Comedy-drama Film [updated] -

Films like Sideways (2004), Juno (2007), and The Descendants (2011) proved that dramedies could win Oscars. The genre became the default voice of "prestige" indie filmmaking. More recently, directors like Greta Gerwig ( Lady Bird ), Hirokazu Kore-eda ( Shoplifters ), and Ruben Östlund ( Triangle of Sadness —a satirical dramedy about class and bodily functions) have pushed the genre into weirder, more uncomfortable territory. The Mechanics of the "Emotional Whiplash" Why do audiences love this genre? Because it mimics reality. No one’s life is a tragedy or a comedy. A funeral is sad, but someone will inevitably trip over a flower arrangement. A wedding is joyful, but someone’s ex is crying in the parking lot.

So the next time you watch a film and you’re crying during a funny part or laughing during a sad one, don’t worry. You’re not broken. You’re just watching a comedy-drama. And you’re feeling, for 90 minutes, exactly what it feels like to be human. comedy-drama film

Directors like Hal Ashby ( Harold and Maude ), Robert Altman ( M A S H*), and Mike Nichols ( The Graduate ) tore up the rulebook. Harold and Maude is the patron saint of the genre: a suicidal young man obsessed with death falls in love with a 79-year-old Holocaust survivor who loves life. It is morbid, joyful, absurd, and profoundly moving. Films like Sideways (2004), Juno (2007), and The