Over salsa verde and secret-keeping, they trade stories of betrayal, relief, loneliness, and lust. They learn to pay bills alone, to laugh at bad dates, to fight with mothers-in-law from a distance, and to forgive themselves for staying too long.
Here’s a write-up for Club de las Divorciadas (Divorced Women’s Club), depending on whether you need it as a film/TV pitch, a short story synopsis, or a social group description. I’ve prepared two versions. Title: Club de las Divorciadas Logline: After their各自的 divorces, five very different women from the same upscale Mexico City building form a secret support group—only to discover that rebuilding their lives means breaking every rule they once lived by. club de las divorciadas
When one of them decides to remarry, the club faces its greatest test: can they celebrate a wedding without mourning their own divorces all over again? Over salsa verde and secret-keeping, they trade stories
Isabella (40s, a perfectionist socialite) thought she had the ideal marriage—until she found the receipts. Sofía (30s, a no-nonsense lawyer) filed for divorce the morning she caught her husband with his assistant. Caro (50s, a free-spirited artist) left her husband of 25 years after he tried to “manage” her creativity. Val (20s, a influencer) got married on a whim and divorced even faster. And Lola (60s, the building’s wise-cracking superintendent) has been divorced three times—and considers herself an expert. I’ve prepared two versions
But the comedy comes from the chaos: disastrous rebound flings, awkward custody exchanges, a shared hatred for their exes’ new girlfriends, and one unforgettable attempt to burn an effigy of a cheating husband on a rooftop.
Sex and the City meets Desperate Housewives with a Latin twist—sharp, funny, warm, and unapologetically honest.
You don’t lose a husband. You gain a club. Version 2: Short Story / Literary Synopsis Title: Club de las Divorciadas