In a year that begged for reassurance, Everything's Gonna Be Alright (2020) arrives not as a promise, but as a question whispered through half-lit hallways and quiet glances. It doesn't scream hope-it hums it, softly, like a lullaby you're not sure you remember or imagined.
The film walks a tightrope between fragility and strength, never settling for easy optimism. Instead, it lets its characters stumble, break, and rebuild in ways that feel achingly real. Moments of silence do the heavy lifting, while the camera lingers just long enough to make you feel like a quiet observer in someone else's inner world.
With understated performances and a tone that embraces vulnerability over resolution, this is a film that doesn't pretend to have the answers. But in its uncertain pacing and human honesty, it offers something more valuable: permission to not be okay, and faith that maybe-just maybe-everything might be.