Close Menu
arabiancelebrity.comarabiancelebrity.com
    What's Hot

    Ozzy Osbourne & Axl Rose Met For First Time at Last Black Sabbath Show

    July 8, 2025

    Damon Albarn Says Oasis Tour is a ‘Good Thing’ But Won’t Be Attending

    July 8, 2025

    Smartworks debt at Rs 382 Cr in Apr-end; to cut loans using IPO fund

    July 8, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    arabiancelebrity.comarabiancelebrity.com
    Subscribe
    • Home
    • Interviews
    • Red Carpet
    • Lifestyle
    • Music & Film
    • NextGen
    • Trending
    • Celebrities
    arabiancelebrity.comarabiancelebrity.com
    Home » Jennifer Lawrence in Psychosexual Drama
    Red Carpet

    Jennifer Lawrence in Psychosexual Drama

    Arabian Media staffBy Arabian Media staffMay 17, 2025No Comments6 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram Pinterest Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


    Lynne Ramsay has never shown much interest in making films that are easy to digest, her hard-edged psychological dramas refusing to offer comfort or provide tidy answers for the messy questions arising out of her characters’ upended lives. The uncompromising Scottish director has not gone soft in her jagged fifth feature, Die My Love. Giving a no-holds-barred performance that careens between disturbed reality and disturbing fantasy, blurring any dividing lines that separate them, Jennifer Lawrence plays a woman transplanted to the wide-open spaces of rural America, where marriage, motherhood and domesticity close in on her, chipping away at her sanity.

    While screenwriters Enda Walsh, Ramsay and Alice Burch relocate Argentine writer Ariana Marwicz’s Lynchian 2012 debut novel from the French countryside, they stay true to its piercing focus on a woman battling her demons in a state of increasingly feverish isolation — whether she’s alone or in a room full of people.

    Die My Love

    The Bottom Line

    A punishing watch that pays off in the end.

    Venue: Cannes Film Festival (Competition)
    Cast: Jennifer Lawrence, Robert Pattinson, Sissy Spacek, Nick Nolte, LaKeith Stanfield
    Director: Lynne Ramsay
    Screenwriters: Enda Walsh, Lynne Ramsay, Alice Burch, based on the novel by Ariana Marwicz

    2 hours

    Lawrence stars opposite Robert Pattinson as Grace and Jackson, a couple making a big change from New York to an unnamed spot nestled among tall trees and prairie grasslands. His family comes from the area and his mother, Pam (Sissy Spacek), and dotty father, Henry (Nick Nolte), still live nearby. Jackson has inherited a spacious, weather-beaten house from his uncle, who committed suicide in an unusual way that makes no sense and has zero bearing on the story.

    Working in the boxy 4:3 aspect ratio, cinematographer Seamus McGarvey (who was DP on Ramsay’s We Need To Talk About Kevin) films the opening in a striking fixed-camera medium-wide shot as the couple first arrives at the house, walking in and out of the frame while entering and exiting different rooms.

    Jackson tells Grace there’s no neighbors close by, so she can blast music as loud as she wants. Which she does, getting them both worked up to the point where they start boning on the floor. It’s established from the start that Grace’s appetite for sex is gargantuan.

    But by the time their baby boy arrives, the couple’s passion in their union already appears to have been turned down a few degrees. This doesn’t sit well with Grace, who prowls around the yard on all fours like a panther and then flops on her back and shoves a hand down her pants while shooting a bored look at Jackson and their son on the porch. She ignores the housework and starts having sexual fantasies — or are they real? — about a hot biker (an underused LaKeith Stanfield) who keeps roaring by the house, sometimes circling back to get another look at her.

    Ramsay shuffles the chronology for no good reason, jumping from after the baby’s birth back to Grace’s pregnancy (I’m sure I won’t be the only one thinking she’s expecting a second child). Pam, along with Jackson’s talkative aunts, pays a visit and they sit around clucking about motherhood. Grace doesn’t even feign interest, but she’s sweet and patient with Harry, who drifts in and out of lucidity. A thread about Pam sleepwalking, like many threads here, goes nowhere.

    The first hour or so of the distended film is a bit of a trudge as Grace’s behavior grows increasingly erratic and she becomes convinced Jackson is screwing around while he’s away at work. Her general dissatisfaction is obvious in her rudeness to a chatty convenience store cashier and to women at a party, where she embarrasses Jackson by throwing off her clothes in the living room and then jumping into a pool full of kids in her skimpy underwear.

    Pam tries reassuring her: “Everyone goes a little loopy in the first year after a baby.” But hurling herself through a glass door or smashing up the bathroom goes way beyond loopy. Early on, Jackson attempts to lighten the mood by bringing home a dog, which turns out to be a bad idea when it’s incessantly yappy and whiny and Grace has access to a shotgun. Jackson tries talking to her in the car to figure out what’s wrong and she causes an accident. Later, she informs him it’s been two-and-a-half months since they had sex and then gets verbally abusive when he fails to perform on command.

    Postpartum depression keeps coming up, and that’s likely what triggered Grace’s psychosexual breakdown. But her connection to the baby seems fine. It’s the fraying connection to her husband that’s the problem.

    Lawrence certainly goes for it in a physically demanding role and she’s always a dynamic presence. But Ramsay’s fondness for abrasive characters and her complete aversion to sentimentality, while admirable qualities in a filmography known for shaking up the quotidian with shock and horror, keep Grace at a distance. She’s a wild animal in a trap, and watching her snarl or claw at the walls or masturbate can only be interesting for so long.

    It’s easier to feel something for Jackson, played by Pattinson with sensitivity and a touching spirit of forgiveness as he slides into despair. Asking Grace to marry him when she’s at her batshit craziest — truly a WTF? move — is an even bigger mistake than the dog, given that drunken weddings tend to make people shed their inhibitions. Or whatever Grace has left of them.

    A stay in a mental health facility — while it doesn’t fix Grace, who’s mostly just acting the part of the happy wife and mother — rescues the movie from being one long, taxing bipolar episode. A joyful scene in which Grace and Jackson sing along to David Bowie’s “Kooks” in the car serves as a reminder that there’s a couple who really do love each other behind the strained union. Not for nothing does Ramsay herself sing Joy Division’s “Love Will Tear Us Apart” over the end credits.

    Regardless of the film’s flaws — some of which might be due to it being rushed through the final stages of post to make the Cannes deadline — the closing stretch has a retroactive effect on everything that’s come before. It transforms Die My Love (the movie loses the comma in the novel’s title) from a self-destructive solo show to a thoughtful examination of a complex relationship and all the patience and understanding it requires.

    Right before the end, an image of a forest fire seen briefly at the start returns in a more expansive way, showing one partner willing to go to any extreme to feel the freedom she craves and the other partner finally seeing her unruly desires and realizing he must make space for them. Ramsay’s film is hard to love, but that beautiful visual casts such an intense glow it pulls the whole unwieldy thing together.



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email
    Previous ArticleYou’ll Kick Yourself For Not Buying These 38 Wildly Effective Cleaning Solutions Years Ago
    Next Article Stylish And Comfy Warm Weather Pieces From Abercrombie
    Arabian Media staff
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Where to Shop Online Instead of Amazon, Target, Walmart 2025

    July 8, 2025

    Best Amazon Prime Day Deals 2025 On Is Clinical Serums and Skin Care

    July 8, 2025

    ‘Dracula,’ David Lynch Executive Produced Films in Locarno 2025 Lineup

    July 8, 2025
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    10 Trends From Year 2020 That Predict Business Apps Popularity

    January 20, 2021

    Shipping Lines Continue to Increase Fees, Firms Face More Difficulties

    January 15, 2021

    Qatar Airways Helps Bring Tens of Thousands of Seafarers

    January 15, 2021

    Subscribe to Updates

    Exclusive access to the Arab world’s most captivating stars.

    ArabianCelebrity is the ultimate destination for everything glamorous, bold, and inspiring in the Arab world.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube
    Top Insights

    Top UK Stocks to Watch: Capita Shares Rise as it Unveils

    January 15, 2021
    8.5

    Digital Euro Might Suck Away 8% of Banks’ Deposits

    January 12, 2021

    Oil Gains on OPEC Outlook That U.S. Growth Will Slow

    January 11, 2021
    Get Informed

    Subscribe to Updates

    Exclusive access to the Arab world’s most captivating stars.

    @2025 copyright by Arabian Media Group
    • Home
    • About Us

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.