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The Invite

A sharp, very funny domestic pressure-cooker that turns a dinner party into a marriage autopsy. The appeal is the mix of escalating comic chaos, strong ensemble chemistry, and a surprisingly sincere look at resentment, desire, and the fragile work of staying together.

86% (13,536)

The Invite

Where to watch: In Theaters

Movie · Drama · Comedy · R

2026 · 1h 47m · ★ 86% (14K)

It'll be fun.

Director: Olivia Wilde

Starring: Seth Rogen, Olivia Wilde, Edward Norton

Overview

Joe and Angela’s marriage is on thin ice. When they invite their enigmatic upstairs neighbors for a dinner party, the night spirals into unexpected places. Have they reignited the spark or lit the match that burns it all down?

Director

Olivia Wilde

Production

Annapurna Pictures, FilmNation Entertainment, Permut Presentations

Cast

Seth Rogen, Olivia Wilde, Edward Norton, Penélope Cruz

Curator Review

Verdict

A sharp, very funny domestic pressure-cooker that turns a dinner party into a marriage autopsy. The appeal is the mix of escalating comic chaos, strong ensemble chemistry, and a surprisingly sincere look at resentment, desire, and the fragile work of staying together.

Best for

  • Viewers who like relationship comedies with real emotional bite
  • Fans of tightly staged, dialogue-driven ensemble films
  • People who enjoy dinner-party disasters and social discomfort
  • Audiences looking for a funny movie that still lands a gut punch

Skip if

  • You want broad, low-stakes comedy only
  • You dislike cringe humor and escalating interpersonal tension
  • You prefer plot-heavy thrillers over character-driven chamber pieces
  • You’re not interested in marriage/relationship drama

Overview

The Invite plays like a polished social grenade: a dinner party that starts as a test of civility and ends up exposing everything the hosts have been avoiding. It’s built on timing, performance, and the kind of escalating discomfort that makes every new line feel like it could either save the night or destroy it.

Worth noting

What stands out most is how funny it is without losing sight of the emotional damage underneath. The cast seems to be in perfect sync, and the script’s rhythm gives the movie a real snap; it knows when to let a joke breathe and when to cut straight to the bruise.

Bottom line

Olivia Wilde’s direction gives the whole thing a confident, controlled energy. Even when the movie gets messy, it feels intentional, and that balance between chaos and precision is what makes it work. It’s the kind of comedy that invites laughter first and then quietly asks what, exactly, everyone is laughing to avoid.

Top Letterboxd reviews

davidehrlich (4★) · 2087 likes

huge respect to Olivia Wilde — i haven't seen a rebound this satisfying and unexpected since Mitchell Robinson grabbed that missed free throw at the end of game 5. great movie, like if Seth Rogen gave the most uncomfortably relatable performance of his life in a peak Mike Nichols comedy. So fucking funny, Wilde directs the shit out of it, divorce rates are about to spike along the coasts. Ed Norton should play Larry Bird in a mediocre TIFF drama about the three years he spent coaching the Pacers. this is my first and last basketball-coded log.

Sean Fennessey · 1524 likes

The best use of Edward Norton in decades.

David Sims (3.5★) · 884 likes

I like any movie that's about how being near Penelope Cruz is a category 5 emotional hurricane

jonathan fujii (4.5★) · 795 likes

Crazy how EVERYONE understood the assignment

Kit Lazer (5★) · 774 likes

Olivia Wilde delivers direction so strong and a performance so good that she got a standing ovation at Sundance. That’s not a thing at Sundance! It’s not Cannes. It’s too cold here for that nonsense. I agonized for about 37 seconds about whether this was a 5 star or a 4 1/2 star picture and then I remembered nothing could matter less. I can say I loved this movie. The entire theater erupted in laughter more times than I could… more

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Themes

marriage in crisis, dinner party chaos, emotional infidelity, social discomfort, relationship comedy, domestic tension, class and status anxiety, ensemble dynamics

Topics

relationship comedy, domestic drama, ensemble cast, cringe comedy, marital tension, dinner party, darkly funny, character-driven, emotional chaos, adult contemporary

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