It Ends with Us movie review & film summary (2024) | Roger Ebert (2024)

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It Ends with Us movie review & film summary (2024) | Roger Ebert (1)

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"What would you say if your daughter told you her boyfriend pushed her down the stairs but it's okay because really it was just an accident?" Questions like this are at the heart of "It Ends with Us,” based on the bestselling novel of the same name by Colleen Hoover. This is a message picture about what it takes to break the vicious cycle of domestic violence. It is not subtle.

After the emotional turmoil of her estranged father's funeral in Maine, our heroine, the impeccably fashionable Lily Bloom (Blake Lively, the best clotheshorse movie star since Kay Francis), breaks into a rooftop to peer at the vast beauty of Boston's skyline. Before she can do much introspection, she meets the impossibly handsome and impossibly named Ryle Kincaid (Justin Baldoni, also the film's director), a neurosurgeon (naturally). Baldoni comes barreling into the scene like a hurricane, hurling a pair of steel chairs across the rooftop in anger. Instead of repulsion from this violent act, Lily finds herself intrigued and drawn to his charm and megawatt smile. Their playful patter, peppered with barbs veiled as flirtation from Ryle, ramps up until the dashing surgeon is summoned back to the hospital by his beeper.

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This is of course not the last we see of Ryle. He just happens to be the brother of Allysa (Jenny Slate), the quirky rich and bored housewife Lily hires to help her run the Cottagecore florist shop of her dreams. Although Lily repeatedly insists that she just wants to be friends, Ryle pursues her, ignoring her many pleas just as flagrantly as she ignores all his red flags. Lust is a hell of a drug.

Quickly, Ryle's negs and flirtatious barbs ramp up, transforming into toxic jealousy and other forms of obsessive behavior. This includes inviting himself to dinner with her mother by dropping the L-word for the first time, one of several such instances of emotional manipulation he brandishes like a silver-tipped dagger. Before she knows it, Lily is not only in a relationship she didn't really want, she herself becomes an outlet for Ryle's raging temper.

The early scenes of Lily and Ryle's volatile courtship are interwoven with scenes in which teenage Lily (Isabela Ferrer) falls in love for the first time with a schoolmate named Atlas (Alex Neustaedter). The soulful boy is squatting in the abandoned house across the street from hers, fleeing his mother’s abusive boyfriend. The generous and nonjudgmental Lily offers both aid and friendship when Atlas needs it the most. He in turn offers her a caring shoulder and a safe place to finally express the fear she feels as she watches her father physically abuse her own mother over and over again.

These scenes are innocent and tender, the two young actors imbuing the teenagers with just the right balance of world weariness from the violence they’ve already endured and the irrepressible hope that comes with youth. Yet, Baldoni and his team of editors (Oona Flaherty and Robb Sullivan) can't quite find the right balance between these scenes and the more erotic and violent scenes featuring Baldoni and Lively. However, once Brandon Sklenar (doing his best Harry Connick, Jr. in "Hope Floats") enters as the grown-up Atlas, he is able to craft an effortless, natural chemistry with Lively that is nearly as strong as these early moments, although they both are far too fleeting.

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This story of love, trauma and abuse is wrapped up in the same amber-hued autumnal glow of Lively’s bestie Taylor Swift’s short film for her autobiographical song "All Too Well (10 Minute Version)," which itself is about an abusive relationship. Lily even has the same tousled strawberry blonde tresses as the short film's star Sadie Sink. So naturally, the film's most climatic moment of domestic abuse, like the short, takes place in the couple's kitchen. Later, the moment where Lily comes into her own power as she attempts to rebuild her life is underscored by Swift's "My Tears Ricochet" (which perhaps counts as a spoiler if you know the topic of the song. Swifties, I'm sorry.)

"It Ends with Us" is a fine-looking picture. Baldoni and cinematographer Barry Peterson know how to frame movie star faces in flattering medium close-ups, allowing every nuanced emotion, every twinkle in their eyes to transport the viewers on this emotional journey with them, even when the characters feel more like didactic cyphers than fully-realized human beings. Lily’s flower shop (which never seems to have any customers) is a Pinterest board brought to life. And Lively’s designer duds are nearly as showstopping as the ones she sports in “A Simple Favor.”

Lively does her best to add emotional layers to Lily so we see her internal growth, but this process is often hampered by the film around her. I kept thinking of "Alice, Darling,” Mary Nighy's incredible film about intimate partner violence from a few years back in which Anna Kendrick finds herself suffocating in a psychologically abusive relationship. In that film, Kendrick's character is given a full life and a group of friends who help her overcome the codependent trap she's been caged in. Here, the few women in Lily's life – her so-called best friend Allysa and her mother Jenny (Amy Morton) – are underdeveloped, relegated to a handful of scenes that largely exist as plot points.

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The PG-13 rating keeps the violence Ryle inflicts on Lily, or her father's violence in the flashbacks, to a minimum visually (and often seen in slow motion or in choppy montages), Christy Hall’s script unfortunately often falls into "as the father of daughters" territory, giving more care to explaining why these men are the way they are (especially in Ryle's case, in the film's most cringe-worthy twist) than it does to the psychology – let alone the economics – of why women often stay with abusive partners. Instead, this subject, which should really be the key to the whole story, is covered in one very short scene between Lily and her mother. The forced love triangle once Atlas re-enters Lily's adult life also restricts things, causing Lily's life to once again orbit mostly around the men in it.

"It Ends with Us" is certainly not a bad film. At times, it's actually quite good and its central message is crafted with intention and care. I just wish it had a sharper focus on Lily's interiority, her life beyond her trauma, and who she really is in relation to herself, and herself alone.

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Film Credits

It Ends with Us movie review & film summary (2024) | Roger Ebert (9)

It Ends with Us (2024)

Rated PG-13

131 minutes

Cast

Blake Livelyas Lily Bloom

Justin Baldonias Ryle Kincaid

Brandon Sklenaras Atlas Corrigan

Jenny Slateas Allysa

Hasan Minhajas Marshall

Director

  • Justin Baldoni

Screenplay

  • Christy Hall

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It Ends with Us movie review & film summary (2024) | Roger Ebert (2024)

FAQs

What is the movie It Ends With Us about summary? ›

What was the last movie reviewed by Ebert? ›

The last review by Ebert published during his lifetime was for The Host, which was published on March 27, 2013. The last review Ebert wrote was for To the Wonder, which he gave 3.5 out of 4 stars in a review for the Chicago Sun-Times. It was posthumously published on April 6, 2013.

Is there actually going to be an It Ends With Us movie? ›

The Gossip Girl alumna will star in the film adaption of Colleen Hoover's It Ends with Us alongside actor Justin Baldoni. Based on the 2016 novel of the same name, the film will follow Lily, a woman who moves to a new city following college graduation and meets and falls in love with a man named Ryle.

Is the movie It Ends With Us rated R? ›

Rated PG-13 for domestic violence, sexual content and some strong language.

What is the summary of It Ends With Us? ›

What message do we get from It Ends With Us? ›

It is important for young people to realize the cycles of domestic violence, and it portrays the feelings of being stuck very well. Unlike other books, It Ends With Us portrays domestic violence realistically, allowing readers to understand that it is often harder to leave than they may expect.

What were Roger Ebert's final words? ›

Sometime ago, I heard that Roger Ebert's wife, Chaz, talked about Roger's last words. He died of cancer in 2013. “Life is but a tale, told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.

How old was Ebert when he died? ›

On April 4, 2013, one of America's best-known and most influential movie critics, Roger Ebert, who reviewed movies for the Chicago Sun-Times for 46 years and on TV for 31 years, dies at age 70 after battling cancer.

What was Roger Ebert's net worth? ›

Ebert's personal net worth was U.S. $9 million.

What is the controversy with the movie It Ends With Us? ›

'It Ends With Us' is being criticized for its marketing. What do domestic violence survivors say? The film follows a woman whose relationship turns physically violent, but some survivors of such relationships are criticizing its marketing and one crucial scene. This story mentions domestic violence.

Is the movie It Ends With Us about domestic violence? ›

'It Ends With Us' movie faces criticism for glamorizing domestic abuse Critics say the film, an adaptation of Colleen Hoover's bestselling novel of the same title, paints a love story — not a picture of domestic abuse as portrayed in the original work.

Who's playing Atlas in It Ends With Us? ›

Brandon Sklenar as Atlas Corrigan

Sklenar has been nailing his role as Spencer Dutton in 1923, the prequel to Yellowstone, but before he started donning his cowboy hat, Sklenar appeared in shows like New Girl (Loner), Westworld (Henry), Walker: Independence (Liam Collins) and The Offer (Burt Reynolds).

What is It Ends With Us movie about summary? ›

Can a 12 year old girl read It Ends With Us? ›

We rated It Ends with Us 15 for sexual violence, domestic abuse.

How old is Lily Bloom in the book? ›

With the prevalence of domestic violence across the globe, New York Times bestselling author Colleen Hoover delves into its reality with her fiction novel “It Ends with Us.” The novel narrates the story of 23-year-old Lily Bloom who grew up witnessing domestic abuse against her mother before she winds up in the same ...

What is the ending of the movie It Ends With Us? ›

The movie ends with a flash forward of Lily, her mother, and Emmy visiting Lily's father's grave, where she introduces her father to his granddaughter and leaves the blank list from her eulogy on his tombstone.

What does Ryle do to Lily in It Ends With Us? ›

He tries to rape Lily and when she bites his tongue, he headbutts her. She loses consciousness. She falls in and out of consciousness while Ryle apologizes, and then falls asleep. She's bleeding from her forehead, and it's difficult for her to see.

Is the Ends with Us movie on Netflix? ›

Viewers in the US will be able to watch "It Ends With Us" movie on Netflix due to a deal between Sony Pictures and Netflix, WhatsOnNetflix reported. "It Ends With Us" movie will be released on Netflix for viewers in the US after 120 days delay.

Is Lily pregnant in the It Ends With Us movie? ›

Lily's discovery that she's pregnant with Ryle's child is one of the most emotional scenes in It Ends With Us, both in Colleen Hoover's 2016 book and the new movie adaptation.

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