Smile… The Worst is Yet to Come Review: An Emotionally Observant Dramedy!

Smile… The Worst is Yet to Come is an emotionally observant dramedy. Co-written and directed by Chloe Lenihan, the film carries substantial emotional weight and uses an intimate cabin setting to dissect love, expectations disappointments, and the slow erosion of dreams. What initially presents itself as a modest relationship drama gradually reveals a far more layered examination of modern adulthood with millennials.

Related – “Big Girls Don’t Cry” Review: Tender & Emotionally Grounded!

The story follows Ben and Birdie, a long-term couple battered by a sequence of losses: a failed business and repeated IVF attempts. Hoping to reset, they escape to Big Bear Lake for a romantic weekend that immediately goes sideways. Their fragile emotional equilibrium is further disrupted by January and Jerek, a Gen-Z influencer couple who crash their space and what unfolds is less a plot-driven escalation and more a carefully engineered emotional pressure cooker, culminating in a night of radical honesty that dismantles the polite lies holding the relationship together.

One of the film’s biggest strengths is its writing. The dialogue is precise, naturalistic, and emotionally calibrated, allowing the key themes to emerge organically rather than through exposition. The film engages deeply with the idea of the “millennial crisis”—that gnawing sense of being too late, of having followed all the rules only to arrive nowhere. Ben and Birdie are not portrayed as dramatic failures, but as people stuck in emotional stasis, mourning futures that quietly slipped away.

Grief and stalled ambition are treated as cumulative wounds rather than singular events, giving the film a lived-in authenticity. The theme of radical honesty becomes the film’s narrative fulcrum, illustrating how truth, when forced into the open, can be both destructive and necessary. Importantly, the film resists offering instant catharsis or tidy resolutions. It simply presents these emotional realities and lets them sit, unresolved and raw.

The title itself is another quietly brilliant touch. Smile… The Worst is Yet to Come functions as both a bitter joke and a thematic thesis. It encapsulates the performative optimism demanded by modern life while acknowledging the exhaustion beneath it. The film begins, circles, and ultimately concludes around this idea, making the title painfully honest.

Performance-wise, the film is anchored by Joseph Mancuso and Elizabeth Masucci, who deliver deeply convincing, emotionally exposed performances. Their chemistry feels earned, their arguments bruising, and their silences heavy with subtext. You can feel the history between them in every exchange. Krystina Alabado and Ethan Jones Romero are equally effective as the Gen-Z counterparts who sharply contrasts with Ben and Birdie’s internalized struggles.

Technically, the film is far stronger than expected for an indie of this scale. The cinematography by Allie Schultz is confident and expressive, using controlled lighting and intimate framing to heighten emotional proximity. The production design and locations feel tactile and lived-in, while the score by Geographer subtly reinforces the film’s theme.

Overall, Smile… The Worst is Yet to Come is a deceptively powerful film—funny, painful, and honest. It captures a very specific emotional moment in modern adulthood with clarity and compassion, leaving you not with answers, but with recognition. Sometimes, that’s far more impactful. Follow ‘Smile… The Worst is Yet to Come’ on Instagram for more updates.

‘Smile… The Worst is Yet to Come’ Rating – 4/5

Surya Komal

It is what it is.

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