News

‘People We Meet on Vacation’ is more jet lag than romcom – 828reviewsNOW

‘People We Meet on Vacation’ is more jet lag than romcom – 828reviewsNOW

Emily Bader as Poppy Wright in "People We Meet on Vacation." Photo: Contributed/Netflix


ASHEVILLE, N.C. (828newsNOW) — The first big romantic comedy of 2026 has arrived. “People We Meet on Vacation,” adapted from the bestselling novel of the same name by Emily Henry and starring Emily Bader and Tom Blyth, will begin streaming on Netflix on Friday, Jan. 9.

“PEOPLE WE MEET ON VACATION” (2026, 113 min., directed by Brett Haley)

I hate having jet lag. There is nothing worse than ending – or, heaven forbid, starting – a vacation feeling like a mushy, sleepy shell of a person. As it turns out, speeding through the sky without adequate time to process the change is a recipe for incoherence, exhaustion and irritability. I’ve been there.

So, trust me when I say that “People We Meet on Vacation,” Brett Haley’s friends-to-lovers flick about two frequent vacationers, has jet leg.

Haley’s film stars Emily Bader as a woman named Poppy Wright, a magazine travel writer. At the beginning of the film, Poppy has been in a writing slump following an estrangement from Alex Nilsen, her longtime best friend, played by Tom Blyth. However, she is spurred back to action after receiving a wedding invitation from Alex’s younger brother, who has planned his destination nuptials in Barcelona, Spain. Poppy decides to take the trip as an opportunity to reconnect with Alex, with whom she used to embark on a jet-setting vacation every summer.

(Courtesy: Netflix) Emily Bader and Tom Blyth in “People We Meet on Vacation.”

The movie is subsequently told in a series of flashbacks, recounting Alex and Poppy’s vacationing adventures while allotting brief respites to the present to inch the plot forward.

The problems with “People We Meet on Vacation” are largely to do with that structural decision. Although it mimics the construction of Henry’s book, the constraints of a two hour movie are far more stringent than a 400 page novel, resulting in a strangely imbalanced screenplay from Yulin Kuang, Nunzio Randazzo and Amos Vernon.

While it’s fun to visit Canada, New Orleans and Italy with Alex and Poppy, the film spends so much time luxuriating in their vacations it seems to forgets about the real life of the characters. The present day timeline and the conflict between the pair, ostensibly the narrative thrust of the film, is incredibly undercooked, like a bad in-flight meal.

(Courtesy: Netflix) Left-to-right: Lukas Gage, Tom Blyth and Emily Bader in “People We Meet on Vacation.”

Bader and Blyth aren’t at fault for the screenplay, but their performances are equally lacking in subtlety.

Bader’s Poppy may as well be the living embodiment of “quirky,” since the actress plays her character fast-talking, bubbly and expressive to a fault. Hardly a scene goes by where Poppy doesn’t commit at least one grievous faux pas, and as follows, there are few scenes in the film where Bader is acting like a human being.

Blyth, meanwhile, interpreted the stoicism of his character as an order to act like a brick wall. Blyth can be an incredibly charismatic performer, but Alex, for all of Poppy’s efforts to bring him out of his shell, is hollow in Blyth’s hands.

The empty qualities of Haley’s movie become especially apparent in comparison with its influences. The meet-cute portion of “People We Meet on Vacation” is an overt reference to “When Harry Met Sally…,” where Poppy and Alex set off together on a roadtrip much like Harry and Sally piled in the car on their way to New York City. What makes “When Harry Met Sally…” such an enduring cultural force, however, is the realism of its characters. Harry and Sally, much like Poppy and Alex, are friends for years before sparking a romance and every scene they share feels like eavesdropping on actual best friends. In contrast, Poppy and Alex, unlike Harry and Sally, are sallied with a preposterously thin script, and every scene they share requiring actual emotion feels false and contrived.

In other words, Poppy and Alex are concocted poppycock people.

(Courtesy: Netflix) Left-to-right: Emily Bader, Molly Shannon, Alan Ruck and Tom Blyth in “People We Meet on Vacation.”

“People We Meet on Vacation” isn’t all bad. There are moments of charm and a couple of good jokes. Bader and Blyth may not be winning any Oscars for their performances, but they do have chemistry in a few steamy scenes. Also, at one point, Alan Ruck – of “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off” fame – appears to deliver the funniest two minutes in the movie. He almost manages to make the other two hours worth it.

That’s the thing about jet lag. It’s not the journey: it’s the destination. There are fun parts of “People We Meet on Vacation,” but the movie flies through character development, emotional stakes and its convoluted story so quickly, you’ll get whiplash. Here’s hoping Blyth, Bader and Haley can sleep this one off.

Rating: 2.5/5

Recent Headlines

19 hours ago in Entertainment, Music

Harry Styles announces first album in 4 years, ‘Kiss All the Time. Disco, Occasionally’

In this world, it's just him: Harry Styles has announced that his long-awaited, fourth studio album will arrive this spring.

1 day ago in Music, Trending

See the dates and ticket plans for the BTS tour that starts in April

The BTS comeback is upon us. The K-pop septet has announced a 2026 - 2027 world tour, kicking off in South Korea in April and running through March 2027 with over 70 dates across Asia, North America, South America, Australia and Europe.

1 day ago in Entertainment

Mattel and Alex Aster team up for Barbie young adult novel, ‘Barbie: Dreamscape’

The publishing arm of Mattel Inc. is teaming with million-selling novelist Alex Aster on a Barbie young adult novel in which the iconic doll embarks on a journey across "treacherous, magical lands."

1 day ago in Sports, Trending

John Harbaugh and the Giants are working on a deal to make him their coach, AP sources say

John Harbaugh and the New York Giants are working on an agreement to make him the team's head coach, three people with knowledge of the decision said Thursday.

2 days ago in Entertainment

Actor Michael Keaton is named Man of the Year by Harvard’s Hasty Pudding Theatricals

Actor Michael Keaton has been named 2026 Man of the Year by Harvard University's Hasty Pudding Theatricals. The theater group, which dates to 1844 and claims to be the world's third-oldest still operating, announced Wednesday that Keaton will receive his Pudding Pot award at a celebratory roast Feb. 6.