Zoe has a medical condition that may leave her infertile, so she decides to try for a baby before it’s too late. Without a partner, she chooses to go the artificial route — and becomes pregnant. Around the same time, she meets Rob on a date, and things seem promising.
At work, Zoe is approached by Emmet, a high-profile client desperate to improve his public image. She initially refuses to take on the job, but when Emmet finds out she’s pregnant and on her own, he offers to support her — being a single father himself. It turns into a complicated arrangement, with Zoe caught between her growing feelings for Rob and an unexpected connection with Emmet.
Perhaps not entirely seamless, but it still turns out to be a good romantic film. Emmet’s transformation works surprisingly well, despite my initial doubts. And while the statistically unlikely coincidence at the end is certainly up for debate — it still somehow works.
