Browse OTT Netflix Prime Video JioHotstar ZEE5
Movie Review

Bingebaaz review

Office Romance Review: Jennifer Lopez Rom-Com Is Breezy But Too Familiar

Office Romance review: Jennifer Lopez and Brett Goldstein lead a breezy Netflix rom-com that is watchable, funny in patches and too familiar.

Verdict
3/5

Quick verdict

Office Romance is a watchable but uneven Netflix rom-com. Lopez brings the glossy star energy the film needs, Goldstein gives Daniel a softer and more awkward comic rhythm, and Betty Gilpin walks away with several of the sharpest moments. But the story leans heavily on familiar office-romance beats, and the central spark works better in individual scenes than across the full film.

If you want the bigger streaming context first, see where the film fits in our June 1 to June 7 OTT releases roundup. For quick facts, our Office Romance Netflix release guide covers the date, story and platform details, while our Office Romance cast guide breaks down Jackie, Daniel and the supporting players.

Rating: 3/5. Stream it if you want a breezy, adult rom-com with recognizable stars. Skip it if you need a genuinely fresh workplace romance or tighter comic writing.

What Office Romance is about

Jennifer Lopez plays Jackie Cruz, the powerful head of an airline company with a strict rule against workplace relationships. Brett Goldstein plays Daniel Blanchflower, the company lawyer who enters her professional orbit at exactly the wrong emotional time.

The hook is simple: two workaholics try to act sensible while their attraction keeps making work messier. The film builds that tension through boardroom pressure, HR panic, family expectations, legal trouble and a romance that keeps moving from professional restraint to impulsive escape.

What works

The best reason to watch Office Romance is its cast. Lopez looks completely at home as Jackie, a woman who has built her entire identity around control, image and responsibility. The film understands her screen presence and lets her play glamour, stress and vulnerability without making Jackie feel small.

Goldstein is an odd but interesting match for her. Daniel is not written as a smooth fantasy-romance lead. He is more rumpled, dry and emotionally exposed, which gives the pairing a different flavour from the usual perfectly matched rom-com couple. That contrast is also why the film works in patches: the leads do not always generate fireworks, but their mismatch gives the movie a few pleasantly awkward comic beats.

Betty Gilpin is the scene-stealer. Her supporting role could have been a standard best-friend part, but she gives it bite and strange comic electricity. Whenever the movie starts feeling too safe, she adds the sharper rhythm it needs.

Where the film struggles

The biggest problem is that Office Romance often feels assembled from rom-com parts we already know. The forbidden relationship, the high-powered boss, the rule-breaking lawyer, the professional fallout and the emotional third-act reckoning all arrive more or less when expected.

That would be fine if the comedy kept surprising us, but the jokes are uneven. Some adult humour lands because the cast sells the embarrassment. Some of it feels like the film is trying too hard to prove this is not a soft, old-fashioned rom-com. The raunchier tone gives Office Romance personality, but it also creates a few moments where the emotion and the joke are fighting each other.

The runtime also feels heavier than the premise needs. A sharper cut could have made the romance feel lighter and the comic rhythm snappier. Instead, the film occasionally pauses to explain stakes that the audience already understands.

Performances

Lopez remains the main draw. She gives Jackie enough confidence to make the CEO angle believable, but also enough softness to remind us this is still a romantic comedy about someone scared to loosen her grip.

Goldstein brings a quieter charm. Viewers expecting his rougher Ted Lasso energy may find Daniel more subdued, but that is partly the point. He works best when the movie lets him be nervous, dry and slightly overwhelmed by the situation.

The supporting cast gives the film much of its bounce. Gilpin is the standout, Edward James Olmos adds warmth as Jackie’s father, and the wider ensemble gives the airline office enough comic texture to stop the story from feeling like only a two-person vehicle.

Should you watch Office Romance?

Watch Office Romance if you miss star-led romantic comedies and are happy with something light, glossy and adult. It is the kind of Netflix film that works best when your expectations are set to easy weekend viewing rather than genre revival.

Do not expect a classic. The film is too predictable for that, and its chemistry is more charming than electric. But as a casual Netflix rom-com with Lopez, Goldstein and a sharp supporting cast, it does enough to justify a one-time stream.

Final verdict

Office Romance is not the big rom-com reset it wants to be, but it is not a waste of time either. It has star polish, some funny adult edges and a few genuinely enjoyable performances. The problem is that the script keeps circling familiar territory without finding a strong enough emotional lift.

Bingebaaz rating: 3/5.

FAQ

Is Office Romance worth watching on Netflix?

Office Romance is worth a casual stream if you want a light, adult rom-com led by Jennifer Lopez and Brett Goldstein. It is not fresh enough to be a must-watch, but it is breezy enough for genre fans.

Who stars in Office Romance?

Office Romance stars Jennifer Lopez as Jackie Cruz, Brett Goldstein as Daniel Blanchflower and Betty Gilpin as Sydney, with Edward James Olmos, Tony Hale, Bradley Whitford, Amy Sedaris and Jodie Whittaker in supporting roles.

Where can I watch Office Romance?

Office Romance is streaming on Netflix from June 5, 2026.

What is Office Romance rated?

Office Romance is an R-rated workplace romantic comedy with adult humour, sexual material, nudity and language.

Discover more from BingeBaaz

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading