Available For Free On
Trailers & Videos

Official Trailer

Nat Gives Becca Advice About How Grief Changes Over Time | Rabbit Hole

Jason & Rebecca Discuss His Comic Book & Parallel Universes | Rabbit Hole

Becca & Nat Share A Laugh While Sorting Through Her Child's Toys | Rabbit Hole

Jason Shows Becca The Comic Book He Made | Rabbit Hole

Howie & Becca Argue Over Their Guilt About Their Son | Rabbit Hole

Howie & Gabby Get High Before Their Meeting & Start Giggling | Rabbit Hole

Becca Meets With Jason In The Park | Rabbit Hole

Becca & Nat Fight In The Bowling Alley | Rabbit Hole

Becca & Her Mother Nat Fight Over Her Group Therapy Attendance | Rabbit Hole
Cast

Nicole Kidman
Becca Corbett

Aaron Eckhart
Howie Corbett

Dianne Wiest
Nat

Miles Teller
Jason

Tammy Blanchard
Izzy

Sandra Oh
Gabby

Giancarlo Esposito
Auggie

Jon Tenney
Rick

Stephen Mailer
Kevin

Mike Doyle
Craig

Roberta Wallach
Rhonda

Ali Marsh
Donna

Deidre Goodwin
Reema

Julie Lauren
Debbie

Rob Campbell
Bob

Jay Wilkison
Gary

Salli Saffioti
Lori

Ursula Parker
Lilly
More Like This
Reviews
Filipe Manuel Neto
**A frankly well-made film, but very painful to watch and highly contraindicated for the most sensitive and grieving people.**
I cannot conceive of a pain stronger than that which a father or mother can feel when having to bury a child. No matter the causes of death, it must be as if the World, God or Fate, whatever, took away a part of us that we couldn't live without. I have to confess, honorable reader, that I have never been in a comparable situation. I can only imagine, and I honestly don't want to go through that, nor do I wish that on anyone. I am still young, and the closest person I saw go was a loving grandfather, whose memory is still with me. I suffered with that loss, and that certainty of never seeing him again, but I faced it peacefully, after all, none of us live forever and the elders leave first… it's the nature of things.
This film addresses, precisely, the mourning of a child and the way in which the parents, each in their own way, live this pain and try to find ways to digest it. The world and society almost force us to overcome this after a certain moment, and return to normality. But what normality? There will be “normality” for a parent after something like this? These are questions that deserve reflection and that the film leaves open. We see that couple look at things differently: the father want to keep their son's memory, wants to feel surrounded by his things and touch his objects as if a portion of his son were inside them; the mother prefers to get rid of that objects and even move, in an effort to go forward where anger and frustration are vented on a lot of people around her. To what extent is it pain, not love, that unites them as a couple?
For all this, I need to leave a note of warning, advising this film for people who have lost someone and are going through a grieving, or for people with depression or who are more negative. It's not an easy movie, it's one of those movies that squeezes where it hurts the most. It is based on a play that Nicole Kidman had the good idea of taking to the cinema, and the script is by the same author of the play. Kidman brought the lead role to life with great skill, in a deeply psychological work, full of commitment and awarded with a nomination for an Oscar. Aaron Eckhart brought the heartbroken father to life in a poignant, heartfelt way, in one of the actor's most interesting works. The film also has the frankly positive collaboration of Sandra Oh, Tammy Blanchard, Diane West and Miles Teller.
The production wisely decided not to bet too much on big technical resources, giving the story and the cast's performance all the space needed to shine. Even so, I wanted to leave a note of praise for the cinematography, with a good shooting work, low contrast, a palette of cold or pastel colors and a very well done editing, which gave the film a slower pace that seems to be perfectly adequate. Without flashy visuals and sound, everything is elegant and discrete. The set of the couple's house is perhaps the most relevant, with the large, empty and almost impersonal spaces being, in practice, the mirror of a family that no longer exists, and of an increasingly distant couple.
You've reached the end.

























