunge Girl

Molly Curnow

Dana

Dylan Thuraisingham

Dylan

Conor Bowden

Queer Patron

Karishma Grebneff

Sienna

Esaú Mora

Barista

Charles Pierard

Anchorman

Jessica Underwood Varma

Reporter Gigi Sieczkowski

James Gaylyn

Chief Richard Hartley

Laylah Waggie

Ally's TVC Female Model

Elliot Lloyd-Bell

Ally's TVC Male Model

Antonia Prebble

Jane

Kiri-Rose Kendall

Store Clerk

Jzayla Hughey

Maitre d'

Colm Woulfe

Bistro Bouncer

Wesley Dowdell

Waiter

Greg Johnson

Janos

David Van Horn

Krueger

Batanai Mashingaidze

Garris

Bronwyn Bradley

Fran

Yoson An

David

Daniel Watterson

Brave Guy

Ruby Pledge

Samm

Sol Maxwell

Jordynn

Ella Hope-Higginson

Movie Goer

Vinnie Bennett

Eli

Jacque Drew

Paramedic

Chris Sawin

In Heart Eyes, the Heart Eyes Killer or HEK has been at large for two years. HEK generally targets couples in love but will kill anyone just because. As HEK shows up in a town that has the biggest boner in existence for the romantic holiday, Ally (Olivia Holt) realizes that her marketing career may be over. Ally has created an entire ad campaign for jewelry revolving around romantic couples dying and the company she works for is scrambling to create something new last minute. They call in a freelancer named Jay (Mason Gooding) to brainstorm something that will save the campaign and the company. Ally, who not so secretly hates her job, is obsessed with her ex-boyfriend who is constantly posting on social media about his new love interest. Ally is overwhelmingly bitter over the concept of love while Jay is the opposite and is a complete sucker for falling head over heels for a soulmate. Ally believes that Jay wants to take her job, but the two begin to show interest in one another which puts them right into the swinging distance of the machete slashing and crossbow slinging HEK. From director Josh Ruben (Werewolves Within) and writers Phillip Murphy (Hitman’s Wife’s Bodyguard), Christopher Landon (Freaky, Happy Death Day 2U), and Michael Kennedy (It’s a Wonderful Knife), Heart Eyes is probably the dumbest concept for a recent slasher film but cashes in on Valentine’s Day for the horror genre. The slasher film begins with a couple attempting to have the perfect proposal. HEK brutalizes them with arrows and a compression chamber that squeezes until the victim inside is a gooey squish. Apart from the mask, HEK dons an all-leather outfit and the loudest black boots the world has ever heard. The camera also seems to hover around HEK’s crotch like it doesn’t want to show its face even though they’re always wearing a mask. Heart Eyes is a romantic comedy caterpillar cocooned within a slasher film. The film feels like a romantic movie parody since it is consistently pointing out its ridiculousness. The humor comes off as extremely meta since the film feels like a mockery of someone watching the film rather than taking part in it. After the Happy Death Day films, Freaky, It’s a Wonderful Knife, and even Amazon Prime’s Totally Killer, there’s this genre of slasher comedies that now all feel the same and Heart Eyes is in the same group. It’s partially because it’s the same people working on the majority of these films, but none of them capture the same goofy magic that Happy Death Day or Freaky did. The more these types of slashers are released the more it seems like Freaky was entertaining because of Vince Vaughn’s performance rather than the actual script of the film. Heart Eyes is a horror film that knows it’s dumb and completely plays into it. After the film’s opening, the film spends the next thirty minutes diving in to Ally’s drama at work and her possible chemistry with Jay. There’s some great imagery in the film especially with the sequence on the carousel and the drive-in. But every kill and every promising endeavor results in this sequence of stupidity that mostly doesn’t work. Ally and Jay take refuge in an unlocked van at the drive-in. They attempt to have a serious conversation while a stoned-out couple has loud sex in the back. The sex scene culminates with a kill sequence that Jason Voorhees would approve of. Then there’s a beheading in the film that is so wonderfully slimy, goopy, and dripping with exceptional practical effects. It’s so odd because Heart Eyes feels like a hornier version of Friday the 13th without any gratuitous nudity, which is one of the elements that made horror films from the 80s so memorable. Apart from romantic couples being the main target of the killer in Heart Eyes, the main tagline is that everyone has a kink or a fetish. But nothing in Heart Eyes is that kinky or revealing apart from the kills, which are legitimately the only redeeming aspect of the film. R-rated movies and mainstream horror in general have shifted away from graphic sex scenes and nudity in recent years, and there are several reasons for that. But it seems unusual to have a film take place on what is considered the most romantic holiday of the year for most and be R-rated and not even tease something sensual apart from loud dirty talk. Heart Eyes is a clumsy horror film that is so dumb that it stumbles into accidental amusement from time to time. Some inventive kills are nearly ruined by a half-ass plot that points out how convoluted it is every chance it gets and a killer reveal that’s about as satisfying as waking up at the bottom of a greasy flesh pile at an orgy you didn’t consent to.