Este Haim and Amanda Yamate crafted the emotional backbone of Netflix's upcoming rom-com "Voicemails For Isabelle" by prioritizing sisterhood over romance. The composer duo designed the score to reflect familial bonds rather than traditional love-story beats, a creative choice that distinguishes the film from conventional romantic comedies.
"It was really about family and loving and having such a deep connection to your sister," Haim explained of their approach. Rather than leaning into swelling orchestral moments tied to meet-cutes or kiss scenes, the composers wove intimate, character-driven themes that explore sibling relationships. This shift in emotional focus signals Netflix's broader strategy of expanding the rom-com genre beyond its standard love-triangle framework.
Haim brings credibility to intimate family narratives. As the drummer of Grammy-nominated indie-pop trio Haim, she understands how to construct layered emotional landscapes with minimal instrumentation. Pairing her with Yamate, an emerging composer known for character-focused scoring, created a partnership suited to exploring quieter moments of familial understanding and connection.
The score's emphasis on sisterhood positions "Voicemails For Isabelle" alongside recent streaming hits that prioritize complex female relationships. Netflix has increasingly greenlit projects centering women's friendships and family dynamics, reflecting audience appetite for stories beyond heterosexual romance. The film joins titles like "Nobody Wants This" and "Athena" in treating romantic elements as secondary to deeper interpersonal explorations.
Netflix's rom-com slate continues evolving. The platform released over 30 romance titles in 2024 alone, but standout projects distinguish themselves through thematic depth and emotional authenticity. By anchoring "Voicemails For Isabelle" in sisterly love, the film taps into underexplored territory within
