Viewer Rating
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources
After 5 years of marriage, Ben is still madly in love. Until the day he discovers in public that his wife is cheating on him: humiliated and dumped in the process.
After 5 years of marriage, Ben is still madly in love. Until the day he discovers in public that his wife is cheating on him: humiliated and dumped in the process.
The film primarily explores the personal and social challenges of divorce through the lens of male friendship and individual coping mechanisms. Its focus on personal growth and camaraderie rather than systemic critiques or ideological promotion positions it as politically neutral.
The movie features visible diversity within its cast, though it does not appear to engage in explicit race or gender swaps of traditionally white roles. Its narrative frames traditional identities neutrally or positively, without incorporating strong or explicit DEI critiques as central themes.
The film features Ben, a gay man, as a central character whose identity and relationship are portrayed with dignity and normalcy. His loving partnership is integrated into the narrative without being a source of mockery, contributing to an overall affirming depiction.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
Divorce Club is an original film with no pre-existing source material, historical figures, or legacy characters. All characters were created for this specific movie, therefore no gender swaps occurred.
Divorce Club is an original French comedy film from 2020. It does not adapt any prior source material with established characters or depict historical figures. All characters are new creations for this specific film, thus precluding any race swaps.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources