A woman in New York, who seems to have things under control, is faced with a trauma that makes her life unravel.A woman in New York, who seems to have things under control, is faced with a trauma that makes her life unravel.A woman in New York, who seems to have things under control, is faced with a trauma that makes her life unravel.
- Awards
- 2 wins & 3 nominations
Gage Munroe
- Peyton Powell
- (as Gage Alexander McIver Munroe)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaLionsgate and Pacific Standard - actress Reese Witherspoon and producer Bruna Papandrea's production company - bought the film rights to Jessica Knoll's debut novel before it had even been published. The rights were secured in April 2015, over a month before the book hit stores.
- GoofsOnscreen headlines show that Ani was in high school in the late 90s. During the flashback to Ani's high school field trip, she makes a note of witnessing a commanding woman walking on the sidewalk talking into her cell phone. This woman is speaking into a flat, rectangular smartphone that wasn't introduced until the first iPhone was released in 2007.
- Quotes
[first lines]
Ani Fanelli: [narrating] It's 2015, and people still act like marriage is some kind of crowing achievement for women. That is a trap that I did not fall into. I dove in head first...
- Crazy creditsThe title of the movie appears at the very last second of the movie.
Featured review
The movie starts slowly as we get to know Ani, through her actions, inner monologue, and a series of flashbacks.
We get hints that she has suffered a terrible trauma while at an expensive high school, but has done her best to push all of the trauma down.
Her resulting life is hollow, obsessed with status, and her writing focused on sexualizing every topic.
That Ani is finally forced to confront her trauma, to let it ooze out of the dark corners where she's repressed it, is predictable. The story, however, is not nor is her reaction.
Not to give anything away, but the movie confronts a serious, important subject and gets better as it moves along.
Acting and editing are highlights. Visuals, however, are rather dull.
(This, however, may be on point as well given how the character lives life at a distance every day since high school.)
I'm glad I didn't go to see this in a theater, but it's a solid enough movie to screen on Netflix, with a follow up conversation in your friend-group almost mandatory.
We get hints that she has suffered a terrible trauma while at an expensive high school, but has done her best to push all of the trauma down.
Her resulting life is hollow, obsessed with status, and her writing focused on sexualizing every topic.
That Ani is finally forced to confront her trauma, to let it ooze out of the dark corners where she's repressed it, is predictable. The story, however, is not nor is her reaction.
Not to give anything away, but the movie confronts a serious, important subject and gets better as it moves along.
Acting and editing are highlights. Visuals, however, are rather dull.
(This, however, may be on point as well given how the character lives life at a distance every day since high school.)
I'm glad I didn't go to see this in a theater, but it's a solid enough movie to screen on Netflix, with a follow up conversation in your friend-group almost mandatory.
- How long is Luckiest Girl Alive?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Languages
- Also known as
- La chica más afortunada del mundo
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 53 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content