Comedy of Remarriage

A subcategory of Romantic Comedy, where the Official Couple were once married, but have divorced each other. Eventually they decide that they want to be married to each other after all. A major staple of the classic Hollywood screwball comedy, many examples of this genre owe their existence to the Hays Code, although the trope existed before that. Since the Code prohibited depictions of infidelity, it was necessary to have the characters divorce, then fool around with other people, then get back together.

This last also had the advantage that it made it easier to avoid either one having to be the 'villain' in the previous divorce, and for some, makes them easier to like.

It's practically a given that either the ex-wife or ex-husband has a Disposable Fiancé.


 * Kiss Me Kate
 * His Girl Friday is one of the classic examples.
 * The Philadelphia Story and its musical update High Society
 * The Awful Truth, although the couple never quite gets divorced
 * Mary, Mary
 * In My Favorite Wife, the husband (Cary Grant) isn't divorced, but wrongly believes his long-missing wife to be dead and is all set to commit bigamy.
 * The same goes for its remake starring Doris Day, Move Over Darling.
 * The Parent Trap, although there it is the kids working to get them back together.
 * Sweet Home Alabama, even though they weren't technically divorced.
 * Some endings of Silent Hill 2 are somewhat like a horror version of this trope, considering the couple in question didn't seperate through divorce...
 * Scrubs plays this in reverse with Dr. Cox and Jordan: first they were married, then got divorced. Then they find out that due to a clerical error, they're still married. Due to their extremely screwed-up personalities, this fact causes them no end of torment and so they decide to divorce again to save their relationship.
 * Twister, the divorce is in progress. Jo never signed the papers, so Bill tracks her down, dragging his current fiancee along. On their first meeting it takes the viewers about two seconds to realize that Bill and Jo are going to get back together.
 * Curtains has Georgia and Aaron, songwriters and former married couple. They get back together with some suberb acting by some of the other cast members, who wanted the two back together.
 * Subverted in Mrs. Doubtfire, where Robin Williams' character wants to get back together with his ex-wife (or is at least annoyed to see her with another man), but they never do.
 * Interestingly, Executive Meddling at one point tried to change the ending to play this trope straight only for Robin Williams and Sally Field to convince them otherwise, claiming it would not only be unrealistic, but could potentially cause false hope in children of divorced parents who saw the film.
 * Ocean's Eleven (remake)
 * Hey Arnold! played with this trope in one episode, with Coach Jack Wittenberg remarrying Tish Wittenberg (helped muchly by Arnold's matchmaking prowess).
 * It's Complicated comes close to this.
 * Jude the Obscure is something of a tragedy of remarriage. (It also works the other way round: ).
 * McClintock! is this in Western form.
 * Liar Liar, though a little more realistic to be fair, since the scene where Max's parents are interested in each other again is about a year after the main plot has been resolved.
 * Subverted in The Auteur. Arturo eventually accepts that Fiona won't return to him, because of his "highly addictive personality" and "insanely jealous nature"; but she forgives him his past, and they do manage to become friends again.
 * The Radioland Murders has this as a major subplot - it's mainly a zany romp through, oddly enough, radio shows and serial killing.
 * On Gargoyles, Oberon and Titania remarry after a 1,001-year divorce. Word of God says that Oberon had had two kids with mortals in the meantime (one of whom was Merlin), while Titania.