
Over the weekend, my wife and I sat down at watched Love Hurts, which is now streaming on Prime. It is a zippy, weird fun action movie, and is delightfully original. In a world of Missions Impossible and Marvels-a-many, it is great to see fresh fun on the silver screen.
Love Hurts (2025) is directed by stunt veteran Jonathan Eusebio (John Wick, The Fall Guy) and produced by David Leitch and Kelly McCormick (Bullet Train, Nobody). It stars Oscar winners Ke Huy Quan (Everything Everywhere All at Once, The Goonies) and Ariana DeBose (West Side Story), alongside Daniel Wu (Into the Badlands), Mustafa Shakir (Luke Cage), and Lio Tipton (Crazy, Stupid, Love). It also features another Goonies-alum in Sean Astin, as well as former NFL-star, Marshawn Lynch. The script comes from Matthew Murray, Josh Stoddard, and Luke Passmore.
Ke Huy Quan; Action Star
Ke Huy Quan seems like an odd choice for an action lead. As a former child-actor (Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom) who then took a long break from being on screen, he has a background in both acting and stunt work, including roles as a stunt coordinator and rigger. He worked on X-Men as a stunt rigger and assistant fight choreographer. Quan also performed some of his own stunts in Everything Everywhere All at Once, including the fanny pack scene and wushu rope dart sequences.
He has a second-degree black belt in Taekwondo and draws on his martial arts background for his action scenes. He has a mild and unassuming presence, and on shows like Loki, he was able to lean into that kind and quirky charm. For Love Hurts however, Quan is putting all his experience out there at once, with his likeable nice-guy persona balancing out his butt-kicking chops.
Love Hurts, 25 years ago would have been a Jackie Chan vehicule. It has real Rumble in the Bronx energy to it. Quan plays Marvin Gable, a positive energy real estate agent who loves his boss, treats his employees like a mentor, and only really has conflict with rival agen Jeff Zaks (played by real-life reality show agent Drew Scott). He dresses houses for sale. He bakes cookies. Marvin is a feel good guy.
Then, Love Hurts takes it’s twist, and it becomes a blender of Shoot’em Up, Rush Hour, and Smokin’ Aces. Calling back to the late 90’s/early-aughts, this film brings a fun frenetic energy in it’s fight-scenes and stunt-work to balance out the cartoonish uber-violence it shows. It’s a throwback, with wild set dressing and cool cars. The film could be an underdog classic.
My one knock on the movie is the soundtrack’s slavish devotion to the Valentine’s Day theme. It’s cute at times, but sometimes gets a little too cutesy with itself, and could have used a little more faux-Tarantino or Edgar Wright flair. The way “Bell-Bottoms” (in Baby Driver) or “Battle Without Honor or Humanity” (Kill Bill) hit is missing from this one. One or two deep cuts in the right places would have punched things up a notch.
If you’re looking for a VHS classic, a hidden gem at Blockbuster kinda movie, Love Hurts will be your date.





















