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All of You

All of You (2025)

1h 38m | PG-13

⭐ 6.1 / 10

Laura and Simon have been best friends since college. Over the years, they've realized their bond is more than platonic. Can they—and should they—risk everything to explore a love that has existed all along?

Director: William Bridges

Studio: MRC

Genre: Romance, Drama

Video: 720p

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Cast

Imogen Poots

Imogen Poots

as Laura

Brett Goldstein

Brett Goldstein

as Simon

Zawe Ashton

Zawe Ashton

as Andrea

Steven Cree

Steven Cree

as Lukas

Jenna Coleman

Jenna Coleman

as Dee

Éva Magyar

Éva Magyar

as Jay Gorin

Reviews

By Manuel São Bento

FULL SPOILER-FREE REVIEW @ https://fandomwire.com/all-of-you-review/ "All of You is a… conflicted movie. It possesses an intriguing premise, captivating dialogue, and two superb central performances from Brett Goldstein and Imogen Poots. However, it's sabotaged by a repetitive structure and by protagonists whose selfish and hypocritical actions make a true emotional connection almost impossible. It's a film about the complexity of love that, ironically, feels too simple in its refusal to explore the moral consequences of its characters' choices, resulting in an experience that's more frustrating than moving. It serves as a mirror for our own hesitation, reminding us that the biggest "what if" in life is often the love we didn't have the courage to fight for." Rating: C

By CinemaSerf

With a great deal of store being set on a scientific (and expensive) test to determine relationship suitability, college best friend “Simon” (Brett Goldstein) escorts his pal “Laura” (Imogen Poots) to the clinic where they do the maths. Next thing, she’s hooked up with, married and has a child with Scotsman “Lukas” (Steven Cree) and he - without the gadget’s help - is living with her colleague “Andrea” (Zawe Ashton). Of course the writing is on the wall, and it isn’t in code. He doesn’t really want and she doesn’t really want, and so yada yada off we go on a predicable tale of clandestine affection, deceit, duplicity and contrived histrionics that will test their relationship, her marriage and our patience. It’s a film that really asks why? But more of us. Why are we watching? The story is wafer thin, the characterisations never quite spark and the perfectly manscaped Goldstein also drives the squarest, design-free, looking Mercedes I’ve ever seen. Clearly car design in the future isn’t what it might be. I was completely underwhelmed by their selfish have your cake and eat it philosophy, faintly disguised as some sort of critique on the ultimate in computer-dating, and though I thought some of their banter was quite funny, that all ran out after about twenty minutes. It’s watchable enough, but wait til it’s on the telly as I doubt you will ever recall it.