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Die My Love

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  • Trailer 1

Movie Info & Cast

Synopsis

Grace, a writer and young mother, is slowly slipping into madness. Locked away in an old house in and around Montana, we see her acting increasingly agitated and erratic, leaving her companion, Jackson, increasingly worried and helpless.

Cast

  • Jennifer Lawrence
  • Robert Pattinson
  • Sissy Spacek
  • Nick Nolte
  • LaKeith Stanfield
  • Kennedy Calderwood
  • Victoria Calderwood
  • Gabrielle Rose
  • Clare Coulter
  • Saylor McPherson
Moviegoers are saying
Lynne Ramsay's experimental psychological drama divides audiences with its unflinching portrayal of maternal disintegration, featuring Jennifer Lawrence in a 'completely feral' performance that critics call extraordinary even when the abstract storytelling leaves them cold. While some praise its raw intensity and gorgeous cinematography, many find themselves 'stuck between wanting to do something, and not wanting to do anything at all' - much like the protagonist herself.
Top Mentions
Psychologically-Intense
Experimental-Filmmaking
Feral-Performance
Claustrophobic
Abstract-Drama
Identity-Crisis
Summary generated from the text of Atom User reviews

Letterboxd User Reviews

3.2
517.9K
116.6K
107.4K
RATINGS 1.0K FANS
3.2

Queue Community Reviews

63%
Community 4,402
❤️ LOVE
10%
👍 LIKE
53%
😐 MEH
25%
👎 DISLIKE
13%
Top Reviews

Atom Users Reviews

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POPULAR TAGS

Reviews

Metacritic

90
Nov 5, 2025

Ramsay articulates the inarticulate, here through her saturated blues, yellows, browns and greens, the colours of grief and sickness and rot…but also new life, summer skies, and hope.

Hannah Strong
Little White Lies
50
Nov 5, 2025

Maybe there's something I'm not getting here, but as far as I'm concerned, Die My Love comes alive in individual scenes yet feels stultifying as a whole.

Reuben Baron
Looper
50
Nov 3, 2025

Die My Love is not plot-driven, with events that don’t necessarily follow one another in cause and effect. Rather, it’s a slow-burn psychological drama populated by imperfect people struggling with painful realities. Instead of a dramatic arc, it’s a dramatic decline.

Metacritic review by Michael Ordoña
Michael Ordoña
San Francisco Chronicle