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Review: A24’s ‘The Drama’ is a Psychological Powerhouse That Dismantles Modern Romance

  • Genre : Psychological Drama / Dark Comedy
  • Director: Kristoffer Borgli
  • Cast: Zendaya, Robert Pattinson, Alana Haim, Mamoudou Athie, Hailey Gates
  • Release Date: April 3, 2026

What happens when the “picture-perfect” life you’ve curated hits a wall of unfiltered truth? In Director Kristoffer Borgli’s wildly unpredictable new A24 feature, The Drama, we learn that some secrets aren’t just skeletons in the closet—they are grenades.

It’s safe to say that this film is anything but your traditional romantic comedy. While it starts with the aesthetic charm of a high-end Boston lifestyle, it quickly descends into a masterclass of cringe-comedy and psychological horror.

The Plot: A Game with No Winners

The film opens with a quintessential “meet-cute” at a sun-drenched coffee shop, introducing us to Charlie (Robert Pattinson), a prestigious museum curator, and Emma (Zendaya), a bookstore employee. This opening offers a cinematic magnetism usually reserved for classic rom-coms—a whirlwind romance that quickly evolves into a seemingly blissful engagement within their enviable Boston apartment.

We see the lovers busy perfecting their first dance and finalizing an exquisite wedding menu. The celebratory atmosphere feels bulletproof until their best friends, Mike (Mamoudou Athie) and Rachel (Alana Haim), introduce a pre-wedding ritual: a game of “What’s the worst thing you’ve ever done?” While the others mumble through stories of cowardice or youthful cruelty, Emma’s revelation becomes the “Point of No Return.” It is a moment of TMI honesty so explosive that it redefines how the characters—and the audience—see her. From this second onward, the film jettisons romance in favor of an unsettling exploration of perception versus reality.

One of the film’s most brilliant maneuvers is how it punctuates this mounting dread with sharp, satirical wit. The Drama finds its humor in the agonizing “cringe” of elite social circles—from the pretension of a high-stakes museum world to the absurdity of over-rehearsed wedding rituals. These “laugh-out-loud” moments are deliberately jarring; they offer a brief, almost nervous relief before the film pulls the rug out from under you again. It is this masterful blend of uneasy comedy and psychological tension that keeps you entirely off-balance throughout the 104-minute journey.

Zendaya and Pattinson: A Masterclass in Magnetic, Uncomfortable Chemistry

The real magic of The Drama is how it keeps you guessing. One minute you’re laughing at the “urbane and cool” Boston social scene, and the next, you’re holding your breath in total silence. Zendaya and Robert Pattinson are magnetic here—they aren’t just playing a couple; they’re playing a couple trying to survive a nightmare of their own making.

Pattinson is haunting as a man who suddenly realizes he might be marrying a stranger, while Zendaya’s “TMI” moment is so raw it shifts the entire energy of the theater. Supported by Alana Haim and Mamoudou Athie, the film feels like a cautionary tale for 2026: In a world of curated lives, how much truth can a relationship actually handle? It asks a terrifying question: Do we ever truly know the person we are about to marry?

Our Verdict: Deliberately unsettling and brilliantly acted, The Drama is a cinematic jolt that will stay with you long after the credits roll.

The film is slated for release on April 3, 2026 by PVR INOX Pictures across their cinema network in India.

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