The Bet (2020) May 2026

A significant portion of the film explores the cruelty of treating human beings (like Albert) as pawns in a personal game. While some audiences found the performances by Little and Hodge endearing, others viewed the plot as "improbable and cringy," akin to a dark inversion of the "bet on the nerdy girl" trope. Comparison to Chekhov’s "The Bet"

That man is (Douglas Hodge), a "sad sack" salesman who is in no mood for romance or conversation. The film follows Isabel’s increasingly desperate and manipulative attempts to win the wager, which leads her to cross professional and ethical lines as Albert turns out to be a sales representative for her own company. Critical Analysis and Themes

The film centers on (Natasha Little), a successful tea company president, and her husband Cal (Colin Salmon). The inciting incident is a seemingly petty argument where Cal suggests he is the only man who has ever truly wanted her. In a fit of pride and "mirth-free" competitive spirit, Isabel makes a bet with him: she can get the very next man who walks through the restaurant door to propose to her. The Bet (2020)

Unlike typical romantic comedies, The Bet is often described by critics as a "portrait of marriage that does much to discredit the institution".

Reviewers from Christian Sauvé note that the film is "sad, depressing, and unlikable by design," often failing to land the "comedy" part of its genre. A significant portion of the film explores the

Interestingly, some 2020 adaptations and discussions directly modernize Chekhov’s original story about a lawyer and a banker. In that version, the "bet" is a 15-year voluntary solitary confinement to prove whether life imprisonment is better than the death penalty.

You can find the film on platforms like Amazon Video or Google Play. In a fit of pride and "mirth-free" competitive

Some scholars used the "Age of Coronavirus" and global lockdowns in 2020 to revisit Chekhov's themes of isolation and the realization that material wealth is worthless. Key Production Details Director/Writer: Joan Carr-Wiggin . Lead Cast: Natasha Little, Douglas Hodge, and Colin Salmon. Cinematography: Paul Mitchnick .