Lynne Ramsay adapts Ariana Harwicz’s novel into a film that refuses comfort. DIE MY LOVE follows a woman trapped within domestic life, desire, and psychological instability. The narrative fragments as her internal state fractures, resisting linear explanation.
Ramsay’s approach is sensory rather than narrative driven. Sound design, abrupt cuts, and physical performance replace exposition. The film is raw and confrontational, exploring motherhood, sexuality, and rage without offering resolution or reassurance.
Like Ramsay’s earlier work in 2011's WE NEED TO TALK ABOUT KEVIN, the film prioritises emotional truth over clarity. It is demanding, unsettling, and deliberately uncompromising.
