'Die My Love' review: Jennifer Lawrence and Robert Pattinson descend into madness in Lynne Ramsay's unflinching psychodrama

‎A haunting plunge into fractured minds and broken intimacy, Die My Love marks director Lynne Ramsay’s most unflinching work to date. This Cannes 2025 contender, adapted from Ariana Harwicz’s searing debut novel, stars Jennifer Lawrence and Robert Pattinson as a couple unraveling under the weight of rural isolation, postpartum trauma, and decaying passion.
Jennifer Lawrence in 'Die My Love.'
‎Courtesy of Cannes Film Festival
‎Ramsay’s filmmaking remains fearless. She steers clear of neat conclusions, instead immersing viewers in the unsettling emotional terrain of Grace (Lawrence), a woman torn apart by motherhood and madness. Jackson (Pattinson), her increasingly estranged husband, navigates the wreckage of their relationship with quiet sorrow and stoic tenderness.
‎Shot in a suffocating 4:3 aspect ratio by cinematographer Seamus McGarvey, the film amplifies its psychological intensity with restrained visual claustrophobia. Grace prowls the property like a wild animal, her sexual appetite distorting into something feral and desperate. She fantasizes—or perhaps engages—with a mysterious biker (LaKeith Stanfield), while ignoring housework, reality, and boundaries.
‎Chronology fractures. Ramsay jumps between timelines with dreamlike disarray, disorienting the viewer as Grace loses grip on her mental state. Domesticity curdles into a waking nightmare, punctuated by erratic acts of violence, eroticism, and self-destruction. A baby arrives. The marriage cracks. A dog’s yapping becomes unbearable. A shotgun appears. Nothing is safe.
‎Pattinson delivers one of his most quietly devastating performances yet, portraying Jackson as a man trying, and failing, to hold on to the person he loves. Sissy Spacek and Nick Nolte offer affecting support as his concerned parents, while Ramsay’s stripped-down direction denies catharsis at every turn—until the film’s emotional tide finally shifts.
‎A sing-along to David Bowie’s “Kooks” offers a brief glimmer of joy. Then comes the forest fire—seen first in fragments, later in full blaze—a metaphor for burning boundaries and emotional release. Ramsay herself sings Joy Division’s “Love Will Tear Us Apart” over the closing credits, a final echo of the film’s central tension.
‎Die My Love is difficult, jagged, and emotionally raw. But within its unrelenting portrait of psychological collapse lies a fierce, unspoken devotion—a love tested not by sentiment, but by survival.

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