
Like Weapons, this is a film that got a sole Oscar nomination for its acting (which, for my money, was well deserved!) It’s a very engrossing character piece about a mother at the end of her rope.
Linda has far too much on her plate. Her husband, a ship captain, is away working for weeks at a time, leaving Linda to look after the complex medical needs of their daughter. When a serious leak from the apartment above them puts a massive hole in their ceiling, Linda and her daughter have to go to an extended stay motel. As she argues with contractors, juggles patients at her therapy practice, and listens to the beep of her daughter’s feeding machine at night, she feels like she’s losing her grip.
When it comes to getting inside Linda’s head and feeling her experiences, the film does a really effective job. There is a crushing weight of responsibilities and demands dragging her down. She’s dealing with everything on her own, she’s made to feel like all of it is her fault, and her problems are as much existential as they are physical/logistical. Staring up at the hole, it seems to threaten to swallow everything. Linda knows that she has an identity beyond solely being a mother, but it feels like any her outside of her daughter is going to disappear if she stops clinging onto it. But if she insists on making space for herself, does that mean she’s a selfish, horrible mother?
Her daughter’s condition is never named, but it seems to be ARFID or something similar: she has a feeding tube because she’s severely underweight, she’s incredibly particular about what foods she’ll even consider eating, and she spends all day attending some sort of treatment program. Linda wants to have the tube removed because she thinks it’s become a crutch, while her daughter’s doctor warns that they’ll need to “reassess her level of care” if she doesn’t make her weight goal in the next week. There are some nice details here, like the fact the treatment-center-run “parents’ group” is made up entirely of moms.
Rose Byrne is up for Best Leading Actress for her gripping performance as Linda. To put it simply, Linda is a hot mess, and at this point, she’s struggling to even pretend that she’s not. She’s hanging on by a thread and desperate for someone, anyone, to offer her some guidance or give her a break. The film also features Conan O’Brien as Linda’s checked-out therapist, A$AP Rocky as a guy who’s staying at the same motel, and a small appearance from Christian Slater as her absent husband.
Warnings
Strong thematic elements (including a suicide attempt,) language, drinking/smoking/drug use, sexual references, scenes of violence, and disturbing images.

