Enjoy romantic films? Over the past month, I watched a few I liked a great deal. There's the recently released Send Help, a gory survival thriller-cum-black comedy in which the lines 'I'm sorry I gouged your eyes out' and 'I'm sorry I stabbed you' are followed by 'God, I love you'.Then there's the 2022 Sanctuary, about a psychological tug-of-war between a corporate heir and the woman he hires for role-playing sexual games--with the pre-written script getting out of control.And finally, the Zendaya-Robert Pattinson-starrer The Drama, in which a man learns something about his bride-to-be that causes panic attacks, near-infidelity, and cringe-inducing wedding toasts.I'm not joking about these being romantic films. It's possible to view them as intense love stories (or intense love-hate stories). In fact, two of them end on a mushy note where we see that the twisted journey may have been essential to the consolidation of a relationship, bringing it to a point of emotional maturity and calm.Or, to a point where the people involved just throw their hands up and say, 'Heck, we're both so messed up, we may as well stay together for eternity.' Those journeys are a lot of fun, for us viewers anyway.Nor am I saying these films are similar in some overriding sense. Maybe it was because I watched them close to each other that I saw these links. While all of them are dark, unpredictable, even deranged to varying degrees, there are differences based on genre and situation. For instance, Send Help - directed by horror expert Sam Raimi - contains the most explicit violence - physical and psychological - between protagonists, a social misfit and her cocky young boss who are stranded on an island after a plane crash.In contrast, the unsettling elements in The Drama are mostly confined to brief nightmare scenes. In their real-world interactions, the lovebirds continue to be polite and considerate even after tension has crept into their relationship.The similarities can be telling, though. Both Sanctuary and Send Help centre on a man and a woman playing power games, taking turns being in control, with the man, in each case, being the heir of a rich family and the woman someone who appears subservient to him... until she is not.Traditional gender roles are reversed. 'I brought home the bacon,' quips the Rachel McAdams character in Send Help, after killing a boar for dinner. In Sanctuary, Margaret Qualley's Rebecca goes from being a glorified sex worker to demanding a large stake in a company.Compared to these films, Paradise (2024), starring the talented Darshana Rajendran and Roshan Mathew as a couple who get into trouble while vacationing in Sri Lanka, is straitlaced in its depiction of people under stress. But again, there is a sense of a woman - subdued and quiet early on - coming into her own, and the overturning of conventional roles. Here, this is done through the subverting of mythological templates, with some, perhaps overdone, Ramayan commentary.But now, I should mention that if the above films are not lovey-dovey enough for your taste, consider a couple of other recent releases, sweeter and friendlier in tone. Both involve inter-species love. In The Sheep Detectives, shepherd Hugh Jackman looks after his flock with such devotion - even reading them detective novels - that they set out to solve the mystery of his death.And in Remarkably Bright Creatures, Sally Field, still wonderful at 80, plays an aquarium cleaner who bonds with a wise, sometimes pedantic old octopus.All this has been a way of saying: broaden your definition of 'love story' and you'll have many more good films to choose from. You might also have fun locating other connections between them. A hint to get you started: Send Help has an octopus too, but one that's used to create a paralysing toxin. Nothing mushy about that scene.(Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in this column are that of the writer. The facts and opinions expressed here do not reflect the views of www.economictimes.com.)
Romance redefined: The rise of dark and unconventional romantic stories in cinema, where love is not just candlelight dinners - The Economic Times
Recent films like Send Help, Sanctuary, and The Drama explore intense love stories. These movies feature unconventional relationships and power dynamics. Some even reverse traditional gender roles. For those seeking sweeter tales, The Sheep Detectives and Remarkably Bright Creatures offer inter-species love. Broadening the definition of a love story reveals many engaging films.










