7 Movies With Unforgettable New Year’s Eve Kisses

Here are seven movies where New Year’s Eve kisses steal the spotlight.

By

Columbia Pictures

New Year’s Eve has always been a cinematic stage for magical moments, and nothing captures the spirit of fresh beginnings like a perfectly timed kiss at midnight. 

The New Year’s Eve countdown to midnight serves as the perfect backdrop for some of the most unforgettable film moments. From romantic to dramatic, and everything in between, and with heartfelt confessions and sparks flying at just the right second, these scenes capture the magic of new beginnings. Here are seven movies with New Year’s Eve kisses that remind us why the holiday is all about embracing what’s to come.

When Harry Met Sally (1989)

Columbia Pictures

Billy Crystal’s Harry finally realizes what we’ve known all along – he’s madly in love with Meg Ryan’s Sally. After racing through New York City on New Year’s Eve, he delivers that heart-melting speech about loving that she takes forever to order a sandwich and hating that he can’t hate her. Their kiss, set against a swooning rendition of “Auld Lang Syne,” isn’t just romantic – it’s the perfect payoff to years of friendship and denial, making us believe that the best relationships really can start with friendship.

About a Boy (2002)

Universal Pictures

Hugh Grant’s Will and Rachel Weisz’s Rachel share a midnight kiss at a New Year’s Eve party. But what makes this moment special is its organic, natural feel. There’s no grand speech or orchestral swell. It’s just two people finding each other after Will’s journey from self-centered bachelor to someone capable of real connection. The kiss feels earned, not just because of their chemistry, but because we’ve watched Will grow into someone worthy of this moment.

Bridget Jones’s Diary (2001)

Universal Pictures

In true Bridget fashion, our heroine runs through the snowy London streets in her underwear to catch Mark Darcy. Their kiss isn’t at midnight – it’s better. It’s a testament to imperfect timing and messy reality, with Bridget in her tiger-print knickers and Mark Darcy finally dropping his posh reserve. It’s gloriously awkward, utterly romantic, and perfectly Bridget.

New Year’s Eve (2011)

Warner Bros.

While Ashton Kutcher and Lea Michele’s elevator encounter is sweet, it’s Michelle Pfeiffer and Zac Efron’s whirlwind adventure that steals the show. As uptight executive Ingrid and free-spirited courier Paul, they spend December 31st crossing off her abandoned resolutions in a race against time. Their eventual midnight kiss atop a building feels earned after a day of bucket-list moments and personal growth. It’s that rare May-December romance that works because both characters help each other grow – she learns to live more freely, while he discovers there’s more to him than just being the charming slacker. When they finally kiss as the ball drops, we’re fully invested in this unlikely but utterly believable connection.

The Godfather Part II (1974)

Paramount Pictures

Michael Corleone’s “I know it was you, Fredo” kiss during a Cuban New Year’s party isn’t the typical New Year’s Eve smooch. This brotherly kiss of death is chilling. And it perfectly encapsulates the Godfather‘s themes of family, betrayal, and power. It’s a brilliant use of the holiday’s normally joyous symbolism turned dark, proving that not all New Year’s kisses promise fresh starts.

200 Cigarettes (1999)

Paramount Pictures

Ben Affleck and Casey Affleck lead an ensemble cast in this wonderfully messy ode to New Year’s Eve 1981 in New York’s East Village. While the film gives us several midnight kisses, it’s Christina Ricci and Paul Rudd’s perfectly awkward smooch that steals the show. As first-time Manhattan partiers looking for the ultimate downtown bash, their sweet, fumbling kiss in a grimy diner captures that perfect mix of ’80s punk rock attitude and teenage vulnerability.

In Search of a Midnight Kiss (2007)

IFC Films

This indie gem follows Wilson, who posts a last-minute Craigslist ad on New Year’s Eve: “Misanthrope seeks misanthrope.” Enter Vivian, and what follows is a black-and-white love letter to Los Angeles and desperate romantics everywhere. Their midnight kiss on a downtown rooftop feels like watching lightning strike – raw, unexpected, and absolutely electric. It’s the kind of indie movie moment that reminds you why we all still believe in New Year’s Eve magic.