Netflix has accumulated a quiet library of films that examine relationships outside conventional frameworks. Age gaps, power reversals, open arrangements, and connections formed under unusual circumstances all appear in the platform’s catalogue. Some of these titles were theatrical releases that later migrated to streaming. Others were acquisitions that fill a space mainstream romance rarely occupies. Availability shifts by region and date, but the films below were on the platform at the time of writing.
Shiva Baby
Emma Seligman’s 2020 debut runs 77 minutes and uses every one of them. Rachel Sennott plays Danielle, a bisexual college student who attends a shiva with her parents. Her sugar daddy shows up at the same gathering with his wife and baby. Her ex-girlfriend Maya is also present. The entire film takes place inside a single house over one afternoon.
The premise hinges on a sugar daddy relationship that Danielle has kept hidden from her family. When that secret collides with every other relationship in her life at the same time, the result is sustained tension rendered as dark comedy. Seligman uses the confined setting and Ariel Marx’s score to build claustrophobia that never releases. The film holds a 95% critics rating on Rotten Tomatoes. It does not moralize about Danielle’s arrangement. It presents it as one part of a complicated life, without hierarchy or judgment.
Fair Play
Chloe Domont’s 2023 thriller places Emily and Luke, two financial analysts in a forbidden workplace relationship, under pressure when Emily receives a promotion that puts her above Luke in the corporate hierarchy. The film tracks what happens to the relationship as that power dynamic reverses.
Fair Play works because it takes a familiar tension and pushes it past the point where polite fiction holds. Luke’s response to his partner’s success becomes the engine of the story, and Domont does not soften it. Phoebe Dynevor and Alden Ehrenreich perform the deterioration with precision. The film premiered at Sundance in 2023 and arrived on Netflix in October of that year. Domont has said she wrote it to reckon with unresolved dynamics from past relationships where men were threatened by her ambition.
Emilia Perez
Jacques Audiard’s 2024 musical crime drama follows a Mexican cartel leader who enlists a lawyer named Rita to fake her death so she can live as her true self. Karla Sofia Gascon stars as Emilia, Zoe Saldana as Rita, and Selena Gomez as Jessi, Emilia’s former wife who does not know her supposedly dead husband has transitioned.
The emotional center of the film is what happens when Emilia tries to re-enter her family’s life under a new identity. The relationship between Emilia and Jessi is unconventional by any standard, and Audiard frames it through song and choreography drawn from Mexican popular music. The film won multiple awards at Cannes and received 13 Academy Award nominations. It does not explain its central relationship to the audience. It presents it and lets the viewer process what they see.
Adult Bat Mitzvah
Jason Schwartzman plays Ben, a cantor in his 40s who has lost both his voice and his faith. Carol Kane plays his former grade school music teacher, who re-enters his life as an adult bat mitzvah student. The age difference between the two characters is substantial. The film does not treat it as a problem to solve.
Variety described the film as a cheerful dismissal of debates about people connecting outside their immediate age group. The relationship between Ben and his teacher is built on shared musical history and a recognition of mutual loss. It arrived on Netflix in December 2024 and plays as a character study rather than a conventional romance. The pacing is slow and deliberate, and the film trusts its audience to sit with ambiguity rather than demanding resolution.
The Half of It
Alice Wu’s 2020 film borrows the Cyrano de Bergerac structure. Ellie Chu, a shy student, writes love letters on behalf of a classmate to the girl they both have feelings for. The triangle builds slowly in a small-town setting, and Wu allows the emotional confusion to develop without forcing a tidy ending.
The film does not conclude with a pairing. That choice is itself unconventional for the genre. Wu respects the complexity of what her characters feel enough to leave some of it unresolved. Leah Lewis plays Ellie with restraint that makes her moments of vulnerability more effective. The film premiered at Tribeca and launched on Netflix in 2020. It was one of the few films released that year that handled queer longing without turning it into tragedy or spectacle.
Sugar Baby (2020)
Kelly McCormack wrote and stars in this Canadian independent film as Darren, a struggling musician who enters a sugar baby arrangement to fund her music career. The film does not glamorize the arrangement or condemn it. McCormack plays Darren as someone making a practical decision with full awareness of what it involves, and the story follows the emotional and creative consequences of that choice.
The tone is low-key and observational. The film moves at the speed of Darren’s daily life, mixing rehearsals, gigs, and meetings with her benefactor without drawing hard lines between the parts of her life. It earned positive reviews at TIFF and is available on Netflix in select regions.
Forever
Colman Domingo and Marco Calvani star in this story about two men navigating a health scare and the realities of aging within an open relationship. The film’s most notable choice is that the openness of their arrangement is not the source of their conflict. It is background. Settled, functional, unremarkable.
Most films that depict non-monogamy treat it as a crisis or a phase. Forever presents it as a fact of the couple’s life and builds its drama elsewhere. That framing alone makes it unusual in a genre that tends to treat anything outside monogamy as inherently unstable.
What These Films Share
The common thread is restraint. None of these films use their unconventional premise as a gimmick or a provocation. Shiva Baby does not lecture about sugar dating. Fair Play does not explain gender dynamics to the viewer. Emilia Perez does not ask for permission to tell its story. The films trust their audiences to follow without narration.
Netflix’s willingness to host this range of relationship stories is partly commercial. The platform needs content that fills gaps mainstream studios avoid. But the result is a library that reflects how people actually form connections. Age differences, power gaps, hidden arrangements, open structures. None of these are new. What is newer is a major platform treating them as stories worth telling without attaching a warning label or a moral lesson.
The films on this list are not all equally strong. Some are better made than others. But each takes its subject seriously enough to let the characters remain complicated without reducing them to their relationship format.






