All movies starring Meg Ryan

When Harry Met Sally... (1989) poster

When Harry Met Sally... (1989) ★ 7.6

Harry and Sally have known each other for years, and are very good friends, but they fear sex would ruin the friendship.
Sleepless in Seattle (1993) poster

Sleepless in Seattle (1993) ★ 6.8

A recently widowed man's son calls a radio talk-show in an attempt to find his father a partner.
You've Got Mail (1998) poster

You've Got Mail (1998) ★ 6.7

Book superstore magnate, Joe Fox and independent book shop owner, Kathleen Kelly fall in love in the anonymity of the Internet both blissfully unaware that he's trying to put her out of business.
Kate & Leopold (2001) poster

Kate & Leopold (2001) ★ 6.4

An English Duke from 1876 is inadvertedly dragged to modern day New York where he falls for a plucky advertising executive.
City of Angels (1998) poster

City of Angels (1998) ★ 6.7

An angel on Earth, a doctor unable to believe, a patient with a secret, a love story made in Heaven.
Proof of Life (2000) poster

Proof of Life (2000) ★ 6.3

Alice hires a professional negotiator to obtain the release of her engineer husband, who has been kidnapped by anti-government guerrillas in South America.
In the Land of Women (2007) poster

In the Land of Women (2007) ★ 6.4

A sleazy writer has a chance to redeem himself when he goes to stay with his grandmother and befriends the neighbors.
The Doors (1991) poster

The Doors (1991) ★ 7.2

Oliver Stone's homage to 1960s rock group The Doors also doubles as a biography of the group's late singer, the "Electric Poet" Jim Morrison. The movie follows Morrison from his days as a film student in Los Angeles to his death in Paris, France at age 27 in 1971. The movie features a tour-de-force performance by Val Kilmer, who not only looks like Jim Morrison's long-lost twin brother, but also sounds so much like him that he did much of his own singing. It has been written that even the surviving Doors had trouble distinguishing Kilmer's vocals from Morrison's originals.
Ithaca (2015) poster

Ithaca (2015) ★ 5.4

Genres: Drama War
Fourteen-year-old Homer Macauley is determined to be the best and fastest bicycle telegraph messenger anyone has ever seen. His older brother has gone to war, leaving Homer to look after his widowed mother, his older sister and his 4-year-old brother, Ulysses. And so it is that as spring turns to summer, 1942, Homer Macauley delivers messages of love, hope, pain... and death... to the good people of Ithaca. And Homer Macauley will grapple with one message that will change him forever. Based on Pulitzer Prize-winning author William Saroyan's 1943 novel, The Human Comedy, ITHACA is a coming-of-age story about the exuberance of youth, the abruptness of change, the sweetness of life, the sting of death, and the sheer goodness that lives in each and every one of us.
The Women (2008) poster

The Women (2008) ★ 5.0

Genres: Comedy Drama
Based on a very clever comedy by Claire Booth, wife of Time Publisher Henry Luce and later Ambassador to Italy. One of the surprises was an all-woman cast, novel in the 1930's. And although there were no men in the cast, most of the dialog was about them. The story is rather thin and depended on the fact that divorce, in the 1930's, was not only difficult but almost impossible in New York. Mrs. Stephen Haynes learns that her husband is seeing a salesgirl at Saks, and reluctantly divorces him, abetted by her friends, all of whom have romantic problems of their own. In the 1930's New York women who could afford it went to Nevada, where residency could be established quickly and divorce was relatively easy. The 1939 film, starring Norma Shearer, Paulette Goddard, Rosalind Russell, and Joan Crawford, was a hit. This one, with an even better looking cast, is definitely not, largely because someone tried to move a 1930's situation comedy into the present.