Have you ever actually stopped to wonder why the rom-com genre exists? When it comes to the arbitrary labels we chuck on films to make them easier to find in HMV, cinema’s most popular hybrid is pretty unique. Every other category – horror, sci-fi, western, and so on – tends to stand on its own. But come Valentineās Day, few couples are likely to snuggle down to a straight-up romance movie. For one thing, hardly anyone seems to be making them anymore. No, when most people feel the need to watch two people falling in love these days, they stick on a rom-com. That does seem a bit odd – anyone who’s been through a break-up will tell you they rarely feel like a great mine for comedy at the time. The reason, maybe, this duality has proved so popular for the last few decades is that it’s tapped into something an increasingly scientific, technology-driven world can’t really explain. Romance is, fundamentally, very silly. Romantic films, especially so. When was the last time you met a life partner picking up scattered papers on an office floor? Both reached for the same book at the same time? In fact, how often do people meet hand-first in any capacity (don’t answer that). Even still, the lack of genuinely brilliant new rom-coms is a common complaint amongst cinephiles and general audiences at large. Instead, we seem content to stick on the same comforting classics year after year, and they usually involve Hugh Grant. As Fingernails notes on a particularly self-referential cinema marquee, “no-one understands love more”.
Credit: Apple TV+
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To raise the chances of compatibility, the same company has set up a course. Participants are exposed to a series of the romance genre’s greatest hits: faking a fire in a cinema, for example, or doing karaoke in broken French. One by one, our young couples are subjected to a checklist of romantic cliches. At first glance, the film’s attitude to the sub-genre can feel almost cynical. As Jessie Buckley and Riz Ahmed design absurd relationship tests to put would-be life partners through their paces, the temptation to scoff at these surface-level demonstrations of love is pretty intense. Then the two leads meet each other’s gaze through the chlorinated blue of a swimming pool, and all that cynicism melts away. At its heart, Fingernails is a film fascinated by the idea of love. Yes, a couple bonding, palm to palm, over either side of a stuck car window is fundamentally silly. But it also can’t help but set the heart a-fluttering, and Nikou, along with his characters, wants to find out why. Ahmed and Buckley have chemistry – the kind of unspoken, mutual joy that could sell a relationship even without Nikou’s razor-sharp writing. For most of its runtime, Fingernails shows remarkable restraint as each star’s gaze lingers long, and longingly, on the person destined to sit on the other half of the film’s poster.Credit: Apple TV+
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