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Wednesday, 15 July 2026

The Invite


This review may contain spoilers! 

This is an American adaptation of the Spanish film Sentimental (2020), directed by Olivia Wilde. In this feature, Angela and Joe are a long-married, unhappy couple who find themselves exploring the boundaries of modern erotic culture when their upstairs neighbours come over to visit.

I was entirely prepared to write this film off. I expected The Invite to be a failed foreign language film remake, or a lewd American comedy. The Invite is neither of these things, thankfully. This film feels like genuine lightning in a bottle, one of those hot pieces of cinema that just flows perfectly. Whether those dialogue exchanges are scripted, improvised or scattered with ad-libs, the way these characters speak to one another impressed me so much. The line work here is just unreal; there is verbal sparring that moves organically with a raw intensity I expect more from theatre than film. I believe in Angela and Joe; I believe they are a deeply unhappy married couple. But gosh, is it so much richer than that. This is a pair with their own secret desires, deep-seated grudges and conflicts that span a gaping divide between one another. Introducing Piña and Hawk lights a fuse that doesn't burn fast; it burns steadily. There is an intensity that awakens and incites tensions. Fresh characters who draw forth buried feelings, who jolt the core relationship right to its very core. There was something so precisely built in how real these characters are that the moments of absurdity as we dance around the erotic throughline play like clever moments of contrast. A new step to shake things up and carry our protagonists forward.

This is another go of Olivia Wilde in the director's chair, and she is sitting much more comfortably than her recent Don't Worry Darling outing. This film moves like a well-conducted piece of live performance. All of the elements tangle into one another and become a tapestry of human connection. The way this thing is shot is so intimate, an incredibly tight, closed frame that holds everything for the viewer. We are captured alongside the characters, who feel very much like they're being held under a microscope. The score for this film is hilarious in its drama; this is a fully explosive piece of music that really signposts the moments of tension and lends strong emotion to any given scene. There are a few lovely pieces within the soundtrack too; Sade's 'By Your Side' really brought out that playful, cosy side of The Invite. I loved how this feature is stitched together; every cut and transition feels so timely and deliberate.

There is a core group of four actors here who are working extremely hard and wind up giving a masterful set of performances almost entirely. Olivia Wilde might be giving her career best in this. Angela is such a repressed figure who desires so much more than she is receiving from life. Wilde portrays her as this tightly wound mother, who is so perpetually anxious and frustrated that she is racing towards an explosive release. While Rogen continues to surprise and impress. His turn as Joe, a comedic husband who often fails to meet the bare minimum, is a nice blend of Rogen's dramatic and comedic talents. When he's allowed to just riff and ad lib, he can really run away with a scene. I also loved Edward Norton as a smarmy, sexually liberated ex-firefighter called Hawk. His calming tone and measured approach to the situation border on condescension, but often land in introspective placation.

I was less impressed with Penélope Cruz as Piña. This is a role that felt a bit more far-fetched than Norton's. She would gravitate between partner, sexual matriarch and a sort of therapist figure that made her rather difficult to pin down. I didn't feel Cruz could seamlessly differentiate between these moments either. Sometimes The Invite itself faltered because it didn't know when it had gone on for too long, or a comedic moment kept carrying forward. I suppose that's the sacrifice for letting such a raw expression of passion and talent run rampant. When it's working (which is most of the time), it plays to perfection, but these moments aren't always constant.

This is a film that is razor sharp and constructed with incredible quality in mind. I would give The Invite a 9/10.

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