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You, Me and Tuscany Review: A Charming, Sun-Drenched Rom-Com That Gets the Basics Right

You, Me and Tuscany (2026) review — Halle Bailey and Regé-Jean Page shine in a charming, funny, and romantic Italian-set comedy that elevates familiar rom-com tropes.

By Sean PatrickPublished about 9 hours ago 3 min read

⭐ Star Rating: 3.5/5

Film Details

• Title: You, Me and Tuscany

• Director: Kat Coiro

• Writer: Ryan Engle

• Starring: Halle Bailey, Regé-Jean Page

• Release Date: April 10, 2026

A Familiar Recipe—Done Right

The thing about romantic comedies that we all have to accept is simple: it’s all been done before. When it comes to Hollywood rom-coms, there really is nothing new under the sun.

That’s not a complaint. I love rom-coms. My mom loved rom-coms more than anything, and for big-hearted people like her, I always want these movies to exist—and to succeed.

The key isn’t avoiding tropes. It’s elevating them.

And I’m happy to say that You, Me and Tuscany understands that perfectly.

Up-Cycling the Rom-Com Formula

Director Kat Coiro and writer Ryan Engle don’t reinvent the genre—they refine it.

Yes, all the familiar beats are here:

• The meet-cute

• The misunderstanding

• The inevitable emotional fallout

But thanks to a gorgeous setting, a playful tone, and a cast of memorable oddballs, the film feels light, free, and alive.

This isn’t recycling—it’s up-cycling.

The bones are classic, but the style is fresh, modern, and just a little sexy. It may not be great art, but it is undeniably great entertainment.

Halle Bailey Shines in a Star-Making Rom-Com Turn

Halle Bailey plays Anna, a professional housesitter in New York City drifting through life after the death of her mother.

She abandoned culinary school to care for her, and now she floats between borrowed homes, borrowed clothes, and borrowed identities—pretending she’s okay.

It’s a surprisingly grounded emotional core for such a breezy movie.

After getting caught by a client (in a moment that leans just the right amount into cringe comedy), Anna finds herself with nowhere to go—until a chance meeting at a hotel bar changes everything.

A Fairytale Setup in the Italian Countryside

Enter Matteo (Lorenzo De Moor), a wealthy Italian businessman who, after a night of flirting and drinks, casually mentions his empty villa in Tuscany.

Anna happens to have a plane ticket to Italy—gifted by her late mother.

Too perfect? Absolutely.

But that’s the point.

Soon, Anna is in Tuscany, living out a dream vacation that quickly spirals into classic rom-com chaos when Matteo’s family mistakes her for his fiancée.

From there:

• Lies pile up

• Romance complicates

• And yes, she ends up cooking in the family restaurant

It’s ridiculous. It’s contrived.

And it works.

Regé-Jean Page Brings Charm and Depth

Regé-Jean Page plays Michael, Matteo’s half-brother and Anna’s true romantic match.

Page does exactly what you want him to do—and then a little more.

Yes, the charisma is effortless. Yes, the screen presence is undeniable. But he also brings a quiet emotional depth that keeps the film from floating away entirely on charm.

He may not deliver the biggest laughs, but he anchors the romance in something real.

A Standout Supporting Cast

The real secret weapon here is the supporting cast.

Marco Calvani’s Lorenzo—a kind-hearted Uber driver turned confidant—is the standout. He’s warm, funny, and genuinely invested in Anna’s happiness, and Calvani plays him with an easy, natural charm.

Matteo’s family is filled with familiar archetypes:

• The stern father

• The worried mother

• The observant Nonna

• The slightly ridiculous siblings

But they’re all cast so well that they feel lived-in rather than lazy.

Nonna, in particular, is a quiet triumph—watching, knowing, and revealing more with a look than most characters do with pages of dialogue.

That’s smart filmmaking. Nothing flashy—just well executed.

Italy Does a Lot of Heavy Lifting (And That’s Okay)

Let’s be honest: setting a rom-com in Italy is almost unfair.

The film leans into it fully—sun-drenched vineyards, charming villas, and meals that look like they were designed to make you fall in love.

Combined with its cast and tone, the setting turns a simple story into something rich, romantic, and easy to get lost in.

Final Thoughts: Exactly What You Want From a Rom-Com

You, Me and Tuscany doesn’t try to reinvent the genre.

It just tries to get it right.

And it does.

It’s funny, romantic, a little ridiculous, and filled with enough heart and charm to carry you through every predictable turn.

Honestly, what more can we ask from a modern rom-com than that?

Tags

romantic comedy, rom-com review, You Me and Tuscany, Halle Bailey, Regé-Jean Page, 2026 movies, movie reviews, Italy films, romance movies, Vocal Media

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About the Creator

Sean Patrick

Hello, my name is Sean Patrick He/Him, and I am a film critic and podcast host for the I Hate Critics Movie Review Podcast I am a voting member of the Critics Choice Association, the group behind the annual Critics Choice Awards.

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  • Mariann Carrollabout 9 hours ago

    I love this movie review. I am die hard romantic. Looks like this movie might fit the bill.

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