The Moya View

Tag: loneliness in cinema

  • Anemone: The Flower that Opens in Grief

    Anemone: The Flower that Opens in Grief

    Daniel Day-Lewis returns in Anemone, a mournful drama about parental violence and emotional exile. Directed by his son Ronan Day-Lewis, the film is visually haunting and narratively uneven. A mixed-to-positive review explores its painterly tone, fractured family dynamics, and the quiet presence of the anemone flower.

  • All of You: Love in the Age of Empirical Error

    All of You: Love in the Age of Empirical Error

    William Bridges’ All of You is a romantic sci-fi film that explores love through silence, gestures, and missed connections. Brett Goldstein and Imogen Poots deliver quietly devastating performances in a story that questions the idea of soul mates and embraces the messiness of longing.

  • Sister Midnight: The Monster in the Marriage

    Sister Midnight: The Monster in the Marriage

    A mixed-to-positive review of Sister Midnight, a genre-defying film starring Radhika Apte that blends domestic comedy, horror, and social critique into a chaotic, unsettling, and oddly liberating portrait of a woman reclaiming her identity.