For a while, The Drama looks like it might be easier to describe than it actually is. You see the cast, the setup, the mood of the thing, and you think you more or less know the lane. Two attractive people. A relationship under strain. A film that seems ready to turn private discomfort into prestige drama. The kind of movie festivals tend to like, and the kind of movie audiences usually think they can read early.
That confidence does not last long.
Kristoffer Borgli takes that familiar setup and makes it feel sour almost from the inside out. Not louder. Not more sensational in an obvious way. Just wrong. A little off at first, then increasingly unpleasant. The mood changes before the story fully does, which is part of why the film gets under your skin. You can feel it quietly stepping away from ordinary relationship drama and into something colder and meaner.
That is where The Drama gets its bite. It is also where it starts losing some people.
What keeps The Drama from falling apart?
Mostly the two people at the center of it. Zendaya plays this with a kind of reserve that works well for the film. She is not giving you a big, open performance that does all the emotional work for the audience. She keeps some distance. She lets certain moments land half a second late. Even when the character is saying the right thing, there is often something unsettled sitting underneath it. That tension helps the film more than any twist does.

Pattinson comes at it from the other side. He feels shakier, more exposed, more visibly thrown by what is happening. Not weak, exactly, but destabilized. He gives the impression of someone trying to keep a relationship upright after it has already started leaning the wrong way. That makes him very watchable here, because the performance feels slightly frayed even in quiet scenes.
Together, they do something the script badly needs: they make the emotional imbalance believable. You do not just believe these two people are in trouble. You believe they may be experiencing that trouble in completely different ways. That is much more interesting.
Does the film go deep enough?
Not always, and that is probably the biggest issue. Borgli is clearly very good at discomfort. He knows how to stretch a scene until it starts to sting. He knows how to make ordinary conversation feel contaminated. He knows how to put two people in a room and make the air between them feel hostile without anyone saying much at all. That part works.
The part that works less consistently is everything that comes after the unease has been established.

There are moments in The Drama where it feels sharp and genuinely nasty in a useful way, like it is digging into shame, mistrust, and the strange corrosion that can enter intimacy once something impossible to ignore has entered the frame. Then there are other moments where the film seems a little too satisfied with the fact that it is making the audience uncomfortable. It keeps poking the bruise, but not always with a clear enough idea of what it wants to uncover.
That is why the film is likely to split people hard. Some viewers will admire how abrasive it is. Others will think it confuses provocation with depth. Watching it, I could understand both reactions.
Does The Drama stay with you after it ends?
Yes, though not because it is fully successful.
In some ways, it is easier to admire than to love. There are scenes that feel stronger in intention than in payoff, and emotional turns that should hit with more force than they do. But the film has an irritating, lingering quality that weaker prestige dramas usually do not. It hangs around. You keep replaying bits of it. Not necessarily because every scene lands, but because the film keeps pressing on something ugly enough to leave a mark. That matters.
A tidier version of this story probably would have worked more smoothly. It also would have disappeared faster. The Drama is messier than it needs to be in places, but at least it has some nerve. It is trying to make the audience sit in something sour and unresolved, and for better or worse, it commits to that.
Is The Drama worth watching?
Yes, but not if you want it to meet you halfway. This is not a warm film, and it is not much interested in being lovable. What it offers instead is a tense, brittle, awkward relationship drama with two strong performances at its center and a tone that gets steadily more poisoned as it goes. It does not land every idea cleanly, but it has enough edge, oddness, and emotional friction to keep it from feeling disposable.
Some people are going to hate the way it works. Some are going to be impressed that it works at all. That divide feels built into the film.

Data sources: FilmDB.co.uk and TMDb. Availability of information may vary, and accuracy is not guaranteed.
RomanceComedyDrama105 min
