FindKey

FindKeyは、100万件を超える映画・ドラマ作品、そして数百万人の人物データと独自の16類型CTI診断を統合した、日本初の感情特化型映画レコメンドエンジンです。

Find (見つける) + Key (鍵・正解)

映画に限らず、人生のヒントを見つける場所です。

FindKeyについてロケ地 (試験中)利用規約プライバシーポリシーお問い合わせ
© 2026 Bennu Inc.TMDB Logo

本サービスはTMDB APIを利用していますが、TMDBによる推奨・認定を受けたものではありません。

DIE MY LOVE/ダイ・マイ・ラブ
DIE MY LOVE/ダイ・マイ・ラブ

DIE MY LOVE/ダイ・マイ・ラブ

20251h 59m★ 6.2ドラマ

あらすじ

No synopsis available.

作品考察・見どころ

ジェニファー・ローレンスとロバート・パティンソンが放つ圧倒的な熱量が、観る者の深層心理を激しく揺さぶります。本作の本質は、理性を剥ぎ取られた人間の本能的な苦悶と、そこから滲み出る歪んだ美しさにあります。精神の破綻を詩的な映像美で切り取る演出は、まさに映画でしか到達できない官能的な領域へと観客を誘うでしょう。 豪華キャスト陣が体現する、孤独と渇望の連鎖は見事というほかありません。静寂の中に潜む狂気を爆発させる演技の応酬は、観る側の魂を削るほどの鋭利な輝きを放っています。愛と憎悪の狭間で個が崩壊していく様を克明に描く本作は、現代人が抱える生への根源的な問いを突きつける、強烈な磁力を持った作品です。

興行成績

興行収入: $11,745,933 (18億円)

※製作費・興行収入はTMDBのデータを参照しています。収支は(興行収入 - 製作費)で算出したFindKey独自の推定値であり、広告宣伝費や諸経費は含まれません (1ドル=150円換算)。

口コミ

あなたの評価を記録する

劇場情報

2026年6月12日 公開予定です。

Googleでお近くの上映館を探す

予告・トレイラー

キャスト

ジェニファー・ローレンス
ジェニファー・ローレンス
Grace
ロバート・パティンソン
ロバート・パティンソン
Jackson
シシー・スペイセク
シシー・スペイセク
Pam
ラキース・スタンフィールド
ラキース・スタンフィールド
Karl
ニック・ノルティ
ニック・ノルティ
Harry
Gabrielle Rose
Gabrielle Rose
Jen
Clare Coulter
Clare Coulter
Courtney
Sarah Lind
Sarah Lind
Cheryl
Luke Camilleri
Luke Camilleri
Greg
Victor Zinck, Jr.
Victor Zinck, Jr.
Tom

スタッフ・制作会社

監督: Lynne Ramsay

脚本: エンダ・ウォルシュ / Lynne Ramsay / Alice Birch

音楽: George Vjestica / Raife Patrick Burchell

制作: マーティン・スコセッシ / Justine Ciarrocchi / ジェニファー・ローレンス

撮影監督: Seamus McGarvey

制作会社: Excellent Cadaver / Sikelia Productions / Black Label Media

TMDB ユーザーのレビュー

CinemaSerf
CinemaSerf
★ 7

“Grace” (Jennifer Lawrence) and boyfriend “Jackson” (Robert Pattinson) arrive at the remote Montana home that used to belong to his uncle. She’s not exactly enamoured of the place but they are so loved up that it is quickly a case of getting down to things on the wooden flooring and making themselves a bairn. Thing is, though, once motherhood beckons “Grace” begins to feel the full effects of their isolation. With “Jackson” at work, often far away, she finds herself bored and captivated by their married and motor-cycle riding neighbour “Karl” (LaKeith Stanfield). After the birth, what appears to be some post-natal trauma sets in and neither her boyfriend nor his mother “Pam” (Sissy Spacek) who has had her own troubled experiences with her now late husband (Nick Nolte) can really get to grips with her increasingly erratic, often sex-obsessed, behaviour. It doesn’t exactly help the situation that “Jackson” has no longer any interest in the sexual nature of their relationship and so a chasm is slowly but definitely developing between the pair. Is anything redeemable for them? Do they care? Do we? This film belongs to a Lawrence who is remarkably free with her performance. She portrays her character effectively, depicting senses of confusion and ennui, sexuality and desire really quite powerfully and in a fashion that is quite potently foiled by the sparing appearances of Spacek. Pattinson, though, is just about as wooden as their picket fence and here I could not quite decide if he was cast because he is not a remotely charismatic actor and because Lynne Ramsay wanted this film to be solely about the character of “Grace”; or whether he was meant to add more weight than he actually does and just isn’t very good. It identifies some elements of mental illness, but there is little context or science for us to grasp the extent to which she might be genuinely ill, or just attention seeking? If the latter, then what might have broken their relationship? It’s a smudgy film. Deliberately, I guess, with some plot lines clear, others blurred and some missing altogether - but I found that emotional ambiguity increasingly uninteresting as the plot unravels to no apparent purpose. Perhaps I just wasn’t on the same wavelength, but I didn’t really get anything from this remarkably soulless story. Sorry.

Nick
Nick
★ 8

die my love is intense, messy, and strangely beautiful. the film dives deep into its character’s unraveling without ever feeling fake, and the performances really carry the chaos. it’s not always easy to watch, but it sticks with you in a good way. a bold, jagged drama that mostly hits its mark

Brent Marchant
Brent Marchant
★ 3

Postpartum depression is a subject that, arguably, doesn’t receive enough attention, especially outside of a clinical context. That’s why it’s somewhat surprising to see it addressed in an entertainment vehicle. It’s unfortunate, however, that it hasn’t been examined as tactfully or as effectively as it could or should have been in this disappointing new release from director Lynne Ramsay. When Jackson (Robert Pattinson) and his girlfriend, Grace (Jennifer Lawrence), move into a home left to them by his deceased uncle in rural Montana, the couple enjoys their idyllic new lifestyle. And, not long thereafter, they become the parents of a baby boy, a theoretically happy event that, regrettably, also marks the beginning of growing troubles in their relationship. Even though Grace appears to adore her son, she simultaneously becomes dissatisfied with her life as a stay-at-home mom, particularly in the decline of the duo’s once-robust and prolific sex life. Her behavior becomes erratic, unpredictable and even hostile toward Jackson and others, including acts of self-harm against herself. But what’s behind these changes? It’s as if a form of madness has begun overtaking her. And what, if anything, can be done about it? Such conditions are sometimes associated with mood changes after childbirth, but, in the case of this story, their expression goes so far off the rails that the picture becomes difficult to follow or fathom, meandering wildly and losing credibility with each passing sequence. In addition, the inclusion of bizarre, ancillary, seemingly unrelated developments, coupled with unrelenting overacting by the protagonists, makes for an utterly exhausting watch, one in which its core subject seems to be treated almost as an afterthought. Moreover, this is a project that represents a phenomenal waste of its cast; besides Pattinson and Golden Globe Award nominee Lawrence, the film recklessly squanders the talents of supporting players Sissy Spacek, Lakeith Stanfield and Nick Nolte. It’s genuinely unclear what the filmmaker was going for here, prompting viewers to wonder if they’re watching actual events or fabrications in the minds of the characters (or some indistinguishable combination of both). In that respect, this film readily calls to mind the narrative incoherence found in another of Lawrence’s efforts, “mother!” (2017) (one would like to think that she should have learned her lesson from that cinematic debacle – what should have served as a wake-up call to make better script selection decisions). What’s more, this offering features more than its fair share of gratuitous nudity, something I’m typically not prudish about but that truly starts to get out of hand in this release, particularly in its frequent and somewhat graphic depictions of self-pleasuring. Without a doubt, “Die My Love” is a serious letdown, one that should leave almost anyone associated with this production suitably depressed.

おすすめの作品