
Sitting down and watching a movie that you know nothing about can certainly have its advantages. I know several people who go out of their way to avoid trailers and TV spots just because they prefer to go into a movie blind. That’s essentially what I did with “The Drama”. I knew some of the basics, but mostly I had no idea what to expect. As a result, I think the film played better for me than it would have otherwise.
I say that because it’s not hard to figure out where this combustible relationship drama is heading. But it’s the character work, rooted in writer-director Kristoffer Borgli’s screenplay and in the nuanced performances of co-leads Zendaya and Robert Pattinson, that gives “The Drama” a compelling psychological edge. Not everything ends as organically as it begins. But it works thanks to Borgli’s serious approach to storytelling and his willingness to let things get messy.

Charlie Thompson (Pattinson) is a museum curator. Emma Harwood (Zendaya) is a bookstore clerk. The two meet in a Boston café and quickly hit it off. A short time later they are engaged to be married. But one seemingly harmless game with friends threatens to derail what looks to be a beautiful relationship. From there the majority of the “The Drama” plays out over the course of the turbulent week before their scheduled wedding.
The turning point for Charlie and Emma comes during a late-night dinner with their best friends, Rachel (Alana Haim) and Mike (Mamoudou Athie). After a few too many drinks, the four play a game where each share the worst secrets from their pasts. I won’t spoil what Emma’s confession is, but it troubles to entire group to the point of driving a wedge between them. Rachel and Mike go as far telling Charlie he should leave Emma. But he’s unsure of what to do. And soon his fiancée’s secret becomes a destructive obsession that Charlie can’t shake.
Borgli uses his scenario to make a number of interesting observations about relationships. The essential nature of trust, the limits of forgiveness, the need of acceptance – they all come more into focus as Charlie and Emma try to hold things together. They put on the best show they can as they meet with their wedding photographer, dance coordinator, DJ, florist, and so on. But back home, it’s another story. Emma regrets ever saying anything and desperately wants to forget about it. But the increasingly paranoid Charlie’s fixation has him constantly bringing it up.

As everything spirals, we repeatedly hear the word “empathy” spoken yet it becomes clear that neither Charlie, Rachel, or Mike have any. Instead all three are quick to cast their own harsh internal judgments about Emma which they can only hide for so long. Meanwhile Emma keeps certain details bottled up which adds to the pressure. It all leads to several volatile face-to-face reckonings which steadily intensifies the drama (no pun intended). It makes for a compelling, provocative, and morally complex anti-romance.
“The Drama” does have its issues. We end up getting a series of cliché-riddled flashbacks to Emma’s high school years that simply don’t work as intended. This is also one of those movies where it feels as if everything could have been averted with just one open and productive conversation. Still, it’s hard not to lose yourself in the messiness of Emma and Charlie’s crumbling relationship. That’s because Borgli views it through an honest and incisive lens while the formidable performances from Zendaya and Pattinson is the glue that holds it all together.
VERDICT – 3.5 STARS

Is Hollywood capable of making a movie about a relationship where the people act like actual adults instead of highschoolers?
It is depressing to watch adults act like children 😦
It’s a really good question and Hollywood certainly makes you wonder! I will say this movie uses their “behavior” to make some searing points about that very behavior. It genuinely surprised me.
I’m one of those people who try and avoid spoilers and trailers too!
I can certainly understand why. I do love a good trailer, but I completely respect the desire to go into a movie blind.