The bubbly Brenda Song is the star of love Accidentally, yet the film has the gall to treat her unfairly. It's very unfortunate, to put it mildly. love Accidentally, which Peter Sullivan directed from a script by Robert Dean Klein, has a thin plot and subpar acting. Even worse, the Freevee original film's unappealing style is scarcely surprising coming from the Secret Obsession filmmaker. It's enough to sink any romantic comedy.

In the "romantic comedy" love Accidentally, two advertising execs engage in a tense struggle for office supremacy. Jason (Aaron O'Connell) is a smooth-talking, brash rookie, but Alexa (Song) is a capable woman who has been working hard for close to ten years. They are both unaware that their tension is caused by more than just their rivalry. Instead, it results from their strong chemistry. Coincidentally, Alexa and Jason both had their partners break up with them, and Alexa unintentionally texts Jason a "broken heart" message. This causes them to connect. This occurs as a result of a very improbable mix-up involving assigned numbers and work 

Love Accidentally fails miserably to live up to the series of office romances that use the enemies-to-lovers theme, such Lucy Hale's The Hate Game. The most astounding error is not having the main couple acknowledge their underlying attraction or desire for one another. They have no chemistry at all, not even with voice-to-text. It is frustrating since the fundamental objective of any romantic comedy is to make the audience cheer for the lead couple due to their chemistry and the absurd circumstances that bring them together. It appears that love Accidentally has forgotten this.

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