When Ashley asks for a divorce, the good-natured Carey runs to his friends, Julie and Paul, for support. Their secret to happiness is an open marriage; that is, until Carey crosses the line ... Read allWhen Ashley asks for a divorce, the good-natured Carey runs to his friends, Julie and Paul, for support. Their secret to happiness is an open marriage; that is, until Carey crosses the line and throws all of their relationships into chaos.When Ashley asks for a divorce, the good-natured Carey runs to his friends, Julie and Paul, for support. Their secret to happiness is an open marriage; that is, until Carey crosses the line and throws all of their relationships into chaos.
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Nahéma Ricci
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This is barely watchable, cringy, and seriously uninformed about nonmonogamy, which was supposed to be the main plot! The story ends up nowhere for reasons unknown to me, and nobody seems to have learned anything, including myself. It has smuggled some dark stuff under the excuse of comedy, but that stuff is not funny at all. I was fortunate to not have seen this movie alone.
I'm especially disappointed because I'm polyamorous and this is yet another movie which poorly portrays... whatever it intended to portray. We would be better off without it.
I'm especially disappointed because I'm polyamorous and this is yet another movie which poorly portrays... whatever it intended to portray. We would be better off without it.
Newlyweds, Ashley and Carey, quickly discover marriage is not as simple as they thought. Ashley's confession of infidelity has left Carey spiraling and confiding in his best friend. This leads to Carey learning about their open marriage, which in turn causes chaos in their lives and relationships.
This is another atypical romantic comedy. The story explores marriage, infidelity, and what makes a relationship last. The story is completely over the top and messy, which makes for great comedy. The one-hour and forty-four-minute runtime is split up with messiness, loads of comedy, and a pinch of cringe. This is an excellent watch for a good amount of laughs and an intriguing story.
This is another atypical romantic comedy. The story explores marriage, infidelity, and what makes a relationship last. The story is completely over the top and messy, which makes for great comedy. The one-hour and forty-four-minute runtime is split up with messiness, loads of comedy, and a pinch of cringe. This is an excellent watch for a good amount of laughs and an intriguing story.
If you're looking for a serious take on the topics of non monogamy and marriage, you've picked the wrong movie.
It's a comedy made with the intent of having fun and making people laugh. The fact that those themes are present is a simple circumstance.
Skip it if you're looking for a serious film that will make you reflect on life. Keep it if you're looking for a light movie, with absurd scenes that may make you laugh.
Plus, it's shot on film, with a very nice aesthetic.
It's a comedy made with the intent of having fun and making people laugh. The fact that those themes are present is a simple circumstance.
Skip it if you're looking for a serious film that will make you reflect on life. Keep it if you're looking for a light movie, with absurd scenes that may make you laugh.
Plus, it's shot on film, with a very nice aesthetic.
I went into Splitsville hoping for a clever, biting take on modern relationships, but came away feeling deeply disappointed. Despite its trendy premise of open marriage and romantic entanglements, the film never earns its emotional stakes or dramatic turns.
What works (a few): Visually, the movie can be appealing - cinematography and production design occasionally offer pleasing frames, and there are moments of decent comedic absurdity. A few individual jokes land, especially when the male leads' insecurities are pushed to extremes. The pacing is brisk, which helps keep things from dragging entirely.
Major cons (why I rate it so low):
1. Emasculation writ large.
The film seems intent on reducing its male characters to caricatures of weakness, desperation and ineptitude. Rather than a nuanced exploration of vulnerability, Splitsville often feels like a smug humiliation of men - as if the only interesting role for them is to be mocked.
2. No character depth.
None of the four leads are truly developed. The women are especially short-changed: Julie and Ashley rarely transcend their roles as reflections of the men's conflicts. The film treats them as plot devices rather than full people with inner lives. Even where there is tension, it never feels earned - we don't know enough about anyone to care. (Many critics have noted this same failing.)
3. Dakota Johnson playing "Dakota Johnson" Her performance feels so comfortably in type that she brings no surprises. Julie is essentially a variant of roles we've seen her play before - cool, composed on the surface, emotionally stormy underneath - but here she's underwritten, so the trope becomes stale rather than intriguing. Critics have similarly pointed out that her character is manipulated more than developed.
4. Self-indulgent, smug tone.
The movie frequently seems to expect us to laugh merely because these characters are clever, edgy, or tortured - but it never bridges the gap between the cleverness and the humanity. At times it feels like watching its creators showing off rather than telling a story.
In summary: Splitsville is a visually polished mess whose ambitions outstrip its execution. It never builds enough empathy or insight to make its ideas resonate, and instead leaves you feeling hollow.
What works (a few): Visually, the movie can be appealing - cinematography and production design occasionally offer pleasing frames, and there are moments of decent comedic absurdity. A few individual jokes land, especially when the male leads' insecurities are pushed to extremes. The pacing is brisk, which helps keep things from dragging entirely.
Major cons (why I rate it so low):
1. Emasculation writ large.
The film seems intent on reducing its male characters to caricatures of weakness, desperation and ineptitude. Rather than a nuanced exploration of vulnerability, Splitsville often feels like a smug humiliation of men - as if the only interesting role for them is to be mocked.
2. No character depth.
None of the four leads are truly developed. The women are especially short-changed: Julie and Ashley rarely transcend their roles as reflections of the men's conflicts. The film treats them as plot devices rather than full people with inner lives. Even where there is tension, it never feels earned - we don't know enough about anyone to care. (Many critics have noted this same failing.)
3. Dakota Johnson playing "Dakota Johnson" Her performance feels so comfortably in type that she brings no surprises. Julie is essentially a variant of roles we've seen her play before - cool, composed on the surface, emotionally stormy underneath - but here she's underwritten, so the trope becomes stale rather than intriguing. Critics have similarly pointed out that her character is manipulated more than developed.
4. Self-indulgent, smug tone.
The movie frequently seems to expect us to laugh merely because these characters are clever, edgy, or tortured - but it never bridges the gap between the cleverness and the humanity. At times it feels like watching its creators showing off rather than telling a story.
In summary: Splitsville is a visually polished mess whose ambitions outstrip its execution. It never builds enough empathy or insight to make its ideas resonate, and instead leaves you feeling hollow.
The poster said "funniest film of the year". I don't know if that critic got paid, or just has a really weird sense of humour. There were a couple moments where I chuckled, but there are WAY more funny movies out there.
The two couples' lives and relationships are a mess, and I didn't really connect with any of them.
I thought it would be something good like "I Give It a Year", but no, it wasn't nearly as good as that. In the end they needed to wrap up to story so they slapped on an ending. I could only think "what did I just watch and why?" Not the worst movie I've seen, but no good either.
The two couples' lives and relationships are a mess, and I didn't really connect with any of them.
I thought it would be something good like "I Give It a Year", but no, it wasn't nearly as good as that. In the end they needed to wrap up to story so they slapped on an ending. I could only think "what did I just watch and why?" Not the worst movie I've seen, but no good either.
Soundtrack
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Did you know
- TriviaMichael Angelo Covino and Kyle Marvin did all their own stunts.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Movies That Made Me: TRAILER SHOW: Splitsville (2025)
- SoundtracksWhenever I Call You Friend
Written by Kenny Loggins and Melissa Manchester
Performed by Kenny Loggins with Stevie Nicks
Courtesy of Atlantic Recording Corp.
By arrangement with Sony Music Entertainment, Warner Music Group Film & TV Licensing
The Year in Posters
The Year in Posters
From Hurry Up Tomorrow to Highest 2 Lowest, take a look back at some of our favorite posters of 2025.
Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $1,900,750
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $108,315
- Aug 24, 2025
- Gross worldwide
- $3,402,045
- Runtime
- 1h 44m(104 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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