She Dies Tomorrow

    She Dies Tomorrow
    2020

    Synopsis

    Amy is ravaged by the notion that she is going to die tomorrow, which sends her down a dizzying emotional spiral. When her skeptical friend Jane discovers Amy’s feeling of imminent death to be contagious, they both begin bizarre journeys through what might be the last day of their lives.

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    Cast

    • Kate Lyn SheilAmy
    • Jane AdamsJane
    • Kentucker AudleyCraig
    • Katie AseltonSusan
    • Chris MessinaJason
    • Tunde AdebimpeBrian
    • Jennifer KimTilly
    • Josh LucasDoc
    • Adam WingardDune Buggy Man
    • Michelle RodriguezSky

    Recommendations

    • 91

      IndieWire

      Seimetz has conjured a beguiling narrative so tapped into the current worldwide panic that it might have been made in its aftermath.
    • 90

      Screen Daily

      She Dies Tomorrow is both cheeky and disconcerting — and unlike life, it ends right when it should.
    • 90

      The Hollywood Reporter

      Movies like this are why arthouses exist, and why we'll seek them out again as soon as it's safe to breathe near our fellow humans.
    • 83

      The Film Stage

      She Dies Tomorrow is a bizarre and textured work of cinematic poetry, playing like a menacing death march into the unknown.
    • 83

      The Playlist

      Seimetz leaves you feeling content, exhausted, worn out, entertained, provoked, and does so in ninety minutes, no less.
    • 83

      The A.V. Club

      It is an emotionally vulnerable piece of work, touching on everything from the pain of experiencing a mental illness that no one around you understands to what it means to waste your life.
    • 80

      Slashfilm

      Amy Seimetz plays by her own rules like this is the last film she’ll ever make (it won’t be, no shot). She Dies Tomorrow ponders self-fulfillment with agency and riveting execution. Seimetz’s fearlessness is what sells every ounce of this uncontrollable narrative’s every zig and zag. From tone to philosophy to composition, this is Seimetz’s soul on celluloid.
    • 70

      Variety

      The film feels a bit too experimental at times, suffering from lags in tempo and purpose, but it never succumbs to the ordinary either. There is a rare, unrefined quality to Seimetz’s film — a personal work of art that feels deeply honest throughout.

    Seen by

    • ghostradio