Wild Honey is one of the most unique romcoms Iā€™ve ever seen. The pitch is simple: itā€™s about a phone sex operator who falls for one of her clients. But itā€™s so much more than that. This is a film with real heart.

One thing I have to say upfrontā€”Gabby, the main character, isnā€™t just a phone sex operator. What makes her so compelling is that sheā€™s one of the most unlikely protagonists in a romcom, period. Sheā€™s 49 years old, living with her mom, fat, and drifting from one relationship to the next.

A lot of films with a lead like Gabby would focus on self-confidence, body positivity, or ā€œfinding yourself.ā€ And while there are hints of that, Wild Honey is about something different. Gabby is a transgressive personā€”sheā€™s a teenager in a middle-aged womanā€™s body. She acts on impulse, makes reckless choices, and is, in every way, trouble. And itā€™s so refreshing.

Rusty Schwimmer plays her perfectly. You look at Gabby and think, She fucked up. She made stupid choices. Of course, she ended up here. And the film doesnā€™t shy away from that. But then something surprising happens: character growth. And not the contrived kind that ties everything up neatly, but real evolution.

Since this is a romcom, youā€™d expect it to be about Gabby finding loveā€”or is it? Because Wild Honey is ultimately about desire, passion, and following your heart, even when itā€™s messy.

What makes this film so special, why it speaks to me, is that it understands something a lot of movies donā€™t: as we grow older, move into middle age, and beyond, we donā€™t fundamentally change who we are. We grow, we evolve, but that core part of usā€”the thing that makes us usā€”never disappears.

I highly recommend Wild Honey. A fantastic movie. A great romcom.

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