Addams Family Romance Still Goals

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By Mister Fantastic

Addams Family romance is the kind of relationship energy that makes modern dating apps look like a dystopian nightmare. Gomez and Morticia Addams didn’t swipe right. They didn’t do “situationships” or “talking stages.” They looked at each other across a graveyard, said “cara mia,” and committed to a lifetime of passionate, supportive, slightly terrifying love. And in 1991, Barry Sonnenfeld’s film adaptation captured this dynamic with the kind of sincerity that makes you want to delete Tinder immediately.

Raul Julia and Anjelica Huston understood the assignment. Their Gomez and Morticia weren’t just creepy for creepiness’s sake—they were genuinely obsessed with each other. Gomez kisses Morticia’s arm up to her shoulder when she speaks French. Morticia calls him “bubbeleh” and means it. Addams Family romance in this film is defined by mutual adoration, shared interests in the macabre, and zero tolerance for anyone who disrespects their bond. When Tully Alford tries to flirt with Morticia, Gomez doesn’t get jealous—he gets confused, because who would choose Tully over eternal devotion?

The 1991 film expanded on the TV series’ foundation. John Astin and Carolyn Jones established the template in the 1960s, becoming the first sitcom couple with an implied sex life. But Julia and Huston made it cinematic. Their chemistry is so palpable that the film’s plot—about a fake Fester trying to steal the family fortune—barely matters. You’re just watching two people who found their perfect match and never looked back.

Addams Family romance works because it’s the healthiest relationship in the movie despite being the weirdest. They support their children’s interests, even when those interests involve decapitation. They maintain their aesthetic without apology. They never fight, never doubt, never consider that their lifestyle might be “too much.” Gomez goes bankrupt and Morticia doesn’t care. She suggests they “go for a drive, and scare the neighbors” instead. That’s marriage goals.

Charles Addams, the cartoonist who created them, married three women who all resembled Morticia. He understood that this kind of all-consuming passion was aspirational, not just funny. Addams Family romance endures because it tells us that love doesn’t require normality. It requires finding someone who thinks your weirdness is wonderful.

In an era of ghosting and commitment phobia, Gomez and Morticia are revolutionary. They choose each other every single day, with enthusiasm that would exhaust lesser couples. Addams Family romance isn’t just cute—it’s a blueprint for what partnership should look like when you stop apologizing for who you are.

Find your creepy soulmate—stream The Addams Family (1991) and take notes on how Gomez worships Morticia.

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