Two best friends attend the funeral of a Hebrew school classmate who died by suicide and accidentally damage their friendship beyond repair.
Directed by Olivia Peace
funeral
coming of age
lgbt
woman director
rochester, new york
Rank
#126 in 2020·#5605 overall
Trailer
IMDB
N/A
Letterboxd
3.2 / 5
Where to Watch
Cast
Madeline Grey DeFreece
Carrie Lowstein
Rachel Sennott
Hannah Rosen
Daniel Taveras
Tristan Leibotwitz
Shlomit Azoulay
Elaina Cohen
Bernadette Quigley
Moreh Klein
Jenny Lester
Melissa
Melissa Juliet Lawson
Rachel F.
Ellie Anthony
Rachel G.
Keith Weiss
Zack
Rachel Wender
Natalie
Lynne Taylor
Mrs. Goldstein
Katherine D'Anjolell
Sarah Bronstein
Crew
Olivia Peace
Director
Jess Zeidman
Writer
Olivia Peace
Editor
Tehillah De Castro
Director of Photography
Olivia Peace
Producer
Jess Zeidman
Producer
Madison Ginsberg
Producer
Emily Ann Hoffman
Animation Director
John Wong
Sound Mixer
Katherine D'Anjolell
Production Assistant
Popular Reviews
115 reviews
arabelle
7.0★ · 05/08/26
all rachel sennott does is eat bagels at jewish funerals and kiss girls and be insufferable annoying but like honestly u and me too sister
all rachel sennott does is eat bagels at jewish funerals and kiss girls and be insufferable annoying but like honestly u and me too sister
Victoria
7.0★ · 03/09/26
Rachel sennott’s loser lesbian/bisexual character: The father (bottoms) the son (shiva baby) and the holy spirit (tahara) except she was an actual loser and asshole in here
P.s: if hannah doesn’t want carrie then I want cause she’s sooo f pretty
Rachel sennott’s loser lesbian/bisexual character: The father (bottoms) the son (shiva baby) and the holy spirit (tahara) except she was an actual loser and asshole in here
P.s: if hannah doesn’t want carrie then I want cause she’s sooo f pretty
Clark Suttles
7.0★ · 01/27/26
Great piece on performative social actions.
The eclectic Rachel Sennott really shines in films like this. I’m really glad a lot of her work gets releases from Vinegar Syndrome and its sub-labels. She fits in perfectly in the VS bouquet sphere.
Great piece on performative social actions.
The eclectic Rachel Sennott really shines in films like this. I’m really glad a lot of her work gets releases from Vinegar Syndrome and its sub-labels. She fits in perfectly in the VS bouquet sphere.