Romantic comedies have long relied on lies and deception to drive their plots.

From classic films like The Shop Around the Corner to modern hits such as How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days, the genre thrives when characters hide red flags from each other.

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The tension comes from wondering whether love can survive when ulterior motives are concealed.

In 2026, this trope has been pushed to new extremes. A new archetype has emerged: the unlucky-in-love sociopath.

Recent releases show protagonists whose schemes go far beyond harmless fibs, raising questions about the future of romantic storytelling.

Finding Emily: A Case Study in Deception

The film Finding Emily stars Angourie Rice as a psychology student desperate for a dissertation topic.

She decides to study the self-destructive nature of love by framing a fellow student as an obsessive stalker.

Her target, Owen (Spike Fearn), is a kind-hearted bar employee. After a mistaken identity, Emily offers to help him find the woman he danced with.

In reality, she uses him as a guinea pig, faking consent forms and recording their conversations without his knowledge.

As the scheme unfolds, genuine feelings develop between them. But the initial lie has already damaged Owen's reputation.

When he discovers the truth, the audience feels no triumph, only unease.

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You, Me & Tuscany: A House-Sitter's Fantasy

Last month, You, Me & Tuscany introduced another romcom sociopath. Halle Bailey plays Anna Montgomery, a house-sitter who lives vicariously through her clients.

She is fired after wearing their clothes, including underwear.

After a one-night stand with an Italian man, she flies to his Tuscan villa and pretends to be his fiancée.

Her scheme involves multiple lies, yet the family forgives her because they find her charming. The film treats her behavior as endearing rather than alarming.

This trend reflects a broader shift in how romantic comedies handle deception. Filmmakers are making characters more extreme to maintain dramatic tension in an online dating world.

The Drama: Lies and Modern Love

Kristoffer Borgli's black comedy The Drama weaponizes this trope deliberately. Charlie (Robert Pattinson) pretends to have read a book to impress Emma (Zendaya).

Meanwhile, Emma hides a dark secret from her past.

The film's brilliance lies in showing why modern romcoms need extreme lies.

In an era of online dating, characters might swipe left on each other if they met digitally.