The Drama (film)
2026 film by Kristoffer Borgli
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The Drama is a 2026 American romantic black comedy film[5][6][7] written and directed by Kristoffer Borgli. It stars Zendaya and Robert Pattinson as a happily engaged couple whose relationship is tested by an unexpected revelation during the week before their wedding. It also stars Alana Haim, Mamoudou Athie, and Hailey Gates in supporting roles.
- Lars Knudsen
- Ari Aster
- Tyler Campellone
| The Drama | |
|---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
| Directed by | Kristoffer Borgli |
| Written by | Kristoffer Borgli |
| Produced by |
|
| Starring | |
| Cinematography | Arseni Khachaturan |
| Edited by |
|
| Music by | Daniel Pemberton |
Production company | |
| Distributed by | A24 |
Release dates |
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Running time | 105 minutes[1] |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $28 million[2] |
| Box office | $130.8 million[3][4] |
The Drama premiered on March 17, 2026, in Los Angeles and was released in the United States by A24 on April 3. The film received positive reviews from critics and has grossed $126.1 million worldwide on a $28 million budget.[8]
Plot
At a Boston café, Charlie Thompson approaches Emma Harwood while she is reading, pretending to have read the same book. Emma seems to ignore him, so he returns to his seat and later apologizes for making her uncomfortable. Emma then explains that she is deaf in one ear and didn't hear him and invites Charlie to retry his approach, leading to a date.
Two years later, Emma and Charlie are due to be married in a week. They see their wedding DJ, Pauline, smoking heroin in a public park. While discussing whether to fire her with Mike and Rachel, their best man and matron of honor, Emma argues everyone has done bad things, prompting the group to confess their worst actions: Mike admits he used an ex-girlfriend as a human shield during a dog attack and Rachel confesses to locking her "slow" childhood neighbor in an abandoned trailer overnight. Charlie is pressured to share that he relentlessly cyberbullied a classmate who later moved away. Emma reveals she planned a school shooting as a teenager and that her deafness, which she claimed was congenital, was caused by firing a rifle close to her ear. The confession horrifies the group, especially Rachel, whose cousin Samantha was paralyzed in a shooting.
Charlie starts questioning how well he knows Emma. When pressed, Emma explains that she planned the shooting while depressed and bullied, and had been drawn to online communities focused on gun violence. She abandoned the plan after seeing how a mass shooting harmed her community and turned to gun control advocacy, finally finding friends among fellow activists. They awkwardly continue wedding preparations under growing strain. Emma begins having shooting-related nightmares, while Charlie grows paranoid about her mental state and fixates on gun-related imagery.
Rachel repeatedly ignores Emma, refusing to communicate regarding a project Emma's office hired her for. When Emma inadvertently suggests to her boss that Rachel be removed from the project, Rachel ends their friendship and refuses to attend the wedding. Charlie persuades her to reconsider and tries to defend Emma. He then awkwardly encounters Samantha, assuring that she "would love Emma".
At work, Charlie asks his co-worker Misha how she would react if her boyfriend, Blake, planned a school shooting. When Misha says she would call the police, Charlie breaks down; as Misha attempts to comfort him, they kiss, but he stops before they have sex. They agree not to tell their partners. Later, Charlie and Emma have a tense meeting with Pauline; Emma reveals what they saw and fires her, while Charlie remains stressed by his encounter with Misha.
At the wedding reception, a drunken Rachel delivers a passive-aggressive speech, deriding Emma for dishonesty and Charlie for marrying her, heightening Emma's anxiety. In the bathroom, Emma overhears Misha mentioning someone planning a school shooting. Misinterpreting this as gossip about her, Emma confronts Misha; Misha, assuming Emma is referring to Misha's sexual encounter with Charlie, blames Charlie for kissing her. Charlie gives a disastrous speech, apologizing for cheating and assuring guests Emma "didn’t do anything". Blake attacks Charlie, and Emma leaves.
A bloodied Charlie frantically searches for Emma; he travels to their favorite diner, where Emma had previously suggested they go after the wedding. Emma soon arrives and they reintroduce themselves as if meeting for the first time, smiling tearfully at one another.
Cast
- Zendaya as Emma Harwood, a literary editor from Baton Rouge, Louisiana[9]
- Jordyn Curet as young Emma
- Robert Pattinson as Charlie Thompson, a British museum director and Emma's fiancé[9]
- Alana Haim as Rachel, Emma's maid of honor
- Mamoudou Athie as Mike, Charlie's best man and Rachel's husband
- Hailey Benton Gates as Misha, Charlie's co-worker
- Sydney Lemmon as Pauline, a DJ and former musician hired by Emma and Charlie for their wedding[10]
- Hannah Gross as Alice, Emma and Rachel's boss
- Anna Baryshnikov as Sam, a partially paralyzed mass shooting survivor and Rachel's cousin.[11]
- Michael Abbott Jr. as Blake, Misha's current boyfriend[12]
- Zoë Winters as Frances, the wedding photographer
- Damon Gupton as Roger, Emma's father
- Jeremy Levick as Ivan, the DJ hired to replace Pauline
Production
Development
In August 2024, Deadline reported that Kristoffer Borgli would be responsible for writing and directing The Drama for A24. Ari Aster, Lars Knudsen, and Tyler Campellone were set to produce it under their Square Peg studio, with Zendaya and Robert Pattinson in early negotiations to star.[13] In October 2024, Mamoudou Athie and Alana Haim joined the cast.[14]
Filming
Principal photography began on October 21, 2024, in the United Kingdom.[15] On November 6, Zendaya and Pattinson filmed scenes in the Boston neighborhood of Back Bay and Beacon Street.[16] Charlie and Emma's meet-cute was filmed at Tatte Bakery near John Hancock Tower in Boston.[17] Scenes for Charlie and Emma's apartment were filmed at 43 Union Park in Boston.[18] Borgli chose the location due to its spiral staircase, floor-to-ceiling bookshelves, and ornate period-specific molding and decorative detailing.[17] Wine tasting and wedding scenes were filmed at the Turner Hill Golf Club in Ipswich.[17] The Addison Gallery of American Art in Andover, Massachusetts, was used as the fictional Cambridge Art Museum.[18]
Additional filming took place in New York City and Los Angeles.[19] The production also spent $2.9 million shooting in New Orleans, Louisiana.[20] Most scenes featuring a young Emma were shot on location at Riverdale High School in Jefferson Parish, part of the Greater New Orleans area.[17] Filming wrapped in February 2025.[21]
Belarusian cinematographer Arseni Khachaturan served as director of photography on The Drama, shooting it on 35 mm film.[22] Kodak's Vision3 500T 5219 film stock was used.[23] Khachaturan used the Panavision Millennium XL2 camera fitted with Panavision PVintage lenses to shoot The Drama.[24] The use of long lenses enabled Khachaturan to photograph tight shots and portraits of the characters.[23]
Costume design
Intending Charlie and Emma to look like "a cohesive unit", costume designer Katina Danabassis chose unisex flannels and interchangeable basics for both to wear. She found some basics from a thrift store that gave a more lived-in look to loungewear. As the film is set in Boston, Danabassis chose Ivy League–inspired clothing for Charlie, including Margaret Howell and vintage Gap pieces.[25] Emma's clothing reflects her character with simple, comfort-focused pieces, often oversized like they could have been borrowed from Charlie.[25] Having previously worked with Zendaya on Euphoria, Danabassis called her "possibly the easiest person to dress".[26]
Informed by the Patti Bellantoni film criticism book If It's Purple, Someone's Gonna Die, Emma's color palette reflected the character's mental state. For example, a green sweater during her meet-cute with Charlie "symbolize[d] that there's some type of mental instability there", according to Danabassis.[25] Danabassis chose a Lawrence traditional bridal gown by Jenny Yoo out of eight or nine options to be Emma's wedding dress. Four identical versions of the dress were produced for the film's action-heavy third act.[26]
Music
Daniel Pemberton composed the film's score.[27] The Drama also includes tracks from Alicia Keys, John Carroll Kirby, Jordan Raf, Ben Leach, Zach Galsky, Sally Oldfield, Judee Sill, Skinny Pimp, Lady B, Nolan Strong & The Diablos, Smerz, Juliette Gréco, Jackie Gleason, Moondog, Sibylle Baier, Todd Terje, Katie Fash, Shira Small, White Light, Mackeeper, Elusin, and Fakethias[28][29] and prominently features Jesse Rae's cover of the song "Inside Out".[30]
Release
The Drama premiered on March 17, 2026, at DGA Theater Complex in Los Angeles.[31] The film was released in the U.S. on April 3, 2026.[32]
Marketing
On December 8, 2025, editors of The Boston Globe's Living/Arts team received a request from A24 to hold their daily TV Critic's Corner column so an advertisement could run next to the newspaper's romance advice column, Love Letters.[9] A mock engagement announcement for The Drama was published the following day, which revealed plot details and character information.[9]
Reception
Box office
As of May 26, 2026[update], The Drama has grossed $48 million in the United States and Canada, and $78 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $126.1 million.[3]
In the United States and Canada, The Drama was released alongside The Super Mario Galaxy Movie, and was projected to gross $12–15 million from 3,151 theaters in its opening weekend.[2] It made $6.3 million on its first day and went on to debut to $14.3 million, finishing in third.[33] In its second weekend the film grossed $8.7 million (a drop of 39.4%), remaining in third.[34] The film crossed $100 million worldwide on April 22, becoming the fifth film in A24's history to do so.[35]
Critical response
On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 77% of 284 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 7.1/10. The website's consensus reads: "Flirting with complex themes, The Drama walks a tonal tightrope with impressive poise thanks to career-highlight performances by Robert Pattinson and Zendaya."[36] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 59 out of 100, based on 52 critics, indicating "mixed or average" reviews.[37] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B" on an A+ to F scale.[33]
William Bibbiani of TheWrap praised the film's performances and tonal ambition, noting its blend of psychological horror and uneasy comedy, though he found the reveal about Zendaya's character deliberately unsettling and difficult to fully enjoy.[38] G. Allen Johnson of the San Francisco Chronicle highlighted the film's focus on empathy and character reactions, singling out Zendaya's layered performance as the emotional core of the story.[39] Joey Magidson of Awards Radar commended the cast, particularly Zendaya, but criticized the screenplay for lacking development and momentum, ultimately concluding that the film falls short of its potential despite strong individual elements.[40] Nikki Gemmell in The Australian praised the actors, but called the script dishonest and repulsive; she gave it 1 out of 5 stars.[41]
The film garnered criticism for its depiction of school shootings. In the film, Emma confesses to her fiancé Charlie that she once planned a school shooting when she was a teenager. Odie Henderson of The Boston Globe awarded the film 0 out of 4 stars for this, calling it "repugnant [and] tasteless".[42] March for Our Lives, an association led by survivors of the Parkland high school shooting, criticized the marketing for the film, which they characterized as "misleading". Tom Mauser, the father of a victim of the Columbine High School shooting also criticized the movie, saying it "humanized" school shooters.[43] A24 did not reveal the twist prior to the movie's release and instructed journalists to not mention it.[44]
Accolades
| Award | Date of ceremony | Category | Nominee(s) | Result | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| National Film Awards | July 1, 2026 | Best International Film | The Drama | Pending | [45] |
| Best Actor | Robert Pattinson | Pending | |||
| Best Actress | Zendaya | Pending |