Netflix's award-winning film details the breakdown of the union between Nicole (Scarlett Johansson) and Charlie (Adam Driver). The movie, which was written and directed by Greta Gerwig's husband Noah Baumbach, follows as Nicole becomes more and more successful, leaving her husband to reckon with his own foundering career.
The Netflix series chronicles the lives of the British Royal Family, meaning no shortage of infidelity and heartbreak. While Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip's shaky marriage was the focus of the series for the first few seasons, their problems take a back seat in season four, which centers on the unhappy union of Princess Diana (Emma Corrin) and Prince Charles (Joshua O'Connor). The upcoming season, starring Elizabeth Debicki and Dominic West, is slated to show the contentious dissolution of their marriage.
There are not one but two unhappy marriages in Mike White's dark comedy. There's Steve Zahn and Connie Britton's Mark and Nicole respectively, who are too preoccupied with jobs, kids and life, to truly focus on the health of their marriage. Then, there's Shane (Jake Lacy) and Rachel (Alexandra D'Addario), a pair of bright-eyed and bushy-tailed newlyweds—but not for long. That honeymoon glow quickly fades as Rachel realizes she gave up her independence and career when she married the wealthy and privileged Shane.
On the face of it, Nicole Kidman and Hugh Grant are seemingly a happy, wealthy couple. But that charming façade is shattered when Hugh is accused of murdering the mother of one of their son's classmates. The HBO series questions if it's possible to truly know the person you're living with.
This HBO series, created by David E. Kelley and starring an ensemble cast, follows a group of mothers in the wealthy California coastal town of Carmel, who were all witnesses to a murder. While it's largely a crime drama, the show proves that there's no such thing as the perfect couple.
Adam Driver portrays crude comedian Henry McHenry, who surprises the world when he falls in love with opera singer Ann (Marion Cotillard). The couple gets married and eventually welcomes their first child together, but Henry is unable to cope with the fact that his career is faltering while Ann's continues to thrive.
A Most Violent Year's Jessica Chastain and Oscar Isaac reunite in this HBO limited series, which is a remake of the Swedish show by Ingmar Begman. Like the original, the show dissects a successful couple's marriage from beginning to end.