4th Wall Inward
Kristoffer Borgli has made a film about the worst thing you never did. Whether that is enough is the conversation we are having this week. The premise arrives early and without warning. Emma and Charlie are days away from their wedding. Their friends suggest a game over drinks. Everyone admits the worst thing they have ever done. Charlie confesses to bullying a classmate. Rachel confesses to something similar. Then it is Emma's turn. What she says stops the film completely. At fifteen, she planned a school shooting. She had her father's rifle. She had a plan. She chose not to go through with it only because another shooting happened nearby and a classmate died, and she felt, in her words, upstaged. That event pulled her out of her isolation. She changed. She became the person sitting across from her fiancé now. And then Charlie cannot look at her the same way. This week on The Fourth Wall Inward we talk about The Drama, Borgli's A24 follow up to Dream Scenario, and the gap between what this film promises and what it delivers. Because the promise is extraordinary. The moral question at the heart of the premise is one of the most genuinely uncomfortable ideas mainstream cinema has attempted in years. Rachel and Charlie admitted to having actually harmed real people. Emma admitted to a plan she chose not to execute. Who has done worse? Who has the right to judge? The hypocrisy inside that question is precisely where the film should live. It does not live there long enough. Robert Pattinson is doing serious work as Charlie. He finds the specific smallness of a man whose conception of his future has been quietly destroyed by information he did not ask for and cannot metabolize. The paranoia, the interrogation, the self-sabotage, the affair with his colleague Misha that he pursues not out of desire but out of something closer to self-destruction. Pattinson plays all of it with the twitchy, masochistic precision that has become his signature and that suits this character almost too well. But the more the film gives Charlie, the less it gives Emma. And this is where The Drama fails most significantly. Zendaya is genuinely extraordinary in this film. There is a moment at the wedding ceremony, sitting in her dress while the world around her collapses, processing information in real time while guests wait for a celebration, where she does something with her stillness that very few actors could do. It is the best scene in the film. It is also a scene about Emma discovering what Charlie has done, not about Emma at all. This is the pattern. Emma confesses the most dangerous thing in the room and then spends the rest of the film reacting to everyone else's response to it. We never understand what it cost her to carry that secret. We never understand the fifteen-year-old who made that plan. The film is not interested in her interior life. It is interested in how her interior life lands on Charlie. The wedding collapse is everything you expect and slightly less than you hoped for. Misha tells Emma about the affair. Charlie delivers his speech and unravels publicly. Misha's boyfriend headbutts him. The ceremony implodes. Charlie ends up in their favorite diner, bloodied, in his wedding suit, ordering a cheeseburger. Emma arrives. She pretends not to know him. She asks to sit. The film ends with the suggestion of beginning again. It is a lovely ending. A genuinely moving idea about love as a choice you make repeatedly rather than a contract you signed once. But it only lands if you believe in both people equally. Emma has spent most of the film existing as a problem Charlie is trying to solve. Her forgiveness reads less like an act of love and more like an act of patience with a screenplay that forgot about her. Follow us on: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@4thwallinward [https://www.youtube.com/@4thwallinward] Letterboxd: https://boxd.it/4TjKf [ https://boxd.it/4TjKf] Substack: https://substack.com/@thefourthwallinward [https://substack.com/@thefourthwallinward] X: https://x.com/4thwallinward [https://x.com/4thwallinward]
11 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de 4th Wall Inward!