Love Across Borders: Asian Romance Films on Netflix for a Cozy Valentine’s

Enemies-to-lovers, office romance, and fated soulmates. These are just some of our favorite romance films. Although some may find romance films cliché, that is exactly what makes them so entertaining to watch over and over again. Stories of love, after all, are timeless.
With Valentine’s Day just around the corner, we’re getting in the mood for something heartwarming—or maybe downright heartbreaking! From heart-fluttering confessions to soul-stirring forbidden love stories, Asian romance movies have a unique way of capturing the beauty of love in all its forms. Luckily, Netflix has an incredible lineup waiting to be discovered. Instead of watching the usual mainstream romances, here are five romantic cinematic delights that go beyond tropes and give us a deeper understanding of what it truly means to love someone.
Under Parallel Skies (2024)
“I ’ve fallen so many times, but you taught me that happiness is not the absence of brokenness.”- Parin
Starring: Janella Salvador and Win Metawin
In this heartbreaking romantic drama, a Filipina hotel receptionist and a Thai bachelor team up on a quest to find his mother in Hong Kong. Along the way, they find common ground despite their cultural differences and grow feelings for each other, which soon turn passionate. It’s a beautiful tale that depicts that popular quote: “Once you stop looking for what you want, you find what you need.”
This movie goes beyond your usual boy-meets-girl and features characters with complex backgrounds and circumstances. We love how Iris (Janella Salvador) is a strong, independent OFW (Overseas Filipino Worker) with a caring soul whose kindness was able to pull Parin (Win Metawin) from his heartbreak. This is a story about navigating love and heartbreak, understanding cultural differences, and healing from one’s past set within the confines of a city known to bring cultures together.
That Kind of Love (2024)
“You don’t have to find love. Love will always find you.”
Starring: Barbie Forteza and David Licauco
Let’s face it. Love is difficult. In our fast-paced world of dating apps and situationships, it’s almost impossible to navigate the dating scene for “the one”—let alone know the right things to say to your crush. This is where Mila Maharlika (Barbie Forteza) comes in, a so-called Love Coach extraordinaire!
“That Kind of Love” tells the story of two imperfect people entangled by fate because of their search for love. When Mila harshly points out the flaws of a conceited man who deems himself “Mr. Perfect,” she ends up in a deal to find him his match. But there seems to be more to the dashing corporate executive Adam De Dios (David Licauco) and as they navigate the dating scene together, they’ll realize that they might have already found the love they’ve been searching for.
Written and directed by mother-daughter duo Catherine and Ellis Camarillo, this romantic comedy is for hopeless romantics wishing for a love match of their own.
OMG! Oh My Girl (2022)
“Screw destiny. Screw societal norms. They say we’re always in the wrong place at the wrong time – so what? Nothing will happen unless we make it happen!”
Starring: Wongravee Nateetorn and Plearnpichaya Komalarajun
Guy (Wongravee Nateetorn) always believed that confessing your feelings to someone is awkward. That is until he met June (Plearnpichaya Komalarajun), the girl who turned his world upside down and made him want to bear his entire heart and soul to. But by a sick twist of fate, his own best friend beats him to it!
Guy has always found himself to be a patient man but in the next few years, a possible romance with June becomes impossible with the two of them bouncing between being single and being in a relationship but never single at the same time. Guy decided to move one and they lose touch over the years, until fate brings them back together and he realizes he had been “moving on” in circles.
If you’re up for something hilarious and romantic, this is it. More than your typical friends-to-lovers trope, this Thai romcom is about love and timing, regret and forgiveness, and finding happiness through loneliness. This is a love story about someone who simply wishes to be “the one” and how they would defy fate to make it happen.
20th Century Girl (2022)
"When I think of him, my heart hurts a bit. If this is love, then I think I'm in love too."
Starring: Kim You Jung, Byeon Woo Seok, Park Jung Woo, Roh Yoon Seo
As Taylor Swift once said, “I feel so high school every time I look at you,” so it’s only right that we throw in a coming-of-age romance drama into this list.
This South Korean film set in 1999 tells the story of a young student named Na Bo-ra (Kim You Jung) who helps her ill best friend (Roh Yoon Seo) track her crush—only to find herself in a web of complex emotions between said crush (Park Jung Woo) and his best friend (Byeon Woo Seok). And yes, both the crush and his best friend eventually develop feelings for her, too, while she falls for the latter.
If you think this is your typical “love triangle” story, think again! When Bo-ra’s best friend, Yeon-du, returns to South Korea after a successful heart surgery, they realize that Bo-ra has been following the wrong guy all this time and that her best friend is actually in love with the boy she had fallen in love with! Talk about messy.
This film has everything you could want in a K-drama: swoon worthy moments, second male lead syndrome, tearful confessions, and friendships you can’t help but root for. Our only warning is that you prepare your tissues because this movie is equal parts swoony and heartbreaking.
18×2 Beyond Youthful Days (2024)
“If back then, I told her about my true feelings properly, would the future have been different?”
Starring: Greg Hsu and Kaya Kiyohara
Based on real-life events recorded in a travelogue, this bittersweet romance is about 36-year-old Jimmy, a Taiwanese game developer who finds a postcard from a Japanese girl named Ami when he returns to his hometown. This causes him to reminisce on their time together and the narrative shifts between the present day and flashbacks of their brief but passionate romance 18 years ago.
One thing we love about the film is its cinematography which tells a story in itself. Its mise en scene carefully utilizes color tones to reflect the emotional state of the characters— contrasting the bright and warm-lit flashbacks, which enhances the sense of joyfulness of their youth, from the softer tones of the present-day shots which signify sadness, regret, and loss.
A must-watch for romance drama fans, “18×2 Beyond Youthful Days” portrays a realistic and touching story about how the love we’ve experienced remains in our hearts no matter how long time has passed.
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