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| Image courtesy of A24. |
Much like Kristoffer Borgli's previous film, the oddball "Dream Scenario," the director's latest film - "The Drama" - works much better when it realizes that it's a dark comedy and finds the absurdity in its premise. It's when the film tries pushing the envelope too hard in being provocative or exploring its back story with any amount of seriousness that it feels less sure of itself.
This is the type of film that audiences will want to walk into without knowing too much as there is a significant twist that comes about 30 minutes into the film that resets the course of the rest of its story. It is nearly impossible for me to write about the film without discussing it, so anyone who doesn't want the plot to be spoiled should stop reading now.
Still here? If you've seen the trailer for "The Drama," you'll know that Robert Pattinson and Zendaya play Charlie and Emma, a couple in love who are about to tie the knot. However, at a dinner with two friends - Rachel (Alana Haim) and Mike (Mamoudou Athie) - the conversation turns to the subject of the worst things that those at the table have ever done.
For three of the participants, it's all stuff that involves shitty decisions, but Emma, probably a bit drunk, reveals that she once planned and nearly carried out a school shooting when she was a bullied teenager. She later got rid of her father's gun and went on to become involved with gun control activism, all of which she later explains to Charlie, but the damage is done.
From there, the relationship begins to unravel, but mostly due to Charlie's behavior. At first, he can't stop prodding her for information, and then becomes increasingly awkward with others - at one point, he sort of harasses a wheel chair-bound cousin of Rachel and, during another, he acts erratically toward and then borderline sexually harasses a coworker.
Everything culminates with a wedding dinner sequence that makes the scene in "Rachel Getting Married" where Anne Hathaway gets up to speak seem tame by comparison. And scenes like that one, as outrageous as they are, play best as comedy. Despite the dark subject matter, there's a fair amount of humor to be mined from the scenario.
It's when "The Drama" aims to be provocative, or especially when it tries to over-explain Emma's backstory - which remains somewhat thin regardless - that it stumbles. Much like Borgli's previous film, the strange "Dream Scenario," in which a guy played by Nicolas Cage began showing up in everyone's dreams and, as a result, got shunned by society, the film works best when it leans into the oddball humor of its scenario. Although a film that seriously explores material like that in "The Drama" would no doubt be fascinating, this picture only does so half-heartedly.
One dramatic element of the film that works is the crumbling of Charlie and Emma's relationship, and it's in these scenes that Pattinson and Zendaya are most effective. But this is the rare example of a movie where it might have benefited if the character's backstory was kept more under wraps. How ironic that a film titled "The Drama" works much better as a comedy.






