Similarly, , starring Mark Wahlberg and Rose Byrne, took a rare comedic approach to the foster-to-adopt system. The film subverts expectations by showing that the kids (Lizzy, Juan, and Lita) are not grateful orphans waiting for a savior. They are traumatized individuals who actively resist blending. The oldest daughter, Lizzy, specifically weaponizes the "You’re not my real mom" trope, but the film doesn’t resolve it in a single hug. It takes months of therapy, destruction of property, and screaming matches.

, filmed over 12 years, is the ultimate case study. We watch Mason (Ellar Coltrane) and his sister Samantha (Lorelei Linklater) as their mother (Patricia Arquette) cycles through husbands and boyfriends. The film captures the exhausting whiplash of a blended childhood: moving to a new house, obeying a new stepfather’s rules, watching your mother fall in and out of love. There is no cathartic finale where Mason accepts his stepfather. Instead, there is a quiet resignation—a realization that "family" is the vehicle you are trapped in, not the destination you choose.

on Netflix, while a teen romance, features a single immigrant father and his daughter, Ellie. The "blending" here is cultural and emotional as Ellie helps the jock, Paul, write love letters. The surrogate family that forms (Ellie, Paul, and the love interest Aster) is a triage unit of confused teenagers—a found blended family built on shared secrets.