For fans of melodrama, brooding British accents, and relationships that require a therapist on speed dial.
After We Collided , the 2020 sequel to the teen drama phenomenon After , does exactly what its title promises. Picking up immediately after the explosive breakup of Tessa Young (Josephine Langford) and Hardin Scott (Hero Fiennes Tiffin), the film doubles down on everything that made the first movie a guilty pleasure for millions: angsty monologues, slow-motion stares, explicit romance, and a relationship dynamic that continues to blur the line between passion and toxicity. After We Collided
Dylan Sprouse also steals every scene he’s in as the charming, sexually confident rival. He provides the audience with a constant, frustrating question: Why won’t Tessa just pick him? After We Collided is not a good movie in the traditional critical sense. It is overly long (131 minutes), repetitive, and fundamentally uncomfortable with the implications of its own romance. However, as a piece of entertainment for its target audience, it delivers exactly what it promises. It is the cinematic equivalent of a guilty pleasure novel you hide under your pillow—messy, addictive, and overheated. For fans of melodrama, brooding British accents, and
Fiennes Tiffin remains the franchise’s anchor. He plays Hardin not as a villain, but as a wounded boy breaking things because he himself is broken. Langford, meanwhile, evolves Tessa from a naive virgin into a woman who chooses the storm. The problem is that her "empowerment" feels hollow; she threatens to leave, lists all the reasons Hardin is bad for her, and then jumps into bed with him. The film mistakes sexual chemistry for emotional maturity. To its credit, After We Collided is a massive upgrade in production value. The lighting is warmer, the soundtrack is packed with moody indie-pop (including tracks by Machine Gun Kelly and blackbear), and the intimate scenes are directed with more confidence. The chemistry between Langford and Fiennes Tiffin is genuinely electric. A library scene—where Hardin reads to Tessa from Wuthering Heights —is a callback that actually lands, connecting their story to the classic literary obsession they constantly reference. Dylan Sprouse also steals every scene he’s in
Directed by Roger Kumble ( Cruel Intentions ), this chapter trades the rainy, academic setting of Washington State for the polished corporate glare of Seattle and a volatile trip to Los Angeles. The result is a film that is undeniably more polished than its predecessor but remains trapped in a repetitive cycle of betrayal, revenge, and make-up sex. The story begins with Tessa starting her high-stakes internship at Vance Publishing, determined to prove she is more than just "Hardin’s girlfriend." Her new life introduces two major players: the sophisticated, older boss, Christian Vance (Dylan Sprouse, injecting much-needed charisma), and the kind-hearted, stable intern, Trevor (Dylan Sprouse... wait, that’s a joke—Trevor is actually played by Dylan Sprouse , but in a dual role of persona, he is the polar opposite of his Suite Life fame). Trevor represents everything Hardin is not: safe, supportive, and respectful.
If you are looking for a model of healthy love, look elsewhere. But if you want two impossibly attractive people screaming at each other one minute and fogging up a shower the next, After We Collided hits the mark. Just don’t mistake the collision for a connection.
Meanwhile, Hardin, drowning in self-loathing and unresolved trauma about his biological father, reacts to Tessa’s success by self-destructing. He gets a racy tattoo, gets into bar fights, and cruelly uses his ex-girlfriend Molly to make Tessa jealous. The core conflict is simple: Hardin can’t stand Tessa being happy without him, and Tessa can’t stop being drawn back to his chaos. The plot is essentially a three-hour (it feels like it) loop of "I hate you" and "I need you," culminating in a drunk-driving accident and a sex scene involving a glass shower and a whole lot of water. This is the central debate of the After franchise. In After We Collided , the film attempts to have its cake and eat it too. It acknowledges Hardin’s behavior as "toxic" and "manipulative"—Tessa literally says the words. Yet, the cinematography constantly frames Hardin as a tragic, Byronic hero. His jealousy is presented as passion. His control issues are presented as devotion. When he stalks her at a club, the film scores it with a haunting piano melody, asking us to swoon rather than run.