
Welcome to the world.
Agnes feels stuck. Unlike her best friend, Lydie, who’s moved to New York and is now expecting a baby, Agnes still lives in the New England house they once shared as graduate students, now working as a professor at her alma mater. A ‘bad thing’ happened to Agnes a few years ago and, since then, despite her best efforts, life hasn’t gotten back on track.
- 6.8
- 2025
- Released
- 1h 43m

Eva Victor
Agnes
Naomi Ackie
Lydie
Louis Cancelmi
Preston Decker
Kelly McCormack
Natasha
Lucas Hedges
Gavin
John Carroll Lynch
Pete
Hettienne Park
Eleanor Winston
E.R. Fightmaster
Fran
Cody Reiss
Devin
Anabel Graetz
Professor Wilkinson
Jonathan Myles
The Man She Thought Was Decker
Danny Diaz
Student
Marc Carver
Doctor
Liz Bishop
Elizabeth
Natalie Rotter-Laitman
Claire
Francesca D'Uva
Grocery Store Gianna
Alison Wachtler
Clerk
David J. Curtis
Judge
Priscilla Manning
Andrea Fuller
Kate Fitzgerald
Tracey Dover
Jesse Gabbard
Hector Woguard
Lucien Spelman
Kevin Faber
Tom Ford
Walter
Celeste Oliva
Sophie
Chhoyang Cheshatsang
Thomas
Conor Sweeney
Jeremy
Lensley Miles Adam
Baby Jane
Langston Shelby Moore
Baby Jane Double
Noochie the Cat
Olga the Cat











Released
en
$1,500,000.00
$2,279,895.00
- #rape
- #post-traumatic stress disorder (ptsd)
- #cat
- #professor
- #massachusetts
- #female friendship
- #jury duty
- #female protagonist
- #pregnant woman
- #healing process
- #sexual assault
- #meditative
- #female teacher
- #cautionary
- #student mentor relationship
- #independent film
- #grad school
- #nonbinary director
Reviews

There is something especially individual about the lead characterisation here, and even though Eve Victor delivers strongly, I just didn’t really engage with it. We conclude fairly swiftly that her “Agnes” has suffered some trauma in her life and that now, in her late twenties, she has taken up a professorial job in a small rural community where she seems content to live en seul. Except, that is,
When we experience a traumatic tragedy, we often can’t fathom how we’re going to respond to it. Some reactions may follow expected patterns. But others may come across as wholly unpredictable, in large part because we don’t quite know what to make of them ourselves. That can become considerably more complicated when we don’t even know how to speak about them, to find the words to sufficiently expr











