yeah...that's actually a comedy of manners.
modern genres/forms/categories are all fuct these days, but drama roughly corresponds to "tragedy," meaning "serious" rather than absurd, as opposed to "comedy," where I would lump satire & parody.
action is essentially mindless drama that blurs the distinction between serious (tragic - not necessarily denoting sad, mind you) and comic. and some of the most effective action movies are effective primarily as comedies (usually buddy comedies). anyway, most of the recent crop of comic book adaptations, I would argue, are dramas (thinking of first 2 x-men, spideys, superman returns - hulk tries to be, daredevil tries...compare to fantastic four, which doesn't try and fits more the historical definition of comedy).
other genre distinctions work across comedy and drama as well: e.g., LotR is fantasy and drama. Dungeons & Dragons (the thing with one of the waynes brothers) is closer to comedy. And Princess Bride is full-on fantasy comedy. Same lack of distinctions in sci-fi: Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy is obviously comedy. Alien & Event Horizon are horror. Battlestar Galactica is drama.
'course, these things are inevitably subjective. I'd never consider clockwork orange drama - more like satire. but there's as strong an argument for one or the other. anyway, at the end of the day, I could see you not liking anything I considered drama - at least not for the aspects that denote it as such.
Life ducks, and you sigh.