From Marriage Story to Gone Girl, these 7 emotional OTT films perfectly capture heartbreak, fading romance, and the painful reality of falling out of love. IMDb
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Marriage Story To Gone Girl, 7 Films About Falling Out of Love to Watch on OTT

Stream 7 powerful OTT films about falling out of love, including Marriage Story and Gone Girl, exploring heartbreak, failing marriages, and complex relationships.

Amit Diwan

Seven films on OTT that explore the quiet, painful reality of falling out of love without clear villains or tidy endings. From Marriage Story and Us and Them to Kabhi Alvida Naa Kehna, Gone Girl, Brothers, Super Deluxe and The Roses, each title examines distance, resentment and loneliness creeping into relationships over time.

Breakups make sense. The screaming match, the final door slam, the dramatic airport scene, those are stories with a shape. What's harder to explain, or watch, is when two people simply... stop fitting. No villain. No betrayal. Just the distance that crept in while everyone was busy living. These 7 films about falling out of love now on OTT sit with that discomfort.

Films About Falling Out of Love

Marriage Story (Netflix)

Noah Baumbach doesn't let either person be wrong. That's what makes it hurt. Two people, both reasonable, both trying, discovering that caring about someone and building a future with them are occasionally two separate things. The film earns accolades for its famous screaming scene because everything before it is so quiet.

Us and Them (Netflix)

A Chinese romance that takes the long view, switching between past and present to ask one uncomfortable question: what happens when two people grow, just not toward each other? Ambition, circumstance, bad timing. Love doesn't disappear here. It just gets left on the platform.

Kabhi Alvida Naa Kehna (Prime Video)

Still dismissed as a film about infidelity. It isn't, really. It's about loneliness, the specific kind that lives inside a functioning marriage, when the person across the dinner table no longer sees you. KANK asks difficult questions. It doesn't pretend the answers are clean.

Gone Girl (JioHotstar)

David Fincher wraps a deeply uncomfortable portrait of modern marriage inside a thriller. Strip the plot mechanics, and what's left is a study in what happens when resentment compounds quietly for years, until intimacy curdles into something else entirely. Sinister might be the right word.

Brothers (Prime Video)

Nobody screams. Nobody cheats. A soldier comes home changed, and the marriage bends under something it was never built to carry. Brothers is about trauma's collateral damage, the way distance settles between two people who still love each other and don't know what to do about it.

Super Deluxe (Aha)

Thiagarajan Kumararaju weaves five stories together, each circling the same problem: people keeping secrets they should have shared years ago. The result is messy in the way real relationships are messy. Not cinematic, messy. Actually messy.

The Roses (JioHotstar)

Starts as a marriage. Ends as a competition. The film watches two people let pride do more damage than any single argument could, and it plays the whole thing darkly funny, right up until it isn't. A portrait of love's decay disguised as a comedy.

None of these films offers resolution. That's the point. Falling out of love doesn't come with a clear beginning or a clean ending, just a slow accumulation of small failures, missed moments, and choices made under pressure. These films don't look away from that. That's why they stay with you.