Kristoffer Borgli has carved out a genuinely weird, unsettling niche in modern cinema. He loves poking at the fragile ways we build our egos and social identities, and with The Drama, he moves away from the viral internet infamy of his previous work to tear apart something much older: the deeply performative ritual of a modern wedding. On paper, it sounds like a standard psychological thriller or a pitch-black comedy about domestic secrets. In reality, the movie functions as a relentless, high-stress endurance test of what unconditional love actually means. Borgli doesn't just tell a story; he weaponizes the audience's expectations, flipping a standard romantic setup on its head to create something deeply deeply uncomfortable. It moves with the slow, agonizing inevitability of a car crash you can't look away from. To get the full, gut-punch effect of what he’s doing here, you absolutely have to walk into the theater knowing as close to zero as possible. The marketing did a ...
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