Zendaya, Robert Pattinson’s The Drama has quickly become one of the most talked about films of the spring, not just for its star power, but for the way it was marketed.
Promoted as a straight romance or comedy, complete with a wedding themed social campaign and even a pop up chapel in Las Vegas, the film’s advertising painted a lighthearted picture.
But audiences and advocacy groups say the reality is far darker.
On April 2, gun control organization March for Our Lives criticized the campaign.
It argued that the marketing failed to acknowledge the film’s sensitive subject matter.
“With a subject this serious, especially in the U.S., that conversation cannot begin and end on screen. It has to carry through in how the film is presented,” the group wrote on Instagram.
The backlash intensified when fans discovered the plot twist: Zendaya’s character is revealed to have planned a school shooting.
Alyson Michalka and AJ Michalka, who survived a mass shooting outside one of their concerts in 2022, condemned the marketing as “sick” in the comments of March for Our Lives’ post.
Some viewers said they felt misled, claiming they would have walked out of theaters had they not been warned in advance.
Others defended the film, arguing that art is meant to provoke discomfort and spark conversation.
“It brings awareness to the societal context we are raising our children in,” one commenter wrote, while another insisted that audiences were being “anti art.”
The debate highlights the tension between artistic storytelling and marketing responsibility.
While The Drama attempts to tackle themes of accountability and trauma, critics say its promotional campaign glossed over the gravity of its narrative.
A24 has not yet commented on the controversy.
The Drama, starring Zendaya and Robert Pattinson, is currently in theaters.
