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J Joy
Splitsville (2025) is a Romance–Comedy film, and honestly, this is not the kind
of rom-com people usually see. Probably no one in 2025 was prepared for this.
The film revolves around a guy named Carey and the tangled lives of people around him. What you witness is a very strange, almost unsettling idea—an exploration of open marriages, where cheating and betrayal are treated as if they’re justified, even normalized. The film throws you into every possible kind of relationship: dating, situationships, marriage, divorce, affairs, friendships—everything. But the twist is, the emotions and reactions you expect from human beings? You don’t really get them. People react in the exact opposite way of what feels natural. If that sounds confusing, don’t worry—just watch the film.
Splitsville doesn’t just bend morals and ethics; it practically turns them into smoke. It talks about second chances, jealousy, forgiveness, apologies, honesty, and loyalty, but in a way that constantly messes with your head. The film questions what romance and intimacy actually mean for human beings. What is happiness in life—sex, freedom, marriage, having kids, or none of it? Honestly, after watching these characters, my brain just stopped working.
Splitsville is weird, absurdly chaotic, and deeply confusing—but somehow, it’s also oddly satisfying. You may not agree with it, you may not even fully understand it, but it stays with you. And that discomfort? That’s kind of the point.
1 Feb’26 18:53
Soumya Sarkar
The openness of closeness or the closeness of openness?
Harman Singh
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MAN OF CINEMA
Mature Comedic Piece about Immature Relationships!
This movie is chaotic,
insane and messy af. And it’s also hilarious and unpredictable. The final act is just really good. Its
Rudrangshu Samanta
Well a movie about an open relationship in this new age era for the married
couple who want to explore everything they desire physically i guess. The conversations pretty much
