
scout283
N/A
|
Apr 19, 2025
It’s hard to find a film that is intimately relatable while not overly exaggerating or undermining human conditions. This is a movie where I saw myself in the characters, especially at a symptomatic time when I needed to see a story where people were in similar chaos and found coping mechanisms that reflected their personal battles.
Pat manages through routine and structure, and Tiffany through movement and dance—both coping in ways that reflect who they are. It's a valuable portrayal that shows healing isn't one-size-fits-all—especially when deep breaths and meditation don't quite cut it.
The heartfelt and extremely well-executed portrayals and discussions around bipolar episodes, psychosis, grief, relationship/family stability, depression, medications, diagnoses, and much, much more are refreshing and showed me that the harsh navigation toward proper treatment isn't so isolating. Its comforting vagueness mirrors real-life ambiguity and slow healing.
This film reminds us that even though your struggles are unique and painful, you are never alone, and there is always someone—closer than you think—who can see right through you (in a good way) when others fail to do so. Pat feels alone in his effort to get better, especially when no one takes him seriously—and Tiffany gives him the connection he was missing.
Things may take time, as they often do, but holding out for the light at the end of the tunnel (probably not a romantic dance competition) is worth it—you’ll get there. This film shows that recovery is messy but possible.
Pat’s recovery is left open-ended—progress, not a cure. Symptoms weren’t cleared, but he’s not trapped anymore. He has stability, connection, and direction—and that’s the whole point.
WATCH THIS MOVIE!!!