A24 has been hiding something. For months — through fake engagement announcements in the Boston Globe, a one-day wedding chapel in Las Vegas, champagne towers at the LA premiere — they marketed The Drama as a romantic dark comedy about an engaged couple. And technically, it is. But the moment you actually sit down in the cinema, you realise something is deeply, deliberately wrong with that description.
Zendaya and Robert Pattinson are in cinemas right now, in a film that 79% of critics have praised, that has divided audiences sharply, that gun safety advocates are calling irresponsible, and that Zendaya herself described on The Tonight Show as “all gas until the end.” It opened April 3, 2026. It is directed by Kristoffer Borgli — the Norwegian filmmaker behind the acclaimed Dream Scenario and Sick of Myself. And it contains a plot twist that A24 has been desperately trying to keep under wraps.
This is everything you need to know — the premise, the twist (clearly marked with a spoiler warning), the reviews, the controversy, the performances, and whether it’s actually worth your time.
The Film at a Glance
| Detail | Info |
|---|---|
| Title | The Drama |
| Release Date | April 3, 2026 (US) | In cinemas globally now |
| Director / Writer | Kristoffer Borgli (Dream Scenario, Sick of Myself) |
| Studio | A24 |
| Cast | Zendaya, Robert Pattinson, Alana Haim, Mamoudou Athie |
| Runtime | 106 minutes |
| Rating | R |
| Rotten Tomatoes | 79% (154 reviews) — Consensus: “Career-highlight performances by Robert Pattinson and Zendaya” |
| Metacritic | 60/100 — “Mixed or average reviews” |
| Score by Daniel Pemberton | Yes — woodwind-heavy, unsettling |
| Where Filmed | Boston MA, New York City, Los Angeles, UK, Louisiana |
| Streaming | Not yet available — theatrical run only |
The Premise — What A24 Will Actually Tell You
Emma Harwood (Zendaya) is a bookshop clerk in Boston. Charlie Thompson (Robert Pattinson) is a British museum director. They meet in a café — Charlie spots her reading a novel, approaches, and awkwardly pretends he’s read the same book. He hasn’t. It’s a ruse that nearly collapses on their first date. The meet-cute is filmed in jittery jump cuts against Daniel Pemberton’s uneasy woodwind score, and from the very first scene something feels subtly, deliberately off.
Two years later, Emma and Charlie are engaged. Their wedding is days away. Their friends — Rachel (Alana Haim), the maid of honour, and her husband Mike (Mamoudou Athie), the best man — come for a pre-wedding dinner. On the way home, they witness their wedding DJ smoking heroin in a park, which leads to the kind of conversation that reveals more than anyone intended. Rachel suggests a game: everyone says the worst thing they’ve ever done.
Mike’s is bad. Rachel’s is bad. Charlie’s is bad. And then it’s Emma’s turn.
⚠️ Everything after this point contains the major plot twist. If you want to go in blind, stop here and scroll to the review section.

The Controversy: Gun Safety Advocates, A24’s Marketing, and the Spoiler War
Before The Drama even opened, it was already the most controversial A24 film in years. And not just because of the twist — because of how A24 chose to hide it.
The studio’s marketing campaign was a masterpiece of misdirection. A fake engagement announcement in the Boston Globe. A pop-up wedding chapel in Las Vegas. A LA premiere after-party with champagne towers, tiered wedding cakes, and red roses. The campaign sold the film as a romantic dark comedy about pre-wedding jitters. Not once did any official marketing acknowledge the film’s central subject matter: planned mass violence.
The backlash came fast. March for Our Lives — the gun safety organisation founded in the aftermath of the Parkland school shooting — issued a public statement condemning the film’s premise: “The way this film has been marketed is deeply misaligned with the reality it engages. We expect better from A24 and the artists behind it.”
Gun violence survivor Mia Tretta was more direct: “Hollywood is treating school shootings like ‘edgy twists’ to drive ticket sales, but for me, this isn’t a plot point.”
One Reddit user’s response captured a feeling many shared: “I’m glad the twist is getting leaked so people have an opportunity to avoid it. I don’t think shock-jocking mass shooting survivors is worth preserving a movie’s twist.”
Others pushed back in defence of the film’s artistic intent. One comment on the same thread: “Art is art — it’s meant to be controversial. And these events are already kind of normalised, aren’t they? That’s the problem.”
Director Borgli appeared to anticipate exactly this divide. Before the LA premiere screening, he told the audience: “It’s been a challenge to put a genre on the movie. You decide what it is for you. You can laugh, you can cry. However you react is valid. You’re probably right.”
Zendaya herself asked audiences not to spoil the twist: “Everybody has their own feelings leaving the theater, especially with the big twist and there are so many conversations that are had after you watch it. I really hope that people don’t spoil it for each other so they’re allowed to go into it just unknowing and really experience the drama.”
That request arrived too late. The twist had already been widely reported. And — as one rival studio executive told Vulture with frank honesty — that may actually have served A24’s purposes: “Our theory with movie marketing is there is a difference between an issue and a threat. This feels like an issue: a PR scuffle, a distraction to the overall campaign. But for A24’s upscale audience, Zendaya doing something old, new, borrowed, and blue around the world matters more. The audience won’t be deterred because of the plot.”
The Performances: What Critics Are Saying
Whatever the film’s divisions on premise and tone, one thing nearly every critic agrees on is this: both lead performances are exceptional.
Rotten Tomatoes Critics Consensus: “Flirting with complex themes, The Drama walks a tonal tightrope with impressive poise thanks to career-highlight performances by Robert Pattinson and Zendaya.”
Rotten Tomatoes — 79% (154 reviews)
Deadline’s Pete Hammond: “A darkly funny, yet explosively honest movie that may not be what you expect at all going in, but one that is bound to spark spirited conversation when you are walking out.” Called Pattinson’s turn “a career-best performance.”
Deadline Hollywood
Empire Magazine (4 stars): “Hilarious in that cruel, keen way that Borgli has proved to be a specialist.” Compared its dark cringe comedy DNA to Sick of Myself.
Empire Magazine
USA Today: “Zendaya’s is the more quietly powerful of the two, juggling the heavy emotions of a wedding with her world quickly falling apart around her. Meanwhile, Pattinson is like a manic roller coaster on screen, increasingly off the rails… Then there’s Haim, so full of venom and vitriol, who, depending on one’s perspective, is low-key the hero or villain of the film.”
USA Today
The Wrap: Praised “the film’s performances and tonal ambition, noting its blend of psychological horror and uneasy comedy, though he found it deliberately unsettling and difficult to fully enjoy.”
The Wrap
CBC Canada: “Imperfect, controversial, and fascinating. There’s a near-endless level of discourse just waiting to be had about the film’s much-talked-about plot twist, but it could also alienate audiences.”
CBC Canada
The critical dissent centred not on the performances but on the script’s handling of Emma. Multiple reviewers noted that while Pattinson’s Charlie gets extensive solo screen time to process his emotional spiral, Emma — whose revelation is the engine of the entire film — is frequently reduced to reacting rather than acting. Slate’s Dana Stevens coined what may be the most quoted phrase about the film so far: Zendaya plays “a manic pixie school shooter” — a deliberately provocative description, but one that cuts to the heart of the criticism that Emma is more a narrative device than a fully realised person.
The Boston Globe’s film critic was more withering: “The reason A24 doesn’t want you to know what Emma did is because there’s a good chance you won’t want to watch The Drama at all if you know.”
The Pattinson Factor: Why He’s the Film’s Secret Weapon
Robert Pattinson, at this point in his career, is one of the most interesting mainstream actors working. The journey from Twilight to The Lighthouse to The Batman to now — playing a twitchy, well-intentioned, emotionally disintegrating British expat in Boston — is a genuine arc of artistic growth that deserves more attention than the franchise headlines usually allow.
In The Drama, he gets to use his own British accent (a rarity in recent roles), and he deploys it in service of a character whose fundamental crisis is a very British problem: the profound inability to process difficult information publicly. Charlie is a man who knows the correct thing to feel and cannot feel it. He knows Emma is still the person he loves. He knows her dark adolescent history does not negate that. And he absolutely cannot live with it anyway.
Multiple critics — including Deadline in their “career-best” assessment — noted that Pattinson’s physical performance, the way Charlie’s body increasingly malfunctions as his mind fails to reconcile what he knows with what he feels, is exceptional. Looper’s review acknowledged: “Pattinson’s twitchiness sometimes borders on overacting, but the intensity is appropriate for where the story goes.”
He also brings genuine dry comedy to the role. One of the film’s sequences — where innocent objects (including a coffee mug that reads “Coffee or I’ll Shoot”) begin triggering Charlie’s paranoid associations — is apparently very funny, in a deeply uncomfortable way.
The Zendaya Question: Career Pivot or Playing It Safe?
The question that follows Zendaya into every new project is increasingly not whether she can act — she can; she’s proven that repeatedly across Euphoria, Challengers, Dune, and Everything Is Love — but whether the roles she’s choosing are giving her enough to work with.
The Drama gives her a role that is, at its core, a paradox. Emma is defined entirely by a secret she kept for over a decade from everyone who loves her — but the film is not really interested in Emma’s psychology. It’s interested in how others react to her secret. Which means Zendaya spends much of the film in reactive mode: watching Charlie fall apart, watching Rachel rage, watching her own wedding become a disaster, and trying to manage everyone else’s feelings about something she did as a teenager.
San Francisco Chronicle’s review called her “the emotional core of the story.” The USA Today review praised her for “quietly powerful” work. But Slate was pointedly critical: “Despite an appealing performance from the impossible-to-dislike Zendaya, Emma remains a story-advancing cipher.”
Zendaya’s own framing of what she wanted the film to do is telling:
“I think our job in general is to make these people feel real, and to also empathize with them and to humanize them in the best way that we can. Hopefully it’ll spark a lot of healthy discussion.”
She is, characteristically, focused on what the film can mean rather than what it can do for her career. That is either remarkable generosity of spirit or evidence that the role did not offer enough — and perhaps both simultaneously.
The 2026 Zendaya × Pattinson Universe: This Is Just the Beginning
Here’s the thing that makes The Drama feel like a small, intimate prelude to something enormous: this is not the only film Zendaya and Robert Pattinson are making together in 2026.
| Film | Director | Their Roles | Release |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Drama | Kristoffer Borgli | Emma & Charlie — engaged couple in crisis | In cinemas NOW (April 3) |
| The Odyssey | Christopher Nolan | TBC — major roles in Nolan’s epic | 2026 (later this year) |
| Dune: Part Three | Denis Villeneuve | Chani (Zendaya) returns; Pattinson in new role | 2026 |
Three films in a single year. Two of the most acclaimed directors alive — Christopher Nolan and Denis Villeneuve — and one of the most interesting indie directors in the world. Zendaya’s 2026 is shaping up to be one of the most remarkable single-year slates any actor has assembled in recent memory. Pattinson is riding the same wave.
The fact that they chose to start this 2026 together with an intimate, deliberately uncomfortable A24 dark comedy — rather than leading with the blockbusters — says something interesting about both of them as artists. They didn’t have to do this film. They chose to.
Popcorn Review’s Verdict
The Drama (2026) — Popcorn Review
The good: Robert Pattinson delivers what may genuinely be a career-best performance. Zendaya is consistently compelling even when the script underserves her. Alana Haim as the furious best friend is a revelation in a supporting role — she is simultaneously the most sympathetic and least sympathetic character in the film, often in the same scene. The editing is sharp. The score is excellent. The tension is maintained throughout.
The complicated: The film’s central premise — using a planned school shooting as the engine of a dark cringe comedy — is genuinely difficult. It is not insensitive by accident. It is provocative by design. Whether you find that provocation meaningful or exploitative will determine your experience entirely. Gun violence survivors who go in uninformed will not thank A24 for this, and that criticism is legitimate and deserved.
The verdict: See it, but know what you’re walking into. The Drama is not a comfortable watch. It is not trying to be. It is the kind of A24 film that exists not to make you feel good but to make you think — and specifically to make you think about how we talk, or refuse to talk, about the darkest corners of American life. That Borgli is Norwegian filming Americans is not incidental. He sees something from the outside that those inside normalise. Whether the film earns the right to use this material for comedy is a question worth sitting with. But the performances are too good, and the discomfort too precisely calibrated, to dismiss.
Watch if: You loved Dream Scenario, Sick of Myself, or the more unhinged corners of A24’s catalogue. You appreciate dark comedy that does not resolve neatly.
Skip if: The premise is triggering for you. Gun violence is not theoretical in your life. You want a romantic comedy. You cannot bear watching Robert Pattinson incrementally lose his mind over 106 minutes.
Wikipedia — The Drama (2026 film)
E! Online — The Drama: Zendaya & Robert Pattinson’s Movie Explained
Deadline — The Drama: What Critics Are Saying
NBC News — The Drama: A24’s Controversial Twist, Gun Safety Activists Respond
Rotten Tomatoes — The Drama (2026)
Slate — The Drama Has a Disastrous Twist
Boston Globe — The Drama: Tasteless Provocation
Rotten Tomatoes — Zendaya Plans to ‘Disappear for a Little Bit’ After Big 2026
Salon — The Audacious Twist of The Drama Holds a Mirror Up to America
IMDB — The Drama (2026)
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Final Word: The Most Uncomfortable Film You’ll Watch This Year — And One of the Most Interesting
Here is what The Drama actually is, stripped of the controversy: a film about how much of the people we love we choose not to know. Emma and Charlie have been together for two years. They know each other deeply, they love each other genuinely, and Emma has never told him — or anyone — the most important fact about who she nearly became.
The question the film is really asking is not whether Charlie can stay with Emma after her confession. It is whether any two people can fully know each other — and whether not knowing is sometimes the condition that makes love possible.
That is a genuinely interesting question. It is not the question A24 was advertising. But it is the one worth walking out of the cinema thinking about.
Robert Pattinson is exceptional. The film is uncomfortable by design. Zendaya deserved a role with more to it. And Alana Haim will steal every scene she is in, full stop. Whether the central premise earns its discomfort or simply exploits it — that is the question only you can answer, sitting in that cinema seat, watching Emma pour herself a glass of orange wine and begin to speak.
Have you seen The Drama? Did the twist land for you — or did it go too far? Drop your honest reaction in the comments below. 👇

Popcorn in hand and a opinion ready — Emily covers movie reviews, box office buzz, and all things cinema at Popcorn Review.
