Scottish filmmaker Lynne Ramsay’s long-awaited fifth feature, “Die My Love” poses a provocative question under the guise of a mental health crisis: can a wild woman be domesticated? Immediately, she hints at her answer, but the audience doesn’t know it yet. We watch a young couple, Grace (Jennifer Lawrence) and Jackson (Robert Pattinson) move into a new home and start to play house. What happens after that is so wild and unpredictable that we almost forget that where it ends up is where it was always going. kAm“s:6 |J {@G6” :D E96 AC@5F4E @7 E96 F?:@? 36EH66? E9C66 52C:?8 H@>6?i y6??:76C {2HC6?46[ DE2C 2?5 AC@5F46C[ HC:E6C pC:2?2 w2CH:4K[ H9@D6 a_`a ?@G6= 23@FE 2 J@F?8 >@E96C DA:??:?8 @FE :? CFC2= uC2?46 {2HC6?46 C646:G65 7C@> |2CE:? $4@CD6D6[ 2?5 #2>D2J[ 2 G:D:@?2CJ 2CE:DE @7 :?E6?D6=J 6
Review: Lynne Ramsay’s 'Die My Love' a primal scream of maternal rage
St. Louis Post-Dispatch8 hrs ago
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