There’s something deliciously unsettling about The Drama, a film that thrives in the uncomfortable silences between confessions and the emotional wreckage that follows.
Set largely over the course of one increasingly combustible evening, The Drama follows Charlie (Robert Pattinson) and Emma (Zendaya) as they prepare for their wedding. The venue is locked, the DJ sorted, the cake chosen, the speeches, almost in place. It’s a picture-perfect lead-up, until a drunken, impulsive game cracks that illusion wide open, triggering a visibly unsettling shift in tone.
The rules are simple: confess the worst thing you’ve ever done. But the fallout is anything but.
At the centre of this unravelling are Zendaya and Robert Pattinson, whose chemistry is the film’s most grounding force. There’s an unmistakable ease between them, which feels organic and deceptively casual. They slip between tenderness, absurdity and tension with remarkable fluidity, which makes their relationship feel both intimate and precarious. It’s this push and pull that gives the film its emotional spine, even as everything else begins to fracture.
Zendaya, in particular, delivers a performance that simmers before it shocks, her character Emma’s “almost” act of school violence becoming the film’s most jarring pivot point. Pattinson, meanwhile, brings a quiet volatility, reacting as much as he acts, his silences often speaking louder than the chaos around him.
Together, they create a rhythm that feels real and fully committed to ‘the drama’ through and through.
Everyone on the cast, including the supporting cast, leans fully into the film’s heightened reality, never pulling back even when the material teeters on the edge of absurdity. That unwavering dedication is what keeps The Drama from collapsing under its own ambition.
Behind the camera, the film’s craft choices are just as deliberate. The cinematography leans into intimacy, tight frames, lingering close-ups, and dimly lit interiors that make you feel like an uninvited guest at a dinner you can’t leave. There’s a voyeuristic quality to it all, as if the film is quietly observing rather than directing where you should look.
The editing, too, deserves its own applause. It embraces fragmentation, jumping between emotional beats as scenes bleed into each other, conversations overlap, and at times, it feels like you’re inside the characters’ heads rather than watching them from a distance. It’s messy, yes, but deliberately so.
It’s also very much in conversation with the sensibilities of Kristoffer Borgli, whose work has consistently explored discomfort, and social awkwardness. Much like his earlier films, most notably Sick of Myself, The Drama leans into cringe, contradiction, and moral ambiguity, often blurring the line between satire and sincerity. Borgli has a knack for placing deeply flawed characters in emotionally volatile situations and simply letting them unravel, and that same instinct is at play here.
There’s also an underlying question the film seems to flirt with but never fully answers: Is this a portrait of contemporary America? On paper, it certainly feels like one, a group of privileged, self-aware individuals grappling with morality, identity, and consequence in a hyper-confessional age.
But The Drama resists becoming a neat sociopolitical statement. There are too many contradictions, too many tonal shifts, too many competing ideas unfolding at once. And perhaps that’s the point.
Genre, in fact, becomes irrelevant here. Is it a relationship drama? A psychological spiral? A dark comedy dressed in tension. The answer is all, and none.
There’s a distinct pulp-fiction energy in its storytelling, where moments feel heightened yet grounded in raw human impulsiveness.
If anything, the film’s greatest strength is also its biggest risk; it doesn’t seek clarity or comfort. Instead, it thrives in ambiguity, contradiction and the uneasy space between confession and consequence. It may not offer answers, but it makes sure you sit with the questions long after the credits roll.
The Drama releases in India on April 3, 2026.


