( ENSPIRE Entertainment ) Why Relationship Goals Is the Serious Relationship Movie We Need Right Now
In a time when dating advice is everywhere—and often rooted in fear, bitterness, or viral misinformation—Relationship Goals emerges as a serious relationship movie for people who genuinely want love to work. This was a breath of fresh air if you are one of those people who still have hope in humanity! This movie deeply resonates with me and many others, reflecting our current life stages.
After interviewing the film’s creatives on January 26 and attending the premiere this past week, one message clearly stood out: this movie does not appeal to everyone—and the filmmakers did not intend it to. The filmmakers intentionally created Relationship Goals for people who are honest about wanting commitment, partnership, and growth, instead of subscribing to negativity disguised as empowerment.

If you’re comfortable repeating harmful narratives about men, women, or modern relationships without self-reflection, this film may feel uncomfortable. But if you’re serious about love—and willing to filter out the noise—this movie meets you where you are. If you are seeking better, you need to start with yourself.
We are living in a moment where people consume relationship advice in brief clips, podcasts, and social posts—often from voices that profit from conflict rather than clarity. The result is confusion, mistrust, and emotional detachment framed as independence. Relationship Goals challenge that culture. This is a process that requires you to think within, know where you are in life and what it is you want. Then by living true to yourself and having faith, all will happen in time. That time is not up to you, but it matters when you start to do the work within.

Rather than fueling gender wars or outdated roles, the film asks a more grounded question:
What happens when two people decide to be intentional instead of defensive? It acknowledges that times have changed—but it refuses to let that reality become an excuse for avoiding commitment. It is time for accountability in what an individual wants in life, as opposed to the opinions of others who are not doing the work you need to do.
One of the most refreshing elements of Relationship Goals is its honesty. The film doesn’t glorify emotional unavailability, fear of commitment, or the idea that independence requires isolation. Instead, it highlights communication, accountability, vulnerability, and choice.
At ENSPIRE, we believe in storytelling that informs, uplifts, and challenges our audience to think deeper. Relationship Goals aligns with that mission because it speaks to people who are done letting misinformation shape their love lives.
Have you watched Relationship Goals on Amazon Prime? What did you think?
Check out my interview with Pastor Mike Todd & Devon Franklin
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