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Splitsville
Overlook Pick

Splitsville

An unromantic comedy.
63
User Score220 ratings
TMDB 6.316+20251h 45mEnglish
ComedyRomance

Synopsis

After Ashley asks for a divorce, good-natured Carey runs to his friends, Julie and Paul, for support. He’s shocked to discover that the secret to their happiness is an open marriage, that is until Carey crosses the line and throws all of their relationships into chaos.

Director
Michael Angelo CovinoFrom TMDB credits
Studio
NEON5 production companies
Release
August 21, 2025Released
Box Office
$3MBudget $20M

Top Cast

8 of 25
Kyle Marvin
Kyle Marvin
Carey
Michael Angelo Covino
Michael Angelo Covino
Paul
Dakota Johnson
Dakota Johnson
Julie
Adria Arjona
Adria Arjona
Ashley
Nicholas Braun
Nicholas Braun
Matt
David Castañeda
David Castañeda
Fede
O-T Fagbenle
O-T Fagbenle
Brent
Charlie Gillespie
Charlie Gillespie
Jackson

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
CinemaSerf
Apr 1, 2026

Though it does have it’s moments, I thought this quite a predicable cycle of contrived romantic dysfunction that really did run out of steam. It starts when the ostensibly happily wed “Ashley” (Adria Arjuna) and husband “Carey” (Kyle Marvin) have a near miss on the road as they are driving to a weekend at their friend’s beach-house. That’s when she declares that she wants a divorce. He abandons the car and embarks on a one-man safari to get to the home of “Julie” (Dakota Johnson), “Paul” (auteur Michael Angelo Covina) and their young son “Russ” (Simon Webster) who have already been briefed on this sudden revelation. It’s not the only one that “Carey” is going to get this night as they reveal that they have an open relationship and that she thinks he regularly meets women for sex in the city where he works as a property developer. What happens next? Well lines get crossed; relationships (and tables) get tested; sexual fluidity becomes the order of the day; Range Rovers get repossessed and all of these characters have to decide just what they really want from life, and what love truly means to each of them. In some ways it reminded me a little of “The Roses” (2025) but otherwise it was little better than an episode of “Sex in the City” only without any subtlety to the humour nor likeableness of any of the four whose selfish and often quite thoughtless introspection robbed the thing of any sense of humanity. It does poke some fun at generations of folks in constant need of therapy or meaning and it also does rather expose our often double-standard approach to sex, but too much of this is padding.

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