The Reylo Book of Everyone’s Dreams Just Dropped Its First Trailer

Prime Video’s The Love Hypothesis dropped its first trailer on June 26, and a week later, the internet is still very much in its feelings about it. Now, as of July 2, fan reactions haven’t slowed down – they’ve only gotten louder.
A Trailer That Turned Fake Dating Into a Real-Time Obsession
The trailer introduces Olive Smith, a Ph.D. student played by Lili Reinhart, who impulsively kisses her intimidating professor Dr. Adam Carlsen, portrayed by Tom Bateman.
What starts as a calculated move to convince her best friend she’s over a past crush quickly evolves into a fake relationship between two scientists who are far better at analyzing data than their own emotions.
The trailer absolutely sells the tension, and that is exactly what viewers latched onto when it dropped on June 26.
“They Understood the Assignment”: Fans React to the Chemistry
Within hours of the trailer’s release, social media lit up with reactions focused almost entirely on the lead pairing. Fans pointed to the push-pull dynamic between Olive and Adam, the clipped dialogue, and the slow-burn tension that feels tailor-made for BookTok audiences.
A common sentiment circulating across platforms is that the adaptation “understood the assignment,” particularly in how it leans into awkward intimacy rather than polished rom-com gloss.
Others zeroed in on Tom Bateman’s portrayal of Dr. Adam Carlsen, with many noting that his restrained performance in the trailer mirrors the emotionally closed-off archetype that made the book so popular in the first place.
The Reylo Echoes Fans Can’t Stop Talking About
Even a week later, much of the online conversation keeps circling back to the story’s origins.
The Love Hypothesis began as Ali Hazelwood’s 2018 fanfiction Head over Feet, which drew inspiration from the dynamic between Rey and Ben Solo.
That connection has resurfaced in full force following the trailer, with fans revisiting the long-running “Reylo-coded” discourse and dissecting how much of that original dynamic remains in Olive and Adam’s relationship.
The conversation has also reignited interest in the subtle meta-layer surrounding the adaptation, including the character name “Adam” and its perceived link to actor Adam Driver, as well as the real-world overlap between the Star Wars cast and the film’s own casting choices.
A Week Later, the Trailer Still Has Momentum
Even seven days after its debut, the trailer continues to circulate heavily across fan spaces, especially among BookTok readers and romance communities who have long championed Hazelwood’s work.
Much of the ongoing discussion focuses less on plot details and more on tone; specifically whether the adaptation will fully commit to the slow-burn awkwardness, academic tension, and emotional restraint that defined the book’s appeal.
For now, fans are still analyzing every frame, every line delivery, and every glance between Olive and Adam. And if the last week is any indication, this is one trailer the internet isn’t done talking about anytime soon.
(feature image: Berkley)
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