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Lists, Opinions, Romantic comedy

Oldies But Goldies: The Romcoms You Need On Your Next Rainy Day

Way before Netflix and Prime, there were these. Blurry on late-night cable. Perfect on a stormy day. Plots that had you dreaming of love in ways that were maybe a little unrealistic.

Written by Oghenetega Elizabeth Obukohwo
Published on May 9, 2026
Romcoms you need on your next rainy day

2000s babies, gather round. And for everyone else who has ever found themselves on a Wednesday night, three episodes into nothing in particular, suddenly switching over to something from 1999 and feeling your whole chest loosen, yes, you too. This is for us.

I started rewatching some of these recently. I told myself it would be one. Just one. And then it was midnight, and I was smiling at an ending I already knew was coming, wearing a sweater and socks that were not doing nearly enough structural work, and I was happy. Genuinely happy. The kind that only old films and comfort food can produce.

So here we are. Way before Netflix and Prime, there were these. Blurry on late-night cable. Perfect on a stormy day. Plots that had you dreaming of love in ways that were maybe a little unrealistic, but absolutely nobody was complaining. These films have immense rewatch value, and I am not sorry about any of it.

1. Pretty Woman (1990)

This movie is number one because it is my piece and also because it is the one that pulled me back into the genre in the first place. One idle evening, I turned it on expecting background noise, and then Julia Roberts laughed, that laugh, and I was completely, helplessly hooked.

Richard Gere and Julia Roberts are electric together in a way that cannot be explained. You simply feel it. The Rodeo Drive montage, the opera scene, the jewelry box snap – if you know, you know. If you do not, please fix that immediately.

Now, in full honesty, watching it in 2025, the power dynamics are something. A man essentially renting a woman and deciding to keep her is not exactly the blueprint we visualize for our love stories. Vivian spends a lot of the film waiting to be chosen, which, look, we see it. But the film announces itself as a fairy tale from scene one and commits fully, and within that frame, it is close to perfect.

Nigerian version: Vivian is a Casablanca girl caught in PH city traffic with a cold, unavailable businessman who needs a plus-one for a Victoria Island dinner party. The chemistry and the class tension write themselves. Nollywood, the door is open.

2. The Sound of Music (1965)

Yes, this one’s included. Julie Andrews and Christopher Plummer fall in love across seven children and some truly spectacular Austrian scenery. That counts.

But more importantly, this is where your childhood soundtrack lived. Do Re Mi. My Favorite Things. Edelweiss. You knew these words before you knew where they came from. And if you need a bridge to the current generation: Ariana Grande sampled My Favorite Things for Seven Rings, and it went platinum, so the lineage is intact.

Mild critique: Maria dissolves pretty completely into a life already built by someone else. But she does it in the Alps, with a full orchestra, so it is hard to hold against her.

3. Runaway Bride (1999)

Drum roll. Julia Roberts. Richard Gere. Again. Because once was clearly not enough for either of them, or for us.

What I love about this one, especially on a rewatch, is that it is actually doing something smarter than it lets on. Maggie Carpenter, woman of many almost-weddings, does not know who she is outside of whoever she is dating. She even orders her eggs the way each fiancé prefers without ever figuring out what she likes. That precise detail hits differently when you are an adult. It hits hard.

Ike Graham (Gere) spends much of the film being publicly awful toward a woman he has never met, and love finds him anyway, which is a bit much. But the banter is sharp, Julia Roberts is doing the most in the best way, and the conclusion is genuinely earned.

Nigerian version: A Lekki wedding planner who has left three men at the altar gets profiled by a journalist from The Punch. He is smug. She is chaotic. They both need therapy and somehow end up in love instead. Classic.

4. When Harry Met Sally (1989)

While this movie straddles the puzzling domains of whether men and women could ever just be friends, what holds up most is the writing. Nora Ephron’s screenplay is funny and sharp and true in the specific way that only the best romantic comedy writing manages.

The diner scene is still the diner scene. Lines from this film live in everyday conversation, and people use them without knowing where they came from.

Harry is insufferable for much of the runtime. Sally is particular in ways that would exhaust a lesser film. They deserve each other completely, and that is precisely the point.

Nigerian version: University friends who argued about everything from 100 level, lost touch, and ran into each other at a wedding fifteen years later. She is married. He is not. The table they get seated at together is very small.

5. Notting Hill (1999) & You’ve Got Mail (1998)

A quick double bill because both films are asking the same question: what happens when ordinary life collides with something bigger than it?

Hugh Grant’s entire career can be understood through Notting Hill. The stammering, the self-deprecation, the sense that he cannot quite believe his own luck — it has never been better deployed than when he is standing opposite Julia Roberts (her again!) playing the most famous actress in the world.

You’ve Got Mail gives us Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan falling in love over email before knowing who the other person is. It is set in autumn in New York, which is doing at least forty percent of the emotional work, and it earns every second.

6. Sleepless in Seattle (1993)

Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan again, this time barely sharing a screen until the final minutes, and somehow that restraint makes the whole thing more romantic.

The film makes you root for a connection built almost entirely on radio waves and projection. It should not work. It works completely. The Empire State Building ending lands every single time, even when you know exactly what is coming and have known since 1993.

Nigerian version? A man calls into the cool FM midnight show to talk about grief, his son’s schemes, and a woman in Abuja hears it on a road trip and becomes entirely too invested. She has a perfectly good fiancé. She absolutely does not care.

7. My Best Friend’s Wedding (1997)

The one romcom with the courage to let its protagonist lose.

Julia Roberts plays Jules, who realizes she loves her best friend right as he announces he is marrying someone else. She spends the film trying to break them up. She fails. The film is better, truer, and more interesting for it. Also, Cameron Diaz is so effortlessly likable in this that you cannot even be properly on Jules’ side, which is the film’s greatest trick.

Nigerian version: She has loved him since university. He calls her from abroad to say he met someone and is bringing her home for an introduction. She has four weeks, one bad plan, and a best friend who keeps talking her out of it. Well, she might need 3 girlfriends to advise her; feel free to make alterations.

8. Bridget Jones: The Entire Series

Renée Zellweger as Bridget Jones is the most human woman ever placed at the center of a mainstream romantic comedy. Messy, funny, well-meaning, catastrophically bad at timing, she is us, flatly, on our worst and best days simultaneously.

Colin Firth and Hugh Grant orbit her in completely different ways, and the push and pull across the series never gets old. These films age best of the lot precisely because Bridget is allowed to be wrong and still be the one we are rooting for.

Nigerian version? A chaotic girl in her late thirties, working in media, keeping a voice-note diary instead of a written journal because who has time. Her mother is calling. The family WhatsApp group is a threat to her mental health. Two men. Zero chill. Somebody, please fund this.

9. Maid in Manhattan (2002)

Jennifer Lopez as Marisa Ventura, a hotel maid mistaken for a guest by a senatorial candidate played by Ralph Fiennes. It is Cinderella with better shoes and an actual conversation about class that the film is too warm to be preachy about.

J.Lo is luminous in this role, and it is worth watching just to remember what it felt like when she was everywhere at once and making it look easy. Which, to be fair, she still is.

Nigerian version: A hotel staff member at a five-star Eko Hotel is mistaken for a guest by a visiting politician’s aide during a conference. Three days. One borrowed blazer. Absolutely zero business falling for anyone.

10. One More Thing

These films were made by people at the top of their craft, actors who could do all of it, the drama and the comedy, and sometimes an actual musical number, often before the age of thirty-five. Julia Roberts, in her prime, is a force of nature. Meg Ryan defined an era. Hugh Grant turned awkwardness into an art form. Audrey Hepburn remains simply unreachable.

The politics are sometimes dated, yes. We can see the cracks now that we could not at twelve years old. A heroine waiting to be rescued, a man rewarded for bad behavior, a love story that asks very little of its male lead, we notice. But we can hold that awareness lightly and still let the warmth in.

Because on a rainy day, or an overwhelming one, or just a Wednesday when the world has asked too much of you, you can curl up with one of these and your heart will feel lighter. That is what they were made to do.

And they still do it beautifully.

Written by Oghenetega Elizabeth Obukohwo

Hi I'm Tega, I am a microbiologist with a lifelong passion for reading, I fell in love with books as child (where I was briefly obsessed with Enid Blyton, lol) reading is simply my escape and hobby and sometimes doubles as therapy for me . My favorite genres are African lit, historical fiction, memoirs/biographies and fantasy. I do beta reading and post book reviews which you can check out on my Instagram @ te_ga_o.

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